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stokes
American Born in Philadelphia. First generation Jamaican-American, queer, Black, female writer. Currently attending school in Western MA. Fooling around, really.
i drink my coffee black with a hint of honey, just like she liked it. sip on the bitter brew, condition myself to like it. i hold my cigarette in the corner of my mouth, like she did, practice smoking it to the nub like she taught me to. i ignore the rain outside, imagine cold spring sunrises on the porch and try to finish my work, all the while dreaming of sleep (where you will visit simultaneously cursing me and asking for my forgiveness).
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Jul 26, 2011
Jul 26, 2011 at 9:29 PM UTC
early mornings/late nights at the bridge
i have dreams where i lose my teeth, pull them out of my mouth one by one, while new teeth push themselves from my swollen pinkgums making me repeat the process, spitting them out, pushing them out with my tongue until they fill my mouth with the hard, bitter taste of enamel. i have dreams where people die, the words "revolution" on their lips, eyes heavy and clouded with sleep and delusion as i watch them get carried away and forgotten. (I could have told you not to die for something stupid- yr head is not hard enough to withstand the fall, yr back is not strong enough to not bend.) i have dreams where i forget to wake up. dear universe: i am ready to wake up now, to still my tongue, to bow my head, to listen.
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Jul 26, 2011
Jul 26, 2011 at 9:28 PM UTC
"the wood for the trees"
i'm a man, who carries his ***** ***** like a knife, ready to tear into the skin of white america. i'm a man, who holds my head high, and my back straight, and looks down on anything that tries to hold me down. i am a man, a black man, who walks over the bridges of my black sister's bodies, forgetting the times when i ****** on her **** drew out her power through her womb and called it revolution.
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Jul 26, 2011
Jul 26, 2011 at 9:26 PM UTC
what it means to be a man
i remember us when we were young. we two little girls, not yet three, sitting on my front steps, you spitting sunflower seeds at my feet and me ******* on the salt and saving the insides for later. we, inseparable at four, singing and dancing at your bday party (only two days before mine), smothering cake all over our faces, shoving icing covered fingers into our open mouths. i remember that you were larger than life. your head was always trying to catch up with your body, that expansive geography of flesh. even when we were kids, you would pass your rolls of fat off for ******* (except for that summer, when i came back and you moved away. i was the one with the biggest ******* on the block then, and instead of boys, girls came running, wanting to see what was hiding under my shirt. that summer i started my first love affair with my new neighbor. the one i said had the ghetto name? we would meet in my livingroom- she on the couch and me on the floor or me on the couch and she on top of me and she would lift up my shirt, struggle with my bra and cradle my budding ******* like newborns. ...i never told you about that, but i wanted to, and i'm sure that's the summer when you came back to visit and tried to get me to come out in your sly way. you told me, "mali, what's the point of boys? they're all trouble anyways." and i mmed, and you waited and i changed the subject. remember that time i bragged to you about smoking **** for the first time? and little Rich from up the block tried to sell us bud, but we told him we had our own? so to look cool, we stole your grandma's **** and i felt bad about it but you told me it was okay because she bought it from my dad anyway. i remember we rolled a joint the size of your middle finger and we smoked the whole thing. i said i didn't feel nothing, but when your grandma asked us about it, the only answer i could muster was, **** what's that?" i don't think she believed me, but she let me off the hook and i wasn't allowed to come over for a little while. i remember being seven on summer nights and playing tag in the bushes that separated our houses or catching lightning bugs in jars across the street in front of the church because there adults couldn't hear our whispers about naughty things like cute teen boys and what *** must feel like. you seemed to have so much freedom. you could walk around the corner, past the crumbling apartment where crackheads would stumble out during midday- all the way to the gas station to get a huggie and a bag of chips, you said, but who knew what exciting adventures you might have had, what interesting people you might have met? my dad rarely let me go up and down the street. i remember being so mad about that that. my big brother said it was because me and him, we were different. now i realize he meant that we were (supposed to be) better. back then, i wanted to be like you. free to make my own choices. when your grandpa candy asked me if i wanted to go on a ride on his motorcycle, my little body shook with disappointment, because i knew i had to say no. i sat on my front steps and waited forever until you came back, half hoping that you had toppled off, or one of the other dangerous things my mom warned me about had come true. instead, you came back looking triumphant, your round cheeks burning with the excitement of your trip, your half-permed hair a messy halo around your head.
