Faithfully
Yes, I love myself.
Plain and simple, straight to tbe point.
I am the hardest working person I know. I believe in myself and in other people. I’m realistic about life. I know I will die one day, one day soon if we keep letting adolescents in Politics. Yes, I know I have sinned, but haven’t we all? But it’s knowing what to say when you are asked that question is the key. There is only one person you have to give the answer to. Everyone else is irrelevant. Yes, I love myself, faithfully.
To Tears, With Love
She looked up at me as she cried.
I gave her a hug and wiped her eyes.
I saw a fear in her that couldn’t be explained.
How do I tell her she would never see her father again?
Dear child, why do you cry and weep?
God has come and rocked your father to sleep.
He knew you would come to see him and not realize,
why he’s not talking to you, and he apologizes.
He told me to tell you, he will see you again one day.
Don’t worry about him, in the time that he is away.
He said he will watch over you, and watch you grow.
He said he will be at every graduation and ballerina show.
He told me that you might not see him because he has to hide.
He said name your favorite teddy bear after him and put him on your side.
So whenever you need to talk to him, or need a fatherly bear hug.
You can hug this bear from your father sent with his love
The Great American Novel
In the dream, I'm walking
hands stuffed way into my jeans,
fall leaves whirling on the sidewalk,
lampposts humming white light,
through the town where I went to college.
I'm looking at the rented house windows
and there's a few yellow empty squares—
but there's no parties going on. There's no
CD player blaring reggae, no
guys from freshman sem, no
girls with plaid shirts tied around their waists who want to talk to me, no
piles of crushed plastic cups.
Only the shadows of the boulevard trees from the streetlights.
I realize I'm alone, too. There's no one to
remind the group that 3rd and Elm has a keg,
drop a cigarette in the grass and lose it,
punch a stop sign and clutch their face in pretend injury.
As the raw emptiness and indifference of time hits me
(it's an ache, a squeezing of the eyes)
and I wake, for a moment
I understand Gatsby completely, understand
that there's nothing to make you whole.
Not here.
The Brave Us
America as we know it,
is free and brave.
It started with all americans
living in caves.
People were born,
buildings were built.
From Adam and Eve to babies in quilts.
One blink of the eye,
one hand in the air,
Let's people know that America will always be fair.
Elected officials are Americans too.
Be it telling a lie,
or what they are speaking is true.
Yet, somehow racism always has the lead.
A simple democracy that dropped us to our knees.
A cry for freedom, a hand in the air,
a baby being born, a predjudice stare.
America why me?
I thought all were free.
Wasn't this the reason,
God shed his grace on thee?
Hidden in Victory
History is on the side of the victors.
Yet, victory only speaks of prosperity.
Victory does not expose
The cruelty disguised
Behind the veneer
Of freedom and justice.
“We the people
of the United States,”
Establish a false hope.
The hope of liberation;
Of freedom and justice.
Built broken. Never fixed.
“I pledge allegiance”
to the “one nation,” divisible.
False promises of unity.
Preached, but difficult in practice.
No “liberty and justice for all.”
Divided we stand.
“O beautiful for spacious skies,”
That hides the separation,
Discourse, and Uncertainty.
The illusion of “brotherhood”.
Inequality, injustice, unrest,
“From sea to shining sea!”
Is it possible to fix something
Broken beyond repair?
Well, that’s the American dream.
Start from the bottom up.
But, break down the walls,
and what do you get?
A nation poisoned at the roots.
There is no music here
If only I could hear with Whitman’s ears
But for me, there is no singing
There is no pride in work that is undervalued and underpaid
No humanity in a CEO who squirrels away billions
For yachts or private islands or whatever that much money can buy
While his workers starve and his fellow citizens die from a virus
That’s only served to further line his designer pants pockets
He profits from our collective misery
If only I could hear with Whitman’s ears
But when I listen all I hear are the cries
Cries from the souls whose backs are broken
From the weight of this nation's foundation
From the mothers whose babies were stolen from their arms
Whose bodies were torn apart to make way for more stealing
Of half-white children and dignity and spirit
From the mothers whose babies are still being stolen
In the streets, in their homes, in their cars
It doesn’t really matter where when its here
In America
Sometimes I do hear tones
As I loafe and stare at those summer blades of grass
But they’re so dissonant
Carols of sorrow in a minor key at best
A cacophony of rage with no melody at worst
Where everyone is singing different lyrics
And half the people don’t know how to read music
They hate genres they’ve never really listened to
They don’t know that good music lifts you up
The more I think about it
I'm sure I never liked that Whitman song anyway
It sounds like the kind of mass-produced pop
That’s catchy at first, but then you can’t get it out of your head
It burrows into the back of your brain and you find yourself humming
When you’re in the shower, or driving your car or trying to sleep
You can’t seem to escape it
You know the kind of song I’m talking about
The backing track is the din of the machine
Droning on and on and on
Sure, there’s pride to be had in creation
But the pride is in the way it makes you feel
Not the way it fills your wallet
You don’t have to monetize every hobby you have
For it to have value
Its value is intrinsic
Made by you for you
Whitman sang another song, a song of himself
And if it was still a chart topper
Maybe everyone wouldn't have missed the part where
He implored us to live for ourselves
Instead of being told what to feel or like or think
Chances are the world will unfurl before you
Like a flower in that summer sun
If you let it
For now, all I know is
I can’t live without music
So how do I go on living here?
I languish and get lost in my dreams
Where the pipes are callin’
Not for my death, but my rebirth
Across the Wild Atlantic
Where those blades of grass are literally greener
They say home is where the heart is
And my heart’s not in it anymore
I'm sorry Walt
My throat's too sore to sing, and
I need a cup of tea
-----
Note: Prior to this challenge, I wrote some other poems inspired by America. If you'd like to read them, you can find them at:
https://theprose.com/post/399067/a-slam-poem-for-america https://theprose.com/post/404355/this-is-america
https://theprose.com/post/405400/cave-screaming
Bleeding America (repost)
Ding dong, ring the bell, someone call the doctor
Cause she’s bleeding out her wrists and her eyes are closed slits.
Somebody call the doctor
Cause America is bleeding.
Someone call the doctor
Can no one hear me screaming?
Someone call the doctor
Cause I think I’m watching a suicide
Someone call the doctor
Cause this is the last stand of my pride
Someone get the medic
Because I can’t feel a beat
Someone get the professionals
Before America’s a lifeless sack of meat
America is bleeding,
Do they hear her now?
Her suffering isn’t as fleeting
As it looks to us from here
And poor little America
Is facing her greatest fear.
Someone call the doctor
Cause America is bleeding
And I want to call an armistice
But I don’t have the power
Someone call the doctor
Ease my shredded justice
Or young, naive America
Will become a wilted flower.
Someone call the medic
Cause I can’t feel a pulse
I think we need to shock her
With a couple hundred volts
Someone call the hospital
I think her life’s at stake
And you can kneel upon my neck
If this turns out to be fake
Someone call the doctor
Cause I feel her heartbeat slow
And if she breathes her final breath,
It will be a crippling blow.
Someone call the doctor
She’s been fighting this for years
Someone call the doctor
She watches and sheds her tears
Someone call the doctor
Get her in a stretcher.
I don’t want another life
Shot down by fate’s cruel archer
I’m begging you don’t look away
For this is one death too many
And if you stay in silence too long
The world may forget there was any.
Someone call the doctor please
She won’t hold on much more
Cause America is bleeding,
One foot across the holy door.
And if no one can make a change
Well that’s just fine by me.
I’ll go join America
In ignorant eternity.
Original post: https://theprose.com/post/359761/bleeding-america