Saturday, December 25, 2010

This Treehouse is For Boys only!

I was 12. That's the last time I saw him - or what was remaining of him. Having experienced so many firsts together, it never dawned on me that he would be the first to die and I would be the first to watch him deteriorate. For some reason, that "first" was never considered. Yes, we were kids - I thought we'd live forever. A part of me still holds to the idea of immortality - even though I get a rude reminder of my impermanence every time I have a close encounter with death (or his offspring, sickness). Nevertheless, the day I walked up to that casket and saw his greying appearance, thin fingers, and sunken face, my innocence was raped - taken from me quicker than I would compartmentalize. We were protectors of the treehouse, a safe haven for our Power Ranger toys, comic books and fruit snacks. NOBODY else was allowed in. We would talk - to each other - over each other - for hours uninterrupted, save dinner or lunch time feeding. When he died, I never returned to the treehouse. I would only secure it, making sure no one could get into it or that  no one would be able to threaten its existence.

We were just kids.

See, these were the times where children were allowed by adults to stay children. Taboo topics were kept among the conversation pieces of adults while children were given imaginary license to be and do whatever they wanted. Talk of leukemia was as familiar to me at that age as was sex - nonexistent. So when he died, I got the typical "God needed him" or "He's an angel now" speech. And yet, I resented him for leaving me. My best friend had lied; we wouldn't be friends forever.

Fast forward 15 years. [Reflecting]

On this Christmas day, I look back at how I have responded to this loss. I have accrued a good bit of prosperity due to hard work, intelligence and grace. Because of this, I've attracted a great bit of people in my life that have become "friends," both fake and real. Folk who are yes men and women, saving their spot in my VIP section or party so that they could drink for free, behave riotously and have much to talk about the next day. I've asked myself over the years, "How many of you know my favorite food?" "What is my biggest fear?" "How many siblings do I have?" The majority of these people would get a righteous "F" as a grade in Johmyrin 101. Yet, I've kept them around because a part of me needed to fill that void.

Need[ed] - past tense

I have since grown up. I owe my best friend about 15 years worth of apologies. In essence, they have infiltrated the treehouse - or at least they've tried. I'm thankful nevertheless that I have made better friends, those who have added to the treehouse, instead of taking away from it. Theron would have appreciated that. Those others, I thank God for them as well. Moochers, back-biters, nay-sayers, bobble heads - all of them. I've learned as much from you about what real friendship is as I have from the blessings that have entered into my life.

I'm thankful this Christmas day - as I am everyday. I'm still growing, being very careful about who enters into the Treehouse. I pray that this next phase of life brings me great joy and more true friendship!

Merry Christmas

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Absence makes the heart grow fonder

It's always been an obstacle for me to say, "I miss you" - until now.

I've poured myself into so much, seeking gratification from guilt and hiding in the fears of my own talent. Had I just taken a minute to think, reflect. I only needed one minute to become that child again, unexposed to men and women who make themselves kin to the brutal realities of life's bad side. Somewhere, in the crevices of my mind - those spaces between thought and action, one might call stillness - I've searched all over for you with no compass to guide me.

I've been using a map all this time. With its landscape of possibilities, I've been walking in that desert for 25 years, with the smallest amount of mana to sustain me. Body beaten, mind run down, and soul searching, I saw a star shoot across the skyline of my soul - leaving behind a trail of brazen gold that laid a path that inspired my journey. The more gold I picked up, the tiniest flashbacks started to return. My eyes opened a little wider, my nose accepted the smells of intrigue. I was in a familiar place with only a few steps taken.

In front of me is this child, a reddish-golden haired lightly sanded skin-toned 7 year old whose appearance caused me the greatest tears. He smelled of my grandmother's downy drowned sheets and the slightest hint of baby powder. His head had not quite caught up to his ears in growth though it was variably bigger than the rest of his body - MY body. I looked into his greyish-brown eyes and saw myself. I had  neglected me - forgot what makes me happy, what was true to me. But that little boy knew. So we sat, had a conversation, where he walked over, picked up things and started using them, mixing them, breaking them. He showed little concern for getting dirty or taking a chance that might end in nothingness. It was the exploration that meant the most to him.

