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Is it the American
dream or nightmare
I so seldom know

the average American
whatever that means
encounters

thirteen thousand
advertisements
every day:

all saying
outward things
meet inward needs

but a lie repeated
thirteen thousand times
is still a lie
Proverbs 4:23
Man fire
street guitar
world dance

******
pain
heartache
shame

safety love
comfort love
everybody love

heartache
rage
panic
strange

man fire
street guitar
world dance

safety love
comfort love
everybody love

I don't want to keep
any of this beauty to myself
nor can I
Response poem to E. Sharp and the Zeros' 'Man On Fire,'  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8m-ZixwsoUU.
As soon as I said that
God laughed upstairs.

You inspired me at least.

There's two huge mistakes:
when you shoot and you shouldn't,
and when you should and you don't.

Nobody knew
about the killing
but all of them knew how to get out.

Don't fix a mistake with a mistake.
             Don't be pride.
                              Don't disappear.
I know you have a tendency to do that.

We know who we are
but we try to convince each other
that we are something else.

And I don't want to do that anymore
The last time
I saw my landlady in the hood

She said, 'I hear you been spending
a lot of time in the woods'

It's true, I said

'I thought so
That's you
you'll sleep in the woods
before you'll sleep in a hotel
have your tea and you'll be happy'

It's true, I thought
happy
in hoods and woods
'Baybo,' say I,
'do you think
my car is okay?'
'Well what you
gone do with it?' says he.
'Bring it into
the house?'
my name is
written
on the hand of
my God
When I walk through the valley of the shadow of death
I carry my homeland as if it were in my arms.
Remembering:
chairs made of wooden crates,
footballs made of newspapers,
cigarettes made of camel dung.
Someone once said: a best friend will help you move
and a best friend will help you move bodies
but if you have to move your best friend’s body,
you’re on your own.

When I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
I think about how you and I
belonged where nothing belonged:
shimmering with heat waves Africa,
rainy season pounding the mabati roof Africa,
weaver birds weighing down acacia trees with their nests,
Africa.  Where do we lay the blame and the bodies?
It could have been me holding the machete,
could have been me holding the machine gun.
Why is that?

When I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
I see acts of courage and sacrifice that take my breath away.
A boy, shielding his sister's body with his own.
A girl, leading a blind woman to safety.
And you, holding an old man in your arms,
his life dripping down your clothes.
What I wished for you was a place where you would not fear
the terror by night, nor the arrow by day,
nor the plague that walks in the darkness,
nor the destruction that lays waste at noonday.
I wished for you the deep red sunsets over the vast hollow of the Chalbi desert,
the brother that reads to you in your break-bone fevers,
the camel that carries you and doesn't get tired.

When I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
I wonder why I lived
and you didn’t.
And for your sake, and mine, and the world’s, and God’s,
I want to leave behind the failed resolve and the excuses
that keep me from leaving the world better than I found it.
When I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
I will learn
to fear no evil.
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