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Jul 26, 2011
Jul 26, 2011 at 9:16 PM UTC
r.i.p. childhood friend (2/13/11)
i remember us when we were young. we two little girls, not yet three, sitting on my front steps, you spitting sunflower seeds at my feet and me ******* on the salt and saving the insides for later. we, inseparable at four, singing and dancing at your bday party (only two days before mine), smothering cake all over our faces, shoving icing covered fingers into our open mouths. i remember that you were larger than life. your head was always trying to catch up with your body, that expansive geography of flesh. even when we were kids, you would pass your rolls of fat off for ******* (except for that summer, when i came back and you moved away. i was the one with the biggest ******* on the block then, and instead of boys, girls came running, wanting to see what was hiding under my shirt. that summer i started my first love affair with my new neighbor. the one i said had the ghetto name? we would meet in my livingroom- she on the couch and me on the floor or me on the couch and she on top of me and she would lift up my shirt, struggle with my bra and cradle my budding ******* like newborns. ...i never told you about that, but i wanted to, and i'm sure that's the summer when you came back to visit and tried to get me to come out in your sly way. you told me, "mali, what's the point of boys? they're all trouble anyways." and i mmed, and you waited and i changed the subject. remember that time i bragged to you about smoking **** for the first time? and little Rich from up the block tried to sell us bud, but we told him we had our own? so to look cool, we stole your grandma's **** and i felt bad about it but you told me it was okay because she bought it from my dad anyway. i remember we rolled a joint the size of your middle finger and we smoked the whole thing. i said i didn't feel nothing, but when your grandma asked us about it, the only answer i could muster was, **** what's that?" i don't think she believed me, but she let me off the hook and i wasn't allowed to come over for a little while. i remember being seven on summer nights and playing tag in the bushes that separated our houses or catching lightning bugs in jars across the street in front of the church because there adults couldn't hear our whispers about naughty things like cute teen boys and what *** must feel like. you seemed to have so much freedom. you could walk around the corner, past the crumbling apartment where crackheads would stumble out during midday- all the way to the gas station to get a huggie and a bag of chips, you said, but who knew what exciting adventures you might have had, what interesting people you might have met? my dad rarely let me go up and down the street. i remember being so mad about that that. my big brother said it was because me and him, we were different. now i realize he meant that we were (supposed to be) better. back then, i wanted to be like you. free to make my own choices. when your grandpa candy asked me if i wanted to go on a ride on his motorcycle, my little body shook with disappointment, because i knew i had to say no. i sat on my front steps and waited forever until you came back, half hoping that you had toppled off, or one of the other dangerous things my mom warned me about had come true. instead, you came back looking triumphant, your round cheeks burning with the excitement of your trip, your half-permed hair a messy halo around your head.
Continue reading...
108
outside, the world is doused in gold light. the woman across the street prunes her roses. three hipsters giggle on the porch next door. a mangy black cat prowls the street, mistaking the twinkle of wind chimes for a nest of chirping birds. inside, bruiser and i are still. (what does a tornado look like? what does it feel like? it feels like waiting.)
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Jul 26, 2011
Jul 26, 2011 at 9:03 PM UTC
tornado watch
i found a new word to describe how i feel abt yr body, pressed up against mine. (you make me feel like i am starving.) i almost feel embarassed saying it, admitting that i miss yr body, miss intently staring into yr eyes, searching for a pattern of freckles similar to the ones scattered across yr back. i miss yr curled fingers tugging at my hair, keeping time with yr surprised moans and giggles (a funny dialogue on the sharpness of my teeth.) the word "miss" is strange. it's gone before you even get the vowel out. i remember the night i told you that i missed you, & you laughed because you were still curled up next to me. i hope you now understand what i meant; you were gone before i even got to savor you, before i had a chance to get used to the taste of you heavy on my tongue. now that you're gone, i spend my nights rummaging in the kitchen, trying to find a texture that reminds me of ******* you. i'm caught- somewhere between coffee ice cream & stale dinner rolls.