Somewhere, somehow, I lost that fearlessness. So wrapped up in my next degree, accomplishment, and success that I had forgotten what God had infused within me at birth - a love for change.

I carry this kid on my journey now. He whispers in my ear every now and then to tell me when he feels like he is fading away. When he does, I know that my truest self is dying by a decision I have made. I'm thankful for my reconnection. I have missed him. I have MISSED me. I have MISSED my passion. This rediscover of self has open up the floodgates for me to love hard, take emotional risks and maybe one day MISS HER.

No longer will I walk around chasing other people's expectations for me. That little boy wants to play and I won't do anything to stop him.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Lights at both ends of the tunnel

Never can say goodbye
No no no no, I
Never can say goodbye

Even though the pain and heartache
Seems to follow me wherever I go
Though I try and try to hide my feelings
They always seem to show
Then you try to say you're leaving me
And I always have to say no...



If only what I said mattered. If only my words could keep you here just a few moments longer. I want to say my goodbye. The same goodbye I refused to speak because the selfish part of me stood firm on the idea that God would never take you away. I was - special. Different. I did what I was supposed to do. I maintained a stature and lifestyle that were both pleasing to you and others. And yet, that just wasn't enough.

Revelation: There are no prerequisites for death.

I typed it. And, it seriously just hit me. I guess there's a part of me that secretly believes that my stay here is permanent. How do you reconcile something so universal/inescapable? Think about it. Philosophy speaks to the impermanence of knowledge, a craft filled with men and women who fool themselves with glorifying the process rather than the goal. And yet, life points toward a goal, an end. One which can NOT be avoided. One that can NOT be predicted. One that can NOT be understood. Yet we are all required to partake. In fact, we have all exited eternity for this stint of time only to be unknowing siphoned back at any moment.

Why give us:
smiles, laughter,
pain, anguish, sadness,
accomplishment, failure,
love, hate,
commitment, infidelity,
experiences, stillness,
passion, depression, purpose,

All for it to end?

I've done my best at coping. Most times, I put it out of my mind, along with the foolish sayings of many of the people who offer false comfort in times where loved ones have walked through that one way door. This was all God's will. Things will get better. You're strong enough to handle this. Pardon me. How does one make judgements on something about which we know so little. Maybe, utilizing knowledge as an avenue for clarity is the wrong approach. That's possible. But, what do I use instead.

At its least, this was therapeutic. I'm not afraid of the unknown. I just want to make sure that those I care about that have passed that way are okay as they reenter eternity. But I can't be sure.

Therefore, I'll continue to be a fool - and hope for the best.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Fallen Anjel

I am ready for love
Why are you hiding from me
I'd quickly give my freedom
To be held in your captivity

I am ready for love
All of the joy and the pain
And all the time that it takes
Just to stay in your good grace
Lately I've been thinking
Maybe you're not ready for me
Maybe you think I need to learn maturity
They say watch what you ask for 
Cause you might receive 
But if you ask me tomorrow 
I'll say the same thing
-I.A.


I've stared in her face, smelled the sweetest fragrance of her lips, devoured each word that glides off her tongue with a ferocity of a thousand hungry men - yet, she belongs to him. She is not property but a gift, his gift. And he is so blinded by possession that he has forgotten the blessing one can find in a gift.

Pity Party of One, Please. I'm not into self-loathing, martyrdom or deprivation - though at some point in this entry, I am sure to exhibit all the signs. Actually, I refuse to admit that I might be one of those disgusting people in this world whom God has set aside a true love. Okay, maybe they're not disgusting. And yes, I'm hating. But a brother's got to find a way to appropriately make sense of it all.

Since very young, I've been celebrated for my intelligence, good looks, athletic build, hair texture, etc. None of these titles (excluding intelligence) have I readily taken ownership of. However, if I amass these prescribed qualities into a recipe for romantic success, then a guy like me (or whom I have been told I am) would be a candidate for a love degree with summa cum laude honors. Yet, in the darkness of my home, the smallest whispers echo the loud truth: I am alone. And frankly, at 26, I need to make the decision to be really content with this or to be ABSOLUTELY uncomfortable about it.

