Thursday, August 27, 2015

If black lives matter...

If black lives matter why aren't we marching in the hood?

If black lives matter why don't we call for all blacks to do good to the hood?

If black lives matter we need to stop the robbing in the hood, instead of trying to play robin hood.

If black lives matter, so many black dads wouldn't be duds.

We are begging for the other races to fix our problem.

Truth is, they may be the cause, but let's unite our kind under a common cause.

The kid's guide to being black is robbing, killing, playing sports and showing their draws.

And then we want to blame the kids for breaking the laws?

True, they exaggerate probable cause...

But our race is bleeding more in the hood, so let's pause.

And go and take back the hood, because it's creating the bulk of our flaws.


Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Remember the land...

How easily we get caught in the daily demands

In a constant race against the sinking sands

The hour glass is an illusion, made by human hands

If we can ever remember the things we become slaves to are just brands

We created this game we are all playing and our voice rules the rules of the lands

But to bring change we must first get others to understand

Understand tat wealth is more than cash in hand

It begins with the brain inside the man or woman

Earth is the holy land, our promised land

But those in power abuse our gift because they want the upper hand

If we continue on our path Earth will become NO MAN"S LAND...


Tuesday, August 25, 2015

#71

Pay attention to the simplicity

Life is divided like symmetry

Do you live this life with consistency?

Take thoughts slow, act with agility

Viciously believe in your abilities

Simplicity equals infinity

Tap into unseen creativity

And you'll find self-sufficiency


Monday, August 24, 2015

#70

Confidence in dominance equals competence

Testing hypothesis that are bottomless

The weak never get remembered in monuments

Unphased by compliments, more concerned with prominence

Bringing an end to insufficiencies like the apocalypse

This is for the people with the appetite of a gang of hippopotamus

To the fulfillers of their promises

I promise dominance

Saturday, August 22, 2015

The Black Wolf

The black alpha wolf growling

In the heat of the moment, it turns to howling

Sudden silence, you can hear him prowling

The alpha does no scrolling, but he is rolling

Adrenaline flowing, heart steady pounding

His keen eyes survey the surroundings

Moving in for the kill with speed that's astounding

Pray for his prey for there is no out running

King of the pack seizes the moment without thinking

Unconscious lethalness, undoubting

Apply this method to your goals

And your results will be outstanding!


Friday, August 21, 2015

Guest Writer: Alexi Stewart

SLIDING DOORS

Two curious things happened on September 8, 2014. The first occurred after I dropped my father off at Baltimore-Washington International Airport. He had come from Dallas to visit me and my husband for the weekend, and unfortunately, the day had come for him to go home. After sending him off to his terminal, I decided to drive the scenic route home to southeast Washington D.C. Between Baltimore and the District are two highways: one with numerous lanes flanked by unforgiving, concrete walls and another with two leisurely lanes on each side of a lush median with skyscraping trees in place of a wall. The latter, which is not favored by commuters because of its tendency to quickly gridlock in rush hour, is the scenic route. I was in no hurry, and traffic would not begin for several hours, so toward my home I drove as my dad flew toward his.

With my hair tied up and all four windows of my green Escape rolled down, I cruised in the fast lane, daring to turn my speakers louder and louder until my car shook like a veritable rock concert. It was one of those gorgeous days! The crisp aroma of fall had not quite arrived, but summer’s cloying air had already passed. Instead, the entire atmosphere seemed to be on its toes in anticipation for dressed up foliage and the first bonfires of the season. The in-between, palette-cleansing air blew in and out of my windows prompting hundreds of wisps of my hair to come loose from my ponytail. 
Then everything shifted all at once.

I felt the wrongness before I saw it – a sleek minivan about twenty yards ahead of me fishtailing in the right-hand lane. It swung just enough to clip the curb of the shoulder where pavement met grass, and suddenly the car was airborne. It completed a neat roll and disappeared upside-down into the trees and brush. The sight defied all laws of nature. As I pulled to the grassy shoulder of the highway and came to a halt, my thoughts reverted to basic physics and common sense.

