Archive for the 'Rants' Category

Heartbeats

Yesterday one of my closest friends boarded a plane and flew across the world. A little more than 24 hours before that, we were sitting on the sofa in her parent’s living room watching the end credits to Knocked Up scroll down the television screen. I had my arm around her and her head was resting on my chest. She said she could hear my heartbeat, and I said, “I guess that means I’m still alive.”

I’ve been thinking a lot about that statement since that night. As the New Year approaches I’ve been thinking a great deal about the beating of my heart, that persistent, thumping reminder that I am still alive. 

At the beginning of 2007 I didn’t feel very alive and it only got worse before it got better. And now I wonder why the same girl who tore my life apart in 2006 and 2007 continues to pull at my taped-together edges as 2008 rounds the corner. 

I remember when it was good between she and I, and nausea still bubbles in my stomach when I think about how bad it got, and how I kept trying as she walked away, saying “I cant look you in the eye”. I remember hating the sound of my heart, beating through my chest every night I stared at the blank ceiling in my room waiting for the sun to rise and bring a new and hopefully easier day. 

I despise those memories because most days they keep me from making new ones. 

They keep me from holding hugs a little longer when a friend is flying off to another country the next day. They keep me from reaching to hold hands with the girl I’m sitting under the stars with at inspiration point. They keep me from asking any girl on a date and instead just hoping she’ll get my impossible to ascertain intentions somehow, and feel the same. They kept me from telling one of the most beautiful and intelligent women I have ever known that I would love to take her out on a date if she is at all interested. Instead I avoided eye contact gobbled down my entire pita bread salad and half of hers because staring into her eyes renders me a nervous wreck, who fumbles his words, and that scares the shit out of me.

In 2008 I will finish my mfa applications with optimism. I will hold each hug longer and firmer. I will remember the thrill of risk taking because I will embrace new risks. I will not avoid eye contact. If given the opportunity, the right place, and right time I will ask for that date and not fear the answer. I will remember my past and the lessons it has taught me. I will remember my mistakes and do my best to make sure I don’t repeat them. I will cherish my heartbeats while I have them so I’ll have no regrets on the day my heart drums its final beat.

Out with the old

My old ipod lasted me through college and kept me company during many sleepless nights so I wont complain too much about it, but I got tired of fixing it so it was time for an upgrade. The clickwheel was my main issue with my old ipod so the new ipod classic didn’t realy spark my interest inspite of the its massive amount of hard drive space.

ipod touch

When the ipod touch came out I was all ready to take the plunge seeing as it had all the amenities of an iphone without the pain of an at&t contract, or so I thought. Out of the box the ipod comes with wifi, safari, and a youtube application for web based activities. However, it doesn’t have google maps or a mail application like the iphone does. This realization made me second guess buying the touch, until I heard about jailbreak.

ipod touch jailbreak

Jailbreak is a bit of code which allows third party and several iphone applications to be added to the touch interface. After finding out about jailbreak I went ahead with my purchase of the touch and I’m definitely glad I did. It’s a wonderful device and I definitely recommend it over the new ipod classic unless you’re one of those folks who like tactile feedback. You do have to look at the touch in order to change songs and navigate the menus, whereas with a classic you can just memorize the feel and placing of the click wheel buttons. It’s a small nuance but a nuance nonetheless. I guess it depends on your preference. Also if you’re more into music than gadgets i would just go with the classic; it has an 80 gig hard drive, massive as I said earlier, is an understatement.

Well that’s all for now merry Christmas and happy New Year.

Statement of purpose: draft 1

My mother lifts her eyes from her paperwork and glares at me over her glasses from the other side of our round dinner table when I tell her I’m taking twenty-eight units my last semester of college, eight for no credit teaching with June Jordan’s Poetry for the People. I tell her I don’t care about the credit; teaching is not about the compensation, she should know, she was once an underpaid, overworked teacher herself. But she pretends not to hear me, lowers her eyes back to her paperwork and tells me I’ll never graduate if I don’t stop wasting my time with that class.

She always referred to Poetry for the People as “that class”, a “waste of time”. She told me I should pay more attention in legal studies and philosophy; work a little harder studying for finals in my major, classes that count, instead of writing and revising poems tirelessly every night at 2 a.m. She would scream from upstairs ordering me to go to sleep, I would crank up the volume on my ipod, and go back to the pile of poems, spread across our round dinner table, urgently needing revision, and pretend not to hear her; I didn’t want to argue, didn’t want to waste time.

My mother’s words echoing in my head as I write this remind me of the questions pinballing in my mind as I sat through junior high and high school, three years of legal studies and philosophy in college, searching for writers of color in PowerPoint presentations, course readers, or even, just maybe, optional summer reading lists. The same questions flooded my mind as I scanned every bullet-pointed syllabus looking for assignments requiring an anecdotal account of a young black man’s life growing up in Richmond. I wondered where the writers of color were, did my constitutional law professor forget to include them in his thick, two volume reader, did they not fit into a class on feminist jurisprudence? Where were they in junior high, high school English, did my teachers think studying their words, and reading mine was a waste of time?

Throughout my education, studying literature and poetry meant a long stint in a classroom trapped in an uncomfortable chair studying European history, Jane Austen and Shakespeare for hours, endlessly. I found nothing familiar in the dreamlike, often avant-garde literature I read in English classes and yearned for more from history books than a rerun reading of Martin Luther King Jr’s I Have a Dream speech during black history month every year. There was no equity in writing; amongst the pages and pages of reading and writing I was required to do, I found little space for my voice, my story or the stories of my ancestors.

With each new poem and every paragraph of prose, I think of myself as refusing to waste anymore time accepting the absence of black voices in classrooms. I see each word as a trumpet, ushering these voices into curriculums that ignore our histories. Writing about black love and heartbreak, about my own family’s history, about black public school kids in my neighborhood coldly handed failing report cards like prison sentences and death certificates bearing their own names, I demand space for our words.

When I was invited to teach with June Jordan’s Poetry for the People in fall 2005 I found myself among other students who were also searching for their own words and for writers whose faces and stories reflect their own. What stories did these poets have stuck in their throats? I wondered if they scoured the contents of their history books searching for the voices of their ancestors, stories of their homelands between the pages. Did they scribble poems about recent heartbreaks in the margins of Shakespeare handouts in high school? Did their mothers tell them poetry was a waste of time?

Attentive as I lectured on black history and affirmation and pushing themselves to write every new draft with fearless urgency, these poets ignited my faith in teaching. With every workshopped poem and each office hour they fueled my desired to teach in spite of the sleepless nights, no compensation or course credit, or even at the expense of my GPA. They taught me, as June herself proclaimed, “the art of telling the truth is a necessary and healthy way to create powerful, and positive connections among people who, would otherwise, remain (Unknown and unaware) strangers.” I watched them transition from shaky voiced students reading first drafts on the first day of class to poets unafraid of the fire in their own voices with words to still even the air in a packed room. Witnessing their journeys gave me the strength, as a teacher and writer, to continue my own.

I will not waste another second, I will spend my time writing about the exhale of relief after a breakup so that someone else will put down the bottle of tequila and let go of the fist full of Tylenol after the severing of their latest love. I will write of the lynchings omitted by historians making space for Christopher Columbus’ clumsy travel tales. I will write poems to make the West Contra Costa Superintendent a little less comfortable in his chair, so he will know the discomfort felt by kids at Stege School after he snatched theirs. I will be a writer; I will stop playing poet, pretending all I’ll ever be is a passive blogger. I will write with my mother’s words still echoing in my head: stop wasting time.