Friday, December 2, 2016

The Attitude











The Attitude



I look life in the eye
and hold my head high.
sheading tears
as I face my fears
yet still I persevere
as I pray.
 Trying to live for today
I see trouble that comes
in many forms
although I press on
through the storm.
While looking life in the eye
Holding my head high.



Saturday, November 5, 2016

Will You Remember Me









Will You Remember Me




Will you remember me young?
Will you remember me when I am old?
Will you remember when I sang my last song?

Will you remember me when I have no more stories to be told?
Will you remember me if I never reach my goal?
Will you remember me when I am old?

Will  you remember when I am at the end of my road?
and I gave my all and soul.
Will you remember me when I am old?

Will you remember me like my first kiss?
Will you remember as I still would exist?
Will you remember me as a pleasant memory?
Or as life has come to be?
Oh old life,
Will you remember me?


Sunday, October 2, 2016

Her Beauty








HER BEAUTY




Her beauty is deep,
like the secrets she keeps.
Her heart is unknown
her body is fully grown.
The lady’s eyes are like diamonds,
as she glows
 the sun glows.
After the rain
 she leads you to the rainbows,
Then sun sets
And she’s gone.
But her love is like life that goes on
Oh yes her beauty is deep
Like a cycle of sleep
Oh her beauty,
Her beauty.


The Pain Of Fame








The  Pain of  Fame

I gave to world music,
 pop culture and a
 icon.
I made money the size of tons,
and when I died the world left me with nothing
but the pain of fame.


Dedicated to Michael Jackson



Thursday, September 1, 2016

To Lose His Life Dedicated In Memory Of Trayvon Martin





Dedicated In Memory

Of Trayvon Martin


To Lose His Life


 Its amazing
that us black and brown
are caught up on stand your ground.
Can you feel the pain
of the family of a young man
who is slain.
Who do you blame?
It’s a shame
that so many die young
just because someone can own a gun.
Many say it was not the case
 of race
but in the first place
Trayvon Martin was of the human race.
So black, brown, or white
is only a plight
and color is in sight
but by the heart
it is right
so by the bloodshed
its color is the same red.
So to kill another
is to kill another brother
that to many may seem hard
but we are all children of God.
So for a young man to die
is an outrage
with prejudice as its own mental cage
not only to die
but to not see justice is a atrocity
which leads you to say where is the liberty
of this so called free land?
 Why is the right of proper action
not taken
but forsaken?
So for an outcry
all people rather black, brown, yellow, red, or white
it is a shame for any man to lose his life.



Wednesday, August 3, 2016

A Mother's Love







A Mother’s Love



A mother’s love
is from above.
Something that only the heavenly father could quilt.
My mother sang lullabies
as my cradle rocked,
reading me stories about Goldie locks.
In the morning she wiped
the cold out of my eyes with her spit,
even then I knew her love for me would never quit.
As I would be late for school,
 she would say “ Beat it all the way to classroom.”
as a child she always kept me well groomed.
Telling me “ I could do anything I put my mind to
and if I trust in God even my wildest dreams would come true.”
 It’s nothing like a mother’s love.
A mother’s love,
is from above.
It’s ingrained into my heart,
knowing my mother’s love
would never leave me or part.
And still today
the prayers that she prays,
sustain me from not going astray.
For a mother’s love
is a love that anyone
and everyone
can hold on too,
a mother’s love.


Runas C. Powers, III











Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Thanks Momma










Thanks Momma  

Thanks Momma,
there is nothing
I would not do
to transcend to the ends
of the earth for you.
For priceless
is your love’s worth,
it’s hard to imagine 
             for a man              
to understand
a woman at child birth.
So I say to you,
Momma God bless your life.
Thank you for raising me right
It’s you and Dad’s Godly insight
that keeps me on the right track.
As a your child and as a man
your discipline was always so stern
always teaching me to live and learn
and with pain and drama
we all take a turn.
So, I say momma
I love you
and that we are all due
the storms of life
that we all have to walk through.
But you are strong
and you will continue
to always to do
what you do
which is make it through
so thanks Momma and I love you.