Cars are meant to be upright on the road, I told myself. Cars are meant to travel on a straight, paved path. Then, how did the Fast and Furious franchise make their car stunts look so real? These thoughts, inane and untimely, crowded my mind as I grappled with my pulsing adrenaline. A young man with curly, outgrown hair jumped out of a parked car in front of me and jogged toward the trees as I sat with windows still down and music still inappropriately blasting. We made eye contact, his puzzled and mine empty. After the sight we just witnessed, I felt disturbed being the subject of this young man’s perplexity. I wanted to move, and I strangely wanted to tell him that, but the swift chaos of the accident pervaded my body like a blood virus and glued me to my leather seats slick with cold sweat. 

Then, like an unbound butterfly I quickly and clumsily began to get out of my car. I slammed the power button on the radio and waited for the windows to roll up at their excruciating pace. Three more people ran into the woods where the overturned car lay in the time it took me to get out and hit the lock button. I could see only the trunk of the car upside down and suspended about five feet off the ground; it was likely held up by newly mangled saplings that now grow bent in perpetual obedience to the chrome and rubber force once subjected on it. The bumper had come clean off and rested on the ground, and a small white cloth, perhaps a t-shirt or towel, hung limply from a tree branch like a weary surrender. 

Instead of venturing into the woods, I stood halfway in between my car and the shrubbery to call 911. Only when the emergency operator realized I had no idea what mile marker was closest did I bite my lip and jog into the woods hoping for someone native to the area. There was no mangled body, crying child, or array of blood like I feared. Instead, a well-dressed, middle-aged woman supported by two Samaritans on either side hobbled around the totaled car and toward the highway. She was moaning slightly and had some scratches on her face, but no bones protruded, and no joints looked out of place. Someone managed to tell me the closest exit, Powder Mill Road, and after I relayed as best as I could our location and the condition of the woman, I hung up with the dispatcher and took my place with a group of now eight or nine people on the shoulder of the highway.

“Mijo, mijo,” mumbled the woman as she fumbled with her mangled cell phone. I hadn’t noticed before her purse slung around one shoulder. She wanted nothing more than to talk to her son in those moments, and my heart inexplicably warmed.

As I stood there watching one of the Samaritans produce his own cell phone and waiting for emergency crews, I reflected on my actions in those short minutes; it could not have been longer than five or seven. A relatively healthy woman sat in front of me, but I had been afraid of her fatality. I had been afraid of coming face-to-face with death in those trees. Though she ended up moderately fine save a possibly broken arm and a strained neck, I did see a life for the last time that day.

The last time I ever saw my dad was when he walked inside the sliding glass doors of the airport terminal on September 8. Though I did not realize it until a week later when he unexpectedly passed away, that was the second curious thing to happen, and it is the reason I will never forget that day.

There is a fairly new plot device in Hollywood called sliding doors. It involves placing a character in a situation where a seemingly insignificant choice exclusively alters their fate. A 1998 Gwyneth Paltrow movie did it with a train, Frasier did it with a choice of outerwear, and Grey’s Anatomy did it with an elevator. Typically the viewer is shown two courses of events: one if the character makes the train, wears the sweater, or catches the elevator, and the other if they miss the train, wear the suit, or do not catch the elevator. Sometimes the ending leaves it up to the viewer which course of action will actually happen, and sometimes a completely different outcome occurs.

Truthfully, I have been tempted to insert myself into my own sliding doors episode. What would have happened if I had done this differently? What would have happened if I had done that instead of this? Would my outcome have changed? Nevertheless, my reality is not producer-funded, script-written Hollywood. My reality is real life. A week after that car accident, my fifty-nine year old father died of a blood clot that originated in his ankle. It was unexpected; it was not scripted; it did not derive from a sliding door. The only sliding doors that exist in my life are the ones my dad walked through at the airport, the ones that ushered him into a wholly different home than I expected.

It is likely I will never fully come to terms with the delicate intermingling of life, death, and reality that day. Closure is slippery. However, I have come to terms with one thing. No amount of hypothesizing my choices will change the outcome of that day or days afterward. The truth is if I done something differently, I might have been the unlucky passenger in a freak car accident, or even worse, I might have missed the car accident entirely. I was reminded of life’s fragility twice in September of 2014. The first reminder, the car accident, made me tell each and every family member and friend how much I love them. The second reminder, my dad’s death, made me grateful I had told him so recently how much he meant to me.