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May 15, 2011
May 15, 2011 at 11:39 PM UTC
insatiable
When Tzitzi and I walk, we discover forgotten places. In the middle of the field, she twirls her body around, arms spread out and eyes shut, like a distraught baby bird. She finally stops, and for a moment, I am sure that she will collapse, dizzily, onto the grassy floor. Instead, she points forward, and we follow the direction of her fingers (me, stomping- and she, tripping) through what used to be a corn field. Behind the book center, everything is still. In this blue-grey light, I can imagine Pompeii, when all the dust settled and solidified everything in ash. Many of the rooms are still dimly lit, and I am afraid to look into the large windows, not wanting to see a spectral face peering curiously back out at me. "You scared?" Tzi asks, and I laugh, trying not to show my chattering teeth. We continue walking, past the pristine bushes and trickling fountain, to find a floor of linoleum tiles. This pale, beige floor looks out of place here, against the bright night's sky, but this is what we have come here to see. Tzitzi prepares herself for her next task. Suddenly, she is kicking hundreds of little rocks against the sandy tiles, and the noise sounds like the rattling of hollow bones. The notes echo off into the woods, and I feel happy and safe and pleased.
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Sep 26, 2010
Sep 26, 2010 at 10:05 PM UTC
Untitled
i am lonely in this place filled with people who call me by the wrong name. or the right name. i can't remember which one. it has always been hard for me to use my voice here. in the real world, so many parts of myself seem fake. contrived. it is hard for me to tell when i'm dreaming. najee gives me words of wisdom through texts: before you can find someone to love, you should get a plant, have a pet for a few years. give it some time. find yourself. i am impatient. i want to have fun, to have someone pay for my popcorn and hold my hand during the scary parts of the movie. cyree tells me you already have that. how are those things different from your friends? what do you truly need? take your time and think. really hard. i am restless. i want to be somewhere else doing something new. i have dreams of new people and new places. my mother tells me you are living above your means. what is your back up plan? i will not always be here for you to fall back on. slow down. live your politics. think about what's really important. i don't want to listen. i want to get away from here. i want to be selfish for once. but what am i running away from? what do i need? i don't know.
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Aug 3, 2010
Aug 3, 2010 at 12:59 PM UTC
being selfish for once
today we saw a baby bird, fallen out of its nest, the little black feathers puffed around its small frame. tiny ball of fluff, we almost missed it in the grass. we came close to inspect and it opened its yellow beak, and screamed for its mother. we could not help it, could not touch it without ruining its chances for survival. *"its mother will reject it if she smells you on the child."* it reminded me of that 15 yr old girl's ghost, who decided while living that death was better than to let the soldiers **** her over and over and over again. how many times did she scream, and lose faith in God, before taking her own life? *"her own people would stone her anyway, if they knew she had been ***** their only excuse for breaking her spirit. when we went back to the grass a couple hours later, the bird was still there. still screaming, but no sound could escape its throat. i will scream for you i will cry for you i will fight for you i will keep screaming **** YOU** to the world until my throat goes dry, because i have to keep hope alive somehow.
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Jul 19, 2010
Jul 19, 2010 at 3:22 PM UTC
frstrtd
i have forgotten how easy it is to love someone so much. you are miles and miles away and yet i can feel your hands pushing on my chest, your fingers tugging at my mouth, pulling my lips apart until vulnerable words flow out slow like honey, sweet things like “i miss you” and “please don't leave me here”. your responses drop in my open mouth like stones, and i struggle to swallow them all, until they fall heavy into my stomach.
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Jul 19, 2010
Jul 19, 2010 at 3:16 PM UTC
"please don't leave me here"