Love, Coley

Monday, May 2, 2016

An Unsung Hero Of The Civil Rights Movement








An Unsung Hero Of The Civil Rights Movement

            As we know, the struggle for civil rights has been an ongoing and uphill battle.  The fight to improve racial equality has been a must vital cause.  Throughout the fight for civil rights, there are many soldiers who gave their lives for a better life for all people.  There are many unsung heroes who did much but never received their credit. As those who dedicated their whole lives to the struggle for civil rights and did not gain a lot of self -recognition, one name comes to mind E. D. Nixon.
            Nixon was a man who was always on the front lines of the civil rights battlefield.  Nixon was one of the most influential civil rights leaders that was never properly recognized. He worked alongside people such as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks and Ralph Abernathy. Although, Nixon was in the company of all these famous civil rights leaders, he did not gain the fame that his contemporaries’ did.  The role Nixon played in the in the civil rights movement was huge.  It was Nixon who was one of the key players in the Montgomery bus boycott. His work was very crucial in the success of the Montgomery bus boycott but Nixon achievements went unnoticed.
            E.D Nixon was born July 12 1899 in Lowndes County, Alabama. Nixon was the son of a Baptist preacher. Nixon ‘s mother died at a very young age and with seven other siblings his education was very limited.  In fact Nixon obtained only 16 months of public school education. Even with very little education, Nixon became a successful leader.  He proved to be a dedicated civil rights leader.
             Nixon was a key figure in the struggle for civil rights but many other civil rights leaders over shadowed him.  In 1955 Nixon work with Montgomery bus boy cot was tremendous.  The boycott was very successful with Nixon’s help as an organizer and a planner.  It was Nixon and Jo Ann Robinson who began to find the right strategy to attack the bus system of Montgomery.  They needed actual witnesses to testify against the racial discrimination of blacks riding the bus system of Montgomery, Alabama.  It was Nixon who ultimately chose Rosa Parks for the task that was at hand. She was arrested because she refused to give her seat to a white person on the bus. Rosa Parks was a key witness in the case of  Browder v Gayle that proved that the Montgomery Bus system was unconstitutional. The segregation of the bus system was ended in 1956. Although, Nixon spearheaded the plan of action, it was Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks who would later gain world fame for this great victory.
            As a life-long organizer and activist Nixon became the president of the Montgomery branch of the N.A.A.C.P. and he was highly involved in the Montgomery Welfare League, and was a leader of the local branch of the Brothers of The Sleeping Car Porters. which was the organization that Nixon himself helped organize.  Nixon also was very heavily involved in the Montgomery Voters League and in fact in 1940 Nixon organized a failed mission of 750 men march to the courthouse in Montgomery, Alabama to protest voters registration.


E. D. Nixon was a very well respected civil rights leader.  As a matter of fact, Dr. King thought very highly of Nixon and had these words to say about him.  King said that Nixon was “One of the Chief Voices of The Negro Community in the area of civil rights and a symbol of the hopes and aspirations of the long oppressed people of the state of Alabama.” This statement made by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. indicated the hard diligent work that Nixon had accomplished to bring hope to not only blacks in Alabama but to all other oppressed people around the world.  Nixon dedicated his whole life to the fight for the advancement of people who were disenfranchised and oppressed.  As an unsung hero Nixon did many great things and has never received much credit. He continued to work and serve those who needed not only a mouthpiece, but someone willing to take the much needed action to accomplish the task at hand.
The life of E.D. Nixon is the life of a great man who did many great things for which he received very little credit.   Although, his worked mattered much Nixon was a man whose life and legacy unfortunately is lost in history.  Although his life is recorded in the history of the fight for the civil rights movement, Nixon is hardly recognized as a civil rights leader that made a serious impact or contribution to humanity. He was responsible for the insurgence of Rosa Parks and how effective his strategy was in bringing down the segregated bus system of Montgomery, Alabama. While Nixon worked along- side of Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks, he was just as important to the movement as they were.  Nixon promoted many changes to come for the world to be a better place for all people.  Nixon passed away in 1987, leaving a forgotten legacy behind.  Nixon was a man whose accomplishments are credited to many others.  He was an unsung hero of the civil rights movement. It is time to pay homage to this legend!

