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 Sep 2015 Bra-Tee
jeffrey conyers
Men, got the packages.
Women, has the gift.
Once you requested it.
Then you just might be blessed.

Men, loves to brag about it.
Women, loves to laugh when they see it.
But if it delivers as stated.
Then both feels like they are in heaven.

Men, are mainly students.
Women, are mainly instructors.
Or might I say directors.
Cause both are producers.

Yes, yes, yes.
More, more, more.
This is the things that most lovers lives for.
 Sep 2015 Bra-Tee
jeffrey conyers
Women, knows a lie.
Which only a one percentage buys.
A man that says, he don't begs.
Know, he can't demand it from a woman.

These are the ones that sleeps alone.

A man that says, he's in control.
Doesn't comprehend she's just going along.
She's aware of the powers she posse.

A man that states, his woman needs him.
Isn't aware she doesn't need him in the least.
Cause after he's gone.

She have options or not to sleep alone.
She knows this.
He just not willing to believe this.

We must remember the very first woman in creation never made him do anything.
She just offered it.
And he decided on his own to go along with it.

Yes, the power of a woman
 Sep 2015 Bra-Tee
Bella
24
 Sep 2015 Bra-Tee
Bella
24
It's our number
I've worn it since third grade
You had it sewn to your shirt in high school
It's the date we first kissed
In that ****** bar next to my ****** apartment
24
It's the day that you asked me to kiss you only
You were going to say something by the ocean
But your nerves got the best of you
So you asked me in your car instead
And I said yes in the passenger seat
24
It's the hours a day that I have you on my mind
Always thinking about the taste of your lips
And the way you make me fall in love
More and more each day
And it will be the day that I ask you
To spend the rest of your life with me
 Sep 2015 Bra-Tee
jeffrey conyers
Hard to believe that there are whites that never been around blacks.
And any opinions they have isn't based around facts.

Not hard to believe, there are blacks that not afraid to stand up to whites.
Stand face to face and speak directly to them.

Hard to believe that this world is destroyed by a few for riches and glory.
And that those that cherish it must be the ones to save it.

Not hard to believe, that many churches is under this impression that the president must reflect their views.

When within this world , there different perspective to the office.

Hard to believe that others, could careless about others until they are walking within their shoes.

Not hard to believe, that many think being cruel and rude is the thing to do.
Oh, this world is surrounded by fools.

Hard to believe that many men aren't nothing without a woman.
Not hard to believe that many ladies knows this as truth.
"I would rather die of passion than of boredom."
-Vincent Van Gogh
 Aug 2015 Bra-Tee
b for short
When I was a little girl, I occasionally loved to wear dresses. Not because they made me feel pretty, or because that’s what the damning norms of society taught me I should wear—I wore them because I loved how it felt when I would spin myself around. I’d scuff my Mary Janes, litter my tights with runs, and twirl around until my balance ran out and my little knees met the ground. No scrape or brush burn kept me from the thrill of that momentum, smiling wide as the material rose up to meet my fingers while I flew around in haphazard circles. I’d watch the colors of this huge, painted world blend and blur together, amused that, for a moment, I was out of my own control.

Eventually, much to my dismay, I grew up in nearly all of the ways a little girl can.

I realize, as an adult, that it’s important to harbor the mindset that we should regret nothing. After all, every experience typically gifts us with a little wisdom nugget, right? We collect them and look back fondly on the good and the bad, carrying our souvenirs with us as we move forward. Well, I have the nuggets (heh), but I can’t help but feel some regret as to how I came about retrieving them. Recently, there have been so many instances where I want to hop in the Doc’s Delorean, go back in time, grab the hands of little me, and spin ourselves into oblivion. We crash in the grass, eyes closed, world still spinning. In the midst of giggles and grins, we lay on our backs, watching the clouds come back into focus. I turn my head and look at her, fully prepared to tell her everything she needs to know to protect herself from all of the hurt and pain I know she’ll come to endure in the next couple of decades. I want so badly to save her from it all, but before I can speak, she does.

“Don’t worry, I can see it,” she looks at me, warmly.

“See what?” I ask, catching my breath.

“I can see all of the cracks in you.”

I don’t have the words for her, as she searches my face. She traces the outlines of my cheeks, somehow still as round and rosy as her own. Her eyes are my eyes; a bewildering gray green—unchanged, even after all of these years. In that moment, I realize that I’ve forgotten just how young I actually am.

“You don’t have to tell me about them. I know they’ll be mine someday.” She smiles and turns her eyes to the sky.

I’m in awe of this child—her understanding and intuitive nature. It left me perplexed.

“You already know what I’m going to tell you?” For a brief second, I relived the heartache, the fear, and the anger—and I wondered if she understood, I mean, truly understood what she was saying. “But if you know, then how can you be smiling?”

She turns back to me, lips curved sheepishly into a grin—an expression we had come to perfect. “Because where you’re cracked is the prettiest part of you. You fill them with gold and silver and all the rest of the glittery colors. They’re not empty—just spaces replaced with things that mean more to you than what was there before.”

I imagined this—a map of myself, sporadic damage branching out in all directions, repaired in technicolor brightness, more eye-catching than ever. I fell in love with the thought of my tattered soul, patchworked into something my heart could use to keep warm.

I kissed her, lightly, on her little forehead—a thank you for the words I still didn’t have, and hugged her tight.

“You should get back now,” she said, still grinning, “you don’t want to miss it.”

I don’t know what she meant by that exactly, but I had this unmistakably good feeling that she was on to something.
©Bitsy Sanders, August 2015

I realize this is not what we'd call a "poem" but rather poetic prose. Either way, it had to get out. Thanks for your understanding.
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