AUNTIE’S ENTRANCE
My favorite diva Auntie,
midriff-revealing hottie,
Deity Oshun embodied
rocking Donna Summer hair
making everyone stare.
THE WRITER’S CHALLENGE
Many lack exposure
to ideas outside their doctrine.
They never examined the unquestioned.
Operating with blindfolds
leads to limited vision.
SURVIVORSHIP
My former body
before tumor robbed me
was a welcome comfort
like Kleenex when you’re sobbing.
THE CANKERWORM’S CONFESSION
Few know my name,
referring to me as
the green wiggly thing on a string,
floating on a strand of silk
like your neighborhood Spider-Man.
I WASN’T REALLY SCARED
I swear I stood
ten scarred scarlet toes down
to the ground,
allowed the cries of my Ancestors to
touch my soles through copper clay,
PATTY CAKE, PATTY CAKE, DOCTOR MAN
Patty cake, patty cake,
Doctor Man,
bake me a butt as
fast as you can!
WHAT IS A FRIEND, ANYWAY?
It hurts so much to lose them, too,
more than scraping my knee
down to the white meat,
more than bites from an angry bumblebee,
more than being ghosted by some fool
who don’t even deserve me—
ME AND THE EASTER BUNNY GOT BEEF
Me and the Easter Bunny
got beef.
Anger rises whenever I see
his smiling buck teeth.
What is he smiling about?
Commercialism?
Capitalism?
Christ being risen?
AIN’T NO MORE SPRING IN THE DMV
Ain’t no more spring in the DMV.
ICE chillin on 295 like pollen,
pullin over white trucks—
si hablas español,
don’t test your luck.
THE MENTOR (Poem)
I remind my ego that
I am not the answer,
but merely a mirror,
reflecting back the delicious fruit
of the future.
THE DAY WE RAN AWAY (Poem)
I swung high,
daring my tiny feet to touch the sky,
relishing in friendship that existed
before boys and bidis.
BODY TANKA (Poem)
Mad at reflections
of parts no one protected.
To hide them, I’d eat—
pack on pounds to feel softness
as my heart hardened.
Splinters in Your Booty
Have you ever sat on the bench so long that you feel splinters in your booty?
The Value of Loneliness
i have known alone,
moved into a room in her home,
making my bed every morning
until i was evicted by joyI’m
What Falling in Love Feels Like
i'm thankful for now;
for my smile and the awakening
in my soul and body,
body and soul,
for jazz tones traveling up my spine
and dancing out of my mouth through colorful laughter.
“The Things Growing Next Door” (POEM)
Bad influences basked in the sun
til the street lights came on;
I went dormant, hibernated all summer long.
Daddy didn’t want me copycatting
the things growing next door.
SPIRITUAL AWAKENING (Poem)
When I inhale,
I stretch my belly out past my belt,
guide breath through every locked crevice,
knock off cobwebs of lies we told.
GRASP WISELY (Poem)
You don't have to correct the past.
It's already forgiven.
Take pleasure in the fact that
you survived,
that what meant to kill you failed
miserably.
NEIGHBORS (Poem)
Welcome to DC,
where we honor Blacks who are dead,
and treat the live ones like ghosts.
THE NEED TO BE LIKED (Poem)
I am divorcing myself from
the need to be liked,
coaxing down forced
church girl smiles