Sunday, April 3, 2016

The Kid




The Kid


        Many call baseball, the American past time, a game that many love to watch.  When I think of baseball, I think of the great players of my generation such as Ken Griffey, Jr.  To me  Ken Griffey, Jr. was the greatest all around baseball player of my generation.
When watching Junior, I saw so many amazing plays from him in the out field or at bat that showed how gifted he really was.  He was the most complete player in his prime than any other player in my generation. When it came to hitting, fielding, and to base running Junior, was the most complete package.  He hit an amazing 630 home runs while bating a life- time average of 284.  He played 22 seasons and was a 13 time all star.  His play in the outfield was awesome as well.  Junior. was a tremendous center fielder.  As a great center fielder, Juinor won 10 straight gold gloves award.  Although Junior was excellent with the glove he was mostly known as home run hitter.  Junior.  hit  2,781 base hits with 1,836 rbi’s, which further demonstrates his expertise.
Some of the great stats that Junior, complied in his career was to hit 8 home runs in 8 consecutive games.  This record he shares with Don Mattingly, and Dale Long.  Junior played for the Seattle Mariners, Cincinnati Reds, and the Chicago White Sox.  His career began with the Mariners in 1989 as a matter of fact in his first home game with Seattle he hit a home run at his first at bat.  Junior,. would play the game of baseball from 1989 until 2010. As a player Junior, earned the nick- name “The Kid” because of his career began at such a young age. Junior made history as the second youngest player to ever start in a major league all star game.  Despite a career full of injuries he left a legacy of greatness that only the games’ greatest could follow.
Although Junior. was a great baseball player, many would say that playing baseball was in his genes. His father Ken Griffey, Sr. had a stellar career as a baseball player himself with the Cincinnati Reds, Atlanta Braves, while completing his career with his Seattle Mariners. As a matter of fact the father and son duo made history together by hitting back to back homers in the same game. 
  
With the successful career of his father, Junior had tremendous pressure to live up to.  At one while the pressure became so intense that Junior, tried to commit suicide. Life was then difficult for Junior, as he tried to come out of his father’s shadow.  As a great baseball player, playing behind his dad was very difficult. Even with a suicide attempt and all the pressures of life, could not stop the greatness of “The Kid” on the diamond.
As Griffey, Jr. completed his career, his battle with injuries would take their toll on his ability to play the game of baseball.  He gave so much to the game of baseball, with so much enthusiasm and pride,  Ken Griffey, jr. to me is the greatest all around player of my generation

Saturday, April 2, 2016

On Thursday April 21











On Thursday April 21 2016 @ 2 P.M. at the Adelia M. Russell Library I will have a book signing and a poetry reading.  This event will feature my new book Verses Of Pain and Love.  I thank all who have supported my blog over the years and I also thank all who supported me throughout my career thank you God bless.



Thursday, March 3, 2016

A First Poet






A First Poet


            African American Lit in many ways has had a lot of first.  Many debated who the first African American poet was that had their work published.   Stated as a fact in the encyclopedia, Phillis Wheatley was the first African American woman to have her poetry published.  Since Wheatley was a slave the origins of her birth are unknown.  To estimate the time about when she was born would be roughly about 1753 and the time of her death was in December 1784.  Wheatley was captured and brought to America in 1761.  At a young age she was purchased by a wealthy family from the Boston Massachusetts area.  The Wheatley family encouraged Phillis Wheatley to write and learn to read. Phillis Wheatley was named Phillis because of the slave ship that brought her to America was named Phillis.  Although it was not known at this time despite the hand that was dealt to Wheatley she used it to build a great legacy.
As Wheatley grew into her life as a slave, she became interested in becoming educated.  As a matter of fact she began her process of learning by being tutored by her master’s daughter Mary Wheatley.  By the time Phillis Wheatley became a preteen she was studying Greek and Latin.  It was through her master’s encouragement that helped Wheatley transcend into a poet.  She studied the works of Alexander Pope, John Milton, and Virgil.  It was these authors that influenced Wheatley to write poetry.
            When it came to the style and structure of Wheatley’s poetry she used a formula that consisted of three elements.  These elements were Christian beliefs, Classicism, and Solar worship.  With these elements plus life experiences Wheatley was very capable of creating potent poetry.  It would be her focus on religious and moral themes that was the main ideas from which her work was created.
            In her work Wheatley expressed herself so well to the point that many thought that she stole her poetry and ideas from someone else.  With many thinking that she did not write her work she was put on trial to see if indeed she was the author of her work.  In 1772 Wheatley had to prove her poetic skills before a court of law.  In this case Wheatley proved to be the author leaving many in shock .It’s a shame that many did not believe a West African female slave could write poetry.  This would make Wheatley the first African American female to have a book published.