I did not face death on September 8. I witnessed life pulsing richly and stubbornly in both the woman and my dad, and I will continue to live in exactly that way. Though I might not be the first person to run straight to the origin of the chaos, I will be there to help. I will be rich and stubborn with my life. I will impact lives around me in a way uniquely my own. I will be content.

That all sounds a lot better than what if.



Thursday, August 20, 2015

#67

Touch my soul, touch my essence..

Our chemistry is a blessin'..

Youthful ambition, forever adolescence..

For life will get to testing..

Brain power as our weapons..

Ever heard of aggressive intelligence?

The type to make you regret you ever questioned..

Sure footed in our moves, no guessing..

Chemical explosion when we meet..

Leaving an aroma so precious...


Monday, August 17, 2015

#66

Spilling my feelings, spilling my thoughts.

Trying to untangle my mental knots.

Using these words to connect the dots.

Mentally pulling the trigger, tell me... can you hear the shots?

Mental squats to increase my strength by the lots.

I encourage you to find yourself, take a mental trot.

My plans are set in stone, connect plots.

One mind and its mine, using it until I rot.


Monday, August 10, 2015

#65

Little guy from the south

A fire burned inside of him, no doubt

His parents planted big seeds, soon they'll sprout

They will grow deep roots, with planned routes

Spitting fire from his mouth

That conversely ended the drought

The little guy grew big and harnessed clout

Day in and day out

His knowledge grew like an eagle scout

Conquering death, by viewing it as only a short time out


Sunday, August 9, 2015

#64

The depths of thoughts can be hidden in a drop

The thought of something is the action stuck in the brain atop

To bring this treasure of the deep to the world, must be an inside job

Because no one knows what's being created in your spinning top

Get out those great thoughts, or they will knock on your head until your head throbs

For your thoughts may lead the next person to greatness, like a lofty lob


Saturday, August 8, 2015

How To Dream

I ran into a man on the train a day ago. He began chatting me up about my future plans and what I wanted to accomplish in my lifetime. I told him my ambitions and he proceeded to drop a nugget of knowledge on me.

He said, " I do not know how to dream anymore. When I say this, I do not mean that I do not dream at all or that I dream incorrectly. I say that I do not know how to dream because I do not know the full possibilities of this life anymore. Coming from a humble household, my dreams are capped at the things that I have seen be accomplish and that have been possible to achieve by people that come from similar circumstances to my life. As I grow older, my dreams get closer and closer to the earth. At one point in my life I could only dream of traveling with my loved ones beyond our solar system. As a child I dreamed like a God. Somewhere along the way I began to believe the limitations that others put on themselves as the limitations that could and should hold me down. Peer gravity caught hold of my ambitions. Now my dreams are only wishes. My lesson to you is to never clip your own wings."


Tuesday, August 4, 2015

#62

Faith and reason are often confused to be similar concepts. This is not the case. Faith and reason both stand on their own two metaphorical feet. Faith and reason may be two separate concepts, but that does not mean that they do not work together; for they surely do. To be frank, reason is the "why" behind an occurrence. What made something occur. When something is "reasonable" it essentially "makes sense". Our brain can understand it.

On the other hand, faith involves other elements completely. Faith requires trust. For faith to exist there must be some degree of uncertainty. It is quiet possible that the greater the uncertainty, the greater the faith. Faith involves many things that are intangible. By that, I mean out of the grasp of your hands. This is often referred to as the "unseen". 

These two concepts work together in the human mind. Do we have reason to have faith? Do we have faith in our reason? The answer to both of these questions is YES. The reasoning behind faith is that we are limited to a specific time span. So we must have faith that the history that we are using to understand the present is correct and legit. We must have faith in the others around us that we depend on, because we can not do everything. For example, we must have faith that the construction workers that build our high hanging over passes have built them in such a way that we can drive over them safely. So when you do anything in life, whether you know it or not, you are exhibiting faith, faith in your fellow man or woman.

We must rely on reason to manage the physical world that we are subjected to in our everyday lives. We must trust that their are at least some basic orders and rules to the world we live in that we can use to command the world around us.

These two concepts play together well, to give us hope that our lives have a deeper meaning.