I sit with my afro, tall and round like the trees I sit with my afro between my mother's knees And I cry. She thinks it's because she pulled my hair I let her feel guilty but really that's not fair Because it's you. So as my mother glides the comb through my onyx curls Your web of lies begins to unfurl And all at once you were my world But now you're nothing. My mother's hands twist my hair into braids Partings in more ways than one have been made Memories like my brother's fade But not for you. Yours are stronger than my mother's hands Yet as soft as my Indian strands And how I wish I could get the clippers and shave my head and watch my memories of you fall away But I can't.
So as my mother braids my hair down my back I remember you and try to forget the fact That you ran your hands through this Raven hair Shielded my now tear streaked face from the frozen air Forget that you loved the coarse strands As much as the Indian; soft in your hands So I lock away these memories with each braid And try to prove to myself that I'm more afraid Of losing my afro than losing you.
I tell myself that it's my mother pulling that makes me cry But you and I, Know that's not true.