Wheatley’s book called Poems On Various Subjects, Religious And Moral was published in England in 1773.  With the success of her book she traveled to England and was invited into George Washington’s home after she wrote a poem about Washington.  The poem was called “To His Excellency George Washington ”  It was poems such as these that brought Wheatley not only fame but her freedom from slavery.  In 1778 Wheatley was freed from all forms of slavery.  She even married a man named John Peters who was a free black man in the grocery business.  Sadly by the year of 1784 Wheatley’s husband was imprisoned for debt.  So Wheatley’s effort to support herself was to become a maid.  The same year Wheatley died in December, she was only 31 years of age.
Much is to be said about the legacy of Phillis Wheatley.  As a young girl she was stolen away from her homeland.  As a child she was cut off from her roots due to the fact of evil practices of slavery.  Throughout her life she made the best of it.  Wheatley was given lemons in life so she made lemonade. With her pain she expressed poetry from her tears.  To be forced to live in a land unknown to be bought, sold and owned is a sick way of life for anyone to live.  Although despite these things this lady showed the world that she was special and through her soul she gave birth to the idea of African Americans being writers.

Friday, February 5, 2016

Choices






Choices
  

King had dream.
Obama was squeaky clean.
Malcolm said by any means.
Huey P,
had an army.
Back to Africa was Marcus Garvey.
Langston Hughes wrote
Stokeley Spoke.
Rosa Parks
gave the Spark
Harritet Tubman
lead us out of the dark.
Joe Louis was the people’s champ.
W.E.B. Dubois was en lighten like a lamp.
Ben Carson had gifted hands.
Ida B. Wells took a brave stand.
Fredrick Douglass,
 said knowledge is power.
And so be it,
the African American experience is power
and we have yet to see our finest hour.









Saturday, January 9, 2016

A Future without the Rebel Flag



A Future without the Rebel Flag

For over 400 years, racism has plagued America.  From slavery to modern times racism has troubled our nation in many ways.  The feeling, attitude, or belief that one race is better than another is a very perverse way for anyone to think.  When it comes to racism there are iconic symbols in American history.  The rebel flag in its many different variations’ has a toxic reputation of racism.  It’s the rebel flag and its many different forms that must be removed from all states’ capitol buildings.
            The rebel flag itself has flown for many years during and after the civil war.  Regardless of the after effects of the civil war the rebel flag to me is a device of evil.  Now I do know that in those days of the civil war only rich men owned slaves.  In those days a man who was considered a planter was automatically freed of duty having to fight in the civil war.  A planter was a man who was able to afford 20 slaves or more.  With this being stated The Civil War was a rich man’s war but a poor man’s fight.  It’s information like this that prolongs racism in many different ways.  For example, since a poor white man had to fight in The Civil War and a rich white man was entitled not too, this showcased the divisions within society in those times.  So a poor white man had to use slavery to subject himself higher than a slave.  So the poor white man had to convince himself that he was better than a slave just because he was white.  I also have reason to believe that in order to keep the balance of power at hand the rich white man feed the same lie to the poor white man.  With this unjust diabolical method he used this to keep his stronghold on both the slave and the poor white man.  As I know these dangerous fallacies still continue to provoke racial tension in many different ways.  Many rich whites and poor whites still feel wrongfully entitled to everything.  A former slave to become a free man is not supposed to have anything.  It was these systematic lies that made the situation of racism even more problematic in those times and now.  As a result the rebel flag continues to be an iconic symbol of racism and crazy ignorant bigotry.
            With the divisions of races and the evil process of slavery I believe the rebel flag is used to preach racial segregation.  Many whites say that to remove the rebel flag would not change anything.  Their argument is that you can’t change history.  With this I strongly disagree because history you can’t change but at the same time with proper education you can change how people think.  For example many whites have said to me “We don’t treat yall like that anymore so you can’t say we are racist.”  With this I say the damage that was done way back then cannot be changed also.  To expand on my point is the physical, emotional, and spiritual damage that was done back then still affects blacks today.  The racism endured by the black race has damaged the overall psyche of all blacks young and old.  So by taking down the rebel flag for me is not about trying to change history but it is about trying to repair or rehabilitate the black psyche.

            If the rebel flag is removed from all state capitols it can change the perspectives of younger people and generations to come.  As the rebel flag continues to fly it only promotes racism.  The racism that is produced by the rebel flag is evil in all forms that destroys the unity of our nation.  The belief of one race is better than the other is a sick and twisted way of thinking. It is very dangerous and explosive to races all over the world and America.  The confederate flag must come down to preserve and protect the future of all American citizens. America is a divided nation which must find unity to survive.  One way I believe to do so is to remove the rebel flag of all state capitols.  The idea of you can’t change history must be revamped to we can’t change history but we can change the future that the present brings on.  By starting with the youth being the future we can reeducate them to build a better tomorrow.  So to remove the rebel flag from our state capitols is a must for America’s future.