I am THE friend. And while I appreciate that I have set myself up to be a trustworthy individual for others, the fact that I die inside whenever a female calls me a great friend shows that some part of my  tin man exterior is porous enough to feel the grief that lies in hope. I'm too old to play the "shut down" game and I will NOT use avoidance as a coping mechanism. Being confident about 99% of the things in my life is not good enough when I doubt my right to a gift such as this. Fuck TV and its depiction of love as some boomerang type of object that magically returns to an owner who takes a risk and throws it out into the open abyss. I haven't seen a return on my investment yet - so, either television is lying or I am truly damned. Scarily, I can't decide which of the two options sounds more plausible.

Just gonna stand there and watch me burn
But that's alright because I like the way it hurts
Just gonna stand there and hear me cry
But that's alright because I love the way you lie. 
I love the way you lie. 

Maybe I'm a sadomasochist, a glutton for self-imposed pain and heartache. In my most heartfelt reflections, I resent the fact that age has riddled my spirit completely incapable of managing matters of emotion. Its like a cancer has lain latent in my soul all these years only to spread its malignant microbes throughout my system at a time when I need to be sealed tight. I can't handle it any longer. I feel like I'm coward, hiding behind the mask of friendship (the same one I resent) so that I get time with her that is, at least, semi-genuine. That way I don't have to risk becoming dumb for her - in her - by her - though I want to. I'm wrapped in a paradox of my own creation and I remain only partly capable of freeing myself from this feeling.

I liken this experience to a prison visit. I stand behind the thin glass, my cool breath kisses the vibration of her lovely sound. I'm pressing my fingers up against the window trying with all my power to get that touch of reinforcement, the little sign I need to know she's in this with me. But sitting on the other side of that window is him. He's staring at her, but she at me. Yet, I stand close enough to be just out of reach. I am not even asking for full contact. I just want a sign. The smallest indication that I might be worthy - or worth what everybody's been telling me I was born to inherit -

love.

When I was 6, I would sit down and draw my future - myself as a grown man with a beautiful wife and four sons. Innocent though it was, I've held on to that hope. Unfortunately, I feel that my crayons have become ink pens or computer keys - every stroke symbolizing a step away from love and toward this contrived idea of success. That kid dies. Every single time I work toward a goal that I realize I have to enjoy alone, that little blonde headed boy certainly dies. Every 4 hour evening conversation purely between friends (that feels like romance) smothers that little boy under one hundred of the heaviest feathered pillows.

I've trapped myself in a maze. I can't or don't know how to escape. I'm a mess inside. Everyday, just before bed, there's an involuntary tear that meets the 'Amen' of my prayer as I rest my mind. Until now, I've thought it to be exhaustion. Now, I know for a fact that its sadness. I could ask myself the depressing questions I've bounced off friends: Am I not good enough? Have I dug myself an emotional hole of escape too deep to be rescued? But they usually yield the same answers as those reminiscent of my childhood upbringing. FUCK. Am I a child gone by the waste side?

These are the things I do know: I'm kind, considerate of others, confident, driven, passionate, and capable of transferring love - from my soul to another's. And yet, even with her and him out of the picture, I remain.... alone. So, it is me. Everyone's lied to me. But how can I reconcile this without feeling like an emotional martyr? The only way I can make sense of it all within the confines of my situation is this: I meet all the qualifications of a great guy but I was born to be alone.

If this is true, then I hate it. I'm not just exiting stage left on this one. I'm setting this stage aflame. This is not a life I can live forever.

And here comes the tears.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Jail Time

Originally, this was written on 50 strips of paper along a rigid table that, unlike most people, had seen my fullest tears. I've decided to give those pieces a body to encompass the soul from which they were begot. This is Jail Time. 


