Strange Fruit

by Patrick ‘StP@’ Bailey II

Tryna figure where I’m from,

Wana know how I got here,

Tryna find out where I’m headed

What my next step is, I’ll tell you,

 

From the dirt,

On the flip side of the Earth,

From a line of Kings and Queens-

The seed don’t fall far from the tree,

I’m the first,

 

Born

First to rise,

The oldest son

They won’t let me shine,

But I’m gon’ shed my light,

Through the grapevine till I taste wine – but

wait life

Isn’t sweet as they say it is,

It’s a bitter bitch at a pic-a-nic,

With liquor, lynchings, & licorice,

And I got “ripe-for-the-picking” pigment,

 

Want me thinkin’ I clutched the short end of

stick, I beg to different,

Cuz when life give me lemons,

I pimp that shit and ride in with an Xzibit,

 

Dawg, Someone saw and then got, Jelly

They ain’t never seen this much sauce,

So much sauce the Jim Crows couldn’t

pluck off.

 

This is not just some college wit,

I’m spittin “know how”-

You don’t know how deep the trauma gets,

I’m from the Marianas Trench,

 

Can’t destroy the kid,

But keloids on my skin from all the failed

attempts, But then again

Guess that’s irrelevant,

 

 

Such a strange fruit,

Where they hang noose, I hang loose,

The put the squeeze on me cuz I got the

juice,

Don’t get shit confused,

The whole world is pursuing,

Like I was for the consumer,

But, I can not let em consume me

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Todo Es Posible

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Vulnerability

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Dear Human

By Genevieve Tucker

Perhaps you didn’t know that It truly
bugs me when I am not constantly
being rubbed. Your long white claw things
brushing through my silky black fur.
While my tail, with a mind of its own
whips back and forth like a metronome
keeping its own time, keeping its own rhythm.
Perhaps you didn’t know that
I am sad and a bit scared when
you leave me. The big brick box
we live in is alive when you’re gone.
The floorboards stretching and cracking,
or the huge sighs of warm air that
gush from the small metal
holes in the ceiling.
Perhaps you didn’t know that
the vibrations and growls that come from
your chest at night are always waking me up.
So, I walk in circles around the bar to tire myself out
like the sheep you’re always counting
in your sleep, I count my cycles around
and around and around.

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Migration

By Ghulam Al Sharifi

We are another part of nature
reborn like so many rainbows,
or like clouds moving in flocks.

From one place to another
we migrate to discover the world,
and to reproduce.

Flying above the skies,
cross the oceans,
landing in new cities,
our life never becomes boring.

But ever so often,
we miss going back to our birthplace.

A place we can never forget;
our home.

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Backyard

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Men Fighting

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A Fleeting Thought

By Ruth Magana

Opal opened the door to a tiny shop. The bell rang sharp and clear as she shuffled in. The floor to ceiling shelves made the darkened room feel cramped. Her eyes shifted over the space and the shadowy corners- how the small windows at the entrance let in a soft buttery light from the afternoon sun. She soaked it all in, trying to commit it to memory. She knew it futile though. She’d soon forget it all by the time she arrived home.

She eyed the aisle to her left and decided to start there. On a shelf at eye level sat pieces of fine blue china. She had no doubt that it cost an arm and a leg during her childhood, but now the price tag read $15. Next to that lay an old eggbeater needing to be cranked by hand to use. Seeing the eggbeater tickled the back of her mind, memories came flooding back in fragments. She used to help her mother make breakfast in the morning. Opal’s long brown hair used to catch in it. She chuckled at the thought, reaching up to the back of her neck where her hair was now white, cut close and cropped to her head. Easier to manage in her old age.

Farther down the aisle she came upon an old basket filled with books. Dust assaulted her nose as she picked one up from the stack. Goodnight Moon. She remembered when it was first published. Her mother used to read it to her and her three siblings to help them fall asleep. She convinced herself the dust made her eyes water. She set the faded colorful book down on a nearby shelf and glided on to the next object that caught her eye.
She marveled at how advanced things had become. At the end of the aisle, a stack of ancient suitcases lay dormant. At the top perched a yellow cracked one. It was flimsy and would no longer protect anything of value. You also had to carry it. The handle, worn and grossly off-center from the many uses and lives it once carried. She felt relieved, such worries could plague her no longer. She doubted her old bones could handle the stress anymore. Now they obtained wheels and pockets! So many pockets.

Opal sighed, running a crooked finger over one of the cracked seams. Maybe she would buy that book… the name escaped her now, but she’d find it. The book would return her memories stolen by this awful disease. Maybe she would read it to her grandchildren, telling them what it was like when her own mother read it to her. Then her lovely daughter would stop sending her worrying glances every time she forgot where she parked, when her husband died, their names.

Opal shook her head and turned back to the overflowing basket of books, searching for it. But the book had disappeared. She rubbed her forehead with a wrinkled hand. Where did it go? It couldn’t have gone far. She pulled one book off the top of the stack then another and another. She shook her head. An orange and green cover caught her eye, resting on the edge of a shelf. A breath of relief slipped past her lips. There it lay. Opal clutched the book tightly to her chest, not letting it wander away again. Yes, the book would help.

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Breakfast

By Jacob Johnson

I strut down the stairs and into my dining room, where the beautiful beams of the Saturday morning sunlight illuminate its essence. As usual, Alex is already up in the seat I dragged him into after our Friday night TV and ice cream session.

“You know, you don’t have to wait for me to wake up to start making breakfast. It is my pleasure, of course, but it’d be nice to wake up to the smell of bacon every once in a while.”

I get some eggs and bacon out of the fridge, turn on the radio for some background noise, and start whipping up breakfast. When I serve Alex his plate, he forgets to say thank you. Again. I look up from the table at him and notice he has turned to a hue of green, as opposed to his usual pretty shade of purple. His neck is cocked back, and he is staring up at the ceiling. I pull his head level to mine, and remind him about our manners. I let go, and his head falls straight down. He’s staring at the plate beneath him now. Still no thank you.

“Alexander. I am getting sick and tired of this behavior. This is the fourth day in a row you aren’t getting anything to eat. If this happens again, I’m just going to have to throw you out back with your brother, who by the way already has maggots feasting on his eyes.”

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Bodies

By: Jiro Jones

We are sculpted with the Earth.

Our legs are like trees, 

made of red muscle and bone.

 

We are rivers and rapids of blood flow

like nectar from the fruit of the vine.

 

We are organic machinery.

 

Our hands are claws made of pumping pink mush.

Small shields of keratin decorate the tips.

 

Little threads sprout on us in collagen gardens, 

which we tend to like farmers

in passing seasons.

 

Incredible is the tongue that tastes,

sensing each feature

each flavor.

Mountains and ridges are in our mouths.

We have valleys and cliffs in each inch. 

 

Our pulses sing like birds.

Like wind, we pull the air. 

Watch us thrive.

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