You were fourteen in Dr. A.’s class when on that day you proclaimed to have learned nothing and on that day Dr. A. held no doctorate degree.
You were fourteen in Dr. A.’s class when bodies: sick, overweight, in-shape fell from buildings and into to TV screens into history books, only to be stuck forever
in a New York newsreel in their Tuesday outfits with Monday night’s love and touch brewing, aged and earthy, from their falling lives. If you listen closely on the eve of this day
the wind still whispers their scent of perfume trails, still whispers what really happened that busy day in the clouds, in the sky. I was ten and can’t recall where I was
or in whose company but like the waters stretched between Europe, Africa, and the America’s, I was (am) far removed, was (am) still putting together the blue-black lineage
of my triangular history that drowned in the salty waters stretched, flowing between three continents. But fifteen years later, we (you and I) have overcome
the billowing black clouds of Tuesdays the Monday night upsets, and the routed maritime of our ancestors. 15 years later you are still alive with your blue eyes
and clear face, are still four years my senior are still my guiding light and sight of sun.