His head was tilted, anchored by a hand that seemed to carry the weight of the world; and yet, his long, dark extensions of fingers trembled beneath something much heavier - an idea not easily defined by the English language. So, for my purposes, I will call it guilt - systematic, institutionally catalyzed guilt. In the background of my observation, there existed the muffled sounds of sniffling, a choir of sympathy bellowing from dry, wooden court pews. These were the family members of the defendant, holding back disobedient tears, filled with shame, anger, confusion - and (weirdly enough) a small bit of hope. It was between these sounds that I found grief, having hid behind the wall where my emotion once lay. I did not understand the legal system. Another black boy convicted of a crime crafted by a system that reserved a jail space for him just as he exited the birth canal - just as I exited the birth canal Yet, I escaped this fate (thus far). This same prison cell he would come to call home - and his final resting place.

We had no choice. There was never one offered in the matter. He had killed in cold blood - or warm blood as was depicted over and over again by the mottled sequence of events that we jurors had to conjure up from gruesome pictures and half-truths. I probably won't ever be able to reconcile the 'why' behind this young man's decision-making. I could probably name a million reasons or excuses as to why and what got him to this point in making horrible choices, but there is nothing I can do to actually create order in places where a mess of disorder exists. The hopeful part of me thought about programs I could start to give young, black men options - better choices - or initiatives that promote healthy decision-making and reemphasize education. These ideas fled quickly at the loud screams of anger - piqued frustration begot from unanswered questions. Where were his parents, the schools, his family, or his church? What causes a seemingly good kid to make horrible choices? 

There's an odd smell that fills the room as my mind runs through options. Justice. Unfamiliar, yet kin. I'm made uncomfortable by the idea that I have to enact something that I don't truly understand. Justice, a remedy that occurs in hindsight, too late for everybody involved in any situation. Up to this point, a speeding ticket (that was later pulled) was the extent of my criminal history. And yet, I have to make a decision about someone's life - and use foolish justice as my only tool of recourse. In crimes this gruesome, there is only life til death or immediate death. Am I my brother's keeper? Should I extinguish a life so that society's failure of him is but a newspaper headline of memory?

This young man had completely lost - or cut himself off by his actions. The whole scenario reminded me of the feeling I would imagine a kicker to get when his field goal winning kick is two feet left of the field goal post. Nobody on the team wins because of his actions, but the team has to pick themselves up and try to do it better the second time around. I think we (I) chose correctly in giving him life imprisonment. I pray there are faculties and resources available to change foolish justice into saintly rehabilitation. Only time can prove that.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Uppity Negro

I wrote these words for everyone, who struggles in their youth. Who won't accept deception instead of what is truth. It seems we lose the game before we even start to play. Who made these rules? We're so confused. Easily led astray. - L. Boogie 

The canary yellow sun is out, heating up every square inch of the thick July afternoon. I sit in Starbucks, sipping on my caramel frappucino staring out of the translucent windows into the street internally complaining about how it just. doesn't. taste. right. My head then is redirected toward my computer - a thin, sleek macbook pro computer, no more than a year old. My eyes light up at the promise of free internet where there had previously been a requirement to pay. Though I'm a bit distracted by the churn of a coffee grinder aided in its serenade by an oversized grouchy blinder, the corner of my eye catches a glimpse of a sidewalk scene I will never forget. A young man, dark complexion seemed to be gasping for air as he stood awkwardly pressed against a police car that rested in the parking lot of the neighboring gas station. The young man's eyes would have revealed his age or the roundabout nature of his maturity, but his dreadlocks held tightly onto his face desperately obeying the humidity. Two cops, husky in size, pinned the young man down using what I think was reasonable force - though he was unarmed, smaller in stature, and for all intensive purposes, cooperating. Before I could develop an idea about the arrest (or what I assumed to be an arrest), I turned my head, sipped the poorly made frappucino, and began typing again. 

 damn.

I was a coward. I strategically hid behind my degrees - more the prestige than the paper itself - and the notion that "it wasn't any of my business." But as I look back and recall that scene, I now know that it was absolutely my business as well as the business of every other Starbucks patron. This young man was shown no love, compassion, or respect. More foundational than that, I should have been outraged that a brother, a HUMAN, was being stripped of signs of his humanity right before my eyes. Broad daylight, two against one - and yet excessive force and bullying seemed to remedy the situation. I doubt it. And yet, I sat more concerned about my minor troubles (and pitiful coffee drink) to truly be concerned.

