I usually have at least one opinion about Black History Month, mostly based on my personal history and experience. I always made it a point to discuss this February phenomenon when I was a talk show host on RMG radio.
While going through some old papers, I discovered a poem I created from the thoughts I scribbled in a dark theater as I watched Tyler Perry’s movie adaptation of Ntozake Shange’s play, “for colored girls who have considered suicide / when the rainbow is enuf.”
I remember the uproar that surrounded Ms. Shange’s work when it first came out. The movie, from my perspective, brought the same intensity to the movie screen. This poem was my attempt to capture my raw visceral response, the emotions raised as I watched the story line unfold.
This is one of my Black History moments.
I do not know
what to expect
I walk into the theater
sit down
and
wait
for what?
I know of the play
and
Ms. Ntozake Shange
its playwright
I remember the turmoil
that swirled around her
around the work
of her hands
and heart
back then
my generation’s un-uttered angst
written in plain view in black and white
I do not know
what to expect
when I go in
and take my seat
when I leave
I wonder
what do I do with
or
make of
these emotions
put on blast?
the movie unwraps itself
and the stories
of the women
begin to wrap around each other
I hurriedly write
snatches of lines
thoughts that rush me
I write
in darkness
out of the darkness
illuminated only by revelation
this community called woman
must pay attention
to each other’s
heartbeat
“A deliberate coquette”
the line startles me
though it is strangely beautifully lyrical
a deliberate coquette
in street language
“I choose to be a whore!”
what pain can drive
a soul to self-inflicted despair
Promiscuity on Purpose
but
what am I do to
with that woman who has yet
to identify her
deliberate coquettish-ness
even
as she recoils at the thought
“another anonymous lay?”
“Raped by Invitation”
an oxymoron spoken
by a wounded soul who wraps
herself in a shroud
of
silent despair
rather than reveal her wounds
because
she laughed and smiled and sat down and dined and dared
to invite a stranger-friend
into her sanctuary
because she trusted the message
and
he violated
her
trust
My fellow theater voyeurs
laugh
in the wrong places
I think
mostly women
they laugh
at
inexplicable scenes
of
heartache
angst
betrayal
bitter tears
too often
greeted with
giggles
guffaws
titters
how many women laugh
nervously
in the dark
because of unspoken connections
to the object
of that laughter?
The desperate girl child
seeks the back alley abortion
desperate
the naive excitement
of a back seat sexual encounter
vanquished by desperation
unwanted life planted in her
that which her broken
and
possessed mother
declares
“that growing inside you is sin”
so many stories tangled together
even as we women believe
we walk a solitary path
but
if we would just look up
we would discover
we are surrounded
by sisters
whose stories
mirror our own
“how are we still alive?”
broken
scarred
forgotten
hiding our scars
lest someone ask
“how did that happen?”
separate lives
connect through pain
connections forged
in the conflagration of life
connections that link us
to the next heart
that beats in sync
to the inequity
called LIFE
it is the pain
that makes us one
in the healing.