Spirituality enter stage left. Walks over to Johmyrin. Stares him down.

I have claimed to be an Uppity Negro, infiltrating the bedrooms of white women at night and raping them with my intellect just long enough to gain their approval and disarm their wedded bedfellows. I've gained their approval and, in the process, lost an essential connectedness with the plight of those unable to live in both worlds successfully. My courage has been transformed to conformity, justifying my lack of exercise by the sly phrase "I can't help those beneath me if I'm on the same level as them." And though this saying is true, a crucial element in reaching back or paying it forward is constantly immersing oneself in the culture of the downtrodden. Majority culture, practices and habits have always and will always be readily available for my mimicking; however, I can not forget to truly understand the plight of the minority class by using a nonjudgemental heart and a loving spirit.

That's where I faltered.

I've wrongly bought into this idea of success - as empty, misunderstood, and wrongly contrived an idea it is. Success, as we know it, mandates a form of sell-out mentality. We must lose ourselves in order to gain access into those locked bedrooms of opportunity. Instead, we should strive for greatness. Being great demands reflection and constant questioning of dogmas. We don't buy into the status quo but we recognize it for what it is. Being great forces us to infuse our humanity into our daily practices - even while we innocently sip drab coffee in a local cafe. Greatness calls for us - for me - to take my deepest disapproval for the mistreatment of my fellow man and act in love on their behalf. To ensure that wrongs become sustainable rights, and that my brothers and sisters of all races treat one another in a spirit of greatness.

I'm ashamed that I sat and did nothing to help that young man. I pray that God has found grace on him. But rest assured, my actions from here on out will be those linked to the hearts of my fellow man. I am no longer an Uppity Negro. Forget that.

I am a Great Negro.

fin. 


Thursday, July 8, 2010

Who saves Simon?

Some nights I cry out in agony from the imaginary scars left behind by the weight of the cross I bear on a daily basis. Some of the suffocating teachings from my religion have taught me to be emotionless - to suffer in silence because pain is only temporary. 

I beg to differ. 

I'm different. I slipped into this world on the heels of destiny with fate holding my right hand hostage just long enough so that it would be estranged to my left. There were some subtleties that were written elusively between the line that separates my first name from my last. I am not exactly who they said I am. 

My back has always been strong. This part of my creation was purposeful. Because I wasn't Jesus carrying that cross. Though like him, I would inherit a world that hated me, loved me, felt indifferent toward me. Yet, my fate was more likened to Simon, the Cyrene. I have a cross of my own and yet I am constantly beckoned to assist in carrying the load of others. 

I won't complain - yet. 

I imagine this life to be an uphill experience, a dirt road where barefoot men, women, and children trample up the rocky side of a steep mountain. Each has a cross paraded on his/her back. Each cross is a different size, made of a different type of material, and varied writings are etched on the surface to give life and acknowledgement to each person's struggles. There are individuals however, who seem out of place. They carry two and three crosses at a time. And I weep for them. 

And yet when I take a step back to see the entire landscape, my tears seem to have more reason. I see individuals on the sidelines taking breaks on the journey while select nomads bear the full load of their crosses in the interim. It looks almost like punishment and yet no one as much as gives notice to their staggering footsteps, broken posture, or sweat ridden bodies. 

Correction. No one notices me

I've been taught to help others - unfortunately at the expense of my own progress. False teachings that are outdated, enabling and unproductive. Who exactly saves Simon from his plight? No one. I'm not concerned with how fair life is. As I said, I'm different. I can deal with the cards I've been dealt. But I am frustrated at the idea that life may never present me with tools to alleviate myself from the load - even occasionally. 

C'est la vie, some might say. Again, I disagree. If I'm stuck with the cards, I would like to at least know how to play the damned game. 



As they went out, they came upon a man of Cyrene, Simon by name; this man they compelled to carry his cross. Jesus told his disciples, "If any man would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. - Matthew 27:32; 16:24