Wednesday, November 6, 2019

Why Fly A Rebel Flag






Why Fly A Rebel Flag



Many want to hold on to a flag,
which doesn’t do anything
but put people in body bags.
The Confederate Flag,
is an image
so haunting,
many use it as a way
of taunting
and flaunting.
So that they are lost,
trying to find
an excuse,
to use violence,
as a way to silence
the upward progression,
to end racial segregation.
So the fight,
for what’s right,
is a plight
and struggle
that will end
only at the end of time.
Only then the blind will see,
the need for racial unity
and equality.
Yes, for all of human kind,
from all above,
oh yes, one God
oh yes, one love.
So no need for a confederate flag,
because all it does is put people in body bags.









Tuesday, October 8, 2019

A Series Of Plots







A Series of Plots



With life being a series of plots,
inspiration comes in fleeting thoughts.
Sometimes what I jot,
is not
what is hot
but what is real.
Saying what I feel,
in my heart
is true art.
With life being a series of plots,
inspiration comes in thoughts fleeting.
While ideas are defining,
and so true telling,
 compelling.
Thoughts provoking,
with truth being spoken,
in the form of a series of plots.
So for this,
  when inspiration comes I must jot,
because life is nothing but a series of plots.






Wednesday, September 4, 2019

On Borrowed Time








On Borrowed Time



Living on time borrowed,
is like a cool breeze
moving in like tomorrow.
Life’s pace,
and the rat race,
is all a steady flow.
Although the current moves so fast,
you still have time to look back at your past.
Everything
is not a blast,
but reality seen
through many eyes.
So to realize life as it is
takes time.
 Like the process of wisdom to gain,
you learn from your pain.
So as time is borrowed,
its up to the creator
for us to see tomorrow.
Still a shot at life again,
is a wonderful way how to begin.




Monday, August 5, 2019

From 1st and 10 to Glory



From 1st and 10 to Glory
            When it comes to sports in America, it is a big ordeal.  Regardless of what team or what sport, Americans have a passion about all sports.  College football is one of the oldest collegiate sports played every year in America and over the years, college football has helped America by making a huge impact on improving race relations.  It is through college football that has put a spotlight on the efforts of a team rather than a player.  The progress made in college football has caused the breakdown of segregation in American’s colleges and universities.  With African Americans playing for predominately white schools this has helped to start the process of breaking down the walls of segregation.  This came as the plight of the African American student athlete became more dominate.
            Before 1961,  African Americans had not won the Heisman Trophy until Ernie Davis, a Syracuse University running back, won The Heisman Trophy in 1961.  The Heisman Trophy is the most sought after individual award in college football.  Davis, being the first African American to win this award, contributed to the sport and helped start a level playing field for African Americans.  It was Davis who blazed a trail for many others to follow.  While he played at Syracuse University, he met many challenges that were racial.  Davis’s team played in the 1960 Cotton Bowl Classic in Dallas, Texas.  It was Davis and his non-white teammates that were forced to sleep in a black hotel.  Due to the fact, of the Jim Crow laws in the state of Texas, blacks where not permitted to have accommodations in regular hotels.
After the Syracuse victory over the Longhorns, the African American football players were not allowed to attend the award show and the trophy presentations according to John Brown a teammate and roommate of Davis.  African American players were not allowed to remain for the banquet either although Davis was the Most Valuable Player of the game.  Davis had to leave with the other African American teammates and they were not allowed to enjoy the moment of victory because of the racial segregation.
With the life of Ernie Davis as a person, and not just an athlete, he gave to America hope in the form of a brave- hearted soul who worked hard to accomplish many things in his life.  He was an inspiration to not only African Americans, but anyone who wanted change.  Davis made such an impact on the gridiron that then President Kennedy arranged to meet with him after the presentation of the Heisman Trophy.  Davis and President Kennedy shook hands.  Sad to say, that this would be the life of a young gifted African American man as Ernie Davis, died at the age of 23 with acute monocytic leukemia.  Although, Davis passed so early in his life before his prime, he left a legacy of greatness that stretched far beyond football.
This gridiron legend that not only excelled on the football field but as a man who was a strong advocate for civil rights.  It was not all what he said but it was how Davis carried himself on and off the field.  It is through this man that helped paved the way for a better today and with Davis's life, we have a glimpse of hope for an even brighter tomorrow.  Ernie Davis left this world with something that is hope, thank you Ernie Davis.

Monday, July 1, 2019

Bold Lyrics Of Love







Bold Lyrics Of Love




                                                             I write bold ballads of love.
With lyrics of love from above,
tears hold and touch me.
Kisses melt in my heart killing me softly.
My heart is a door unto your soul.
Let my arms hold you,
and let my heart love you.
Let me love you until no more,
oh, queen you I adore.
You are my dove,
of love.
I cry tears in front of you,
and this is a poem to say I love you.
I write bold ballads of love,
you inspire me and are so well thought of.
Bold Lyrics Of Love.



Tuesday, June 4, 2019

Despite The Odds






Despite The Odds

When it comes to the American theater, you have to consider the great playwrights of America.  One of the greatest American playwrights was August Wilson who was born April 27,1945-and died  October 2, 2005.  The general idea of Wilson’s plays was to capture the African American experience.  Wilson was from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and he was the fourth child of six children.  Wilson grew up in the hill district of Pittsburgh and it was the hill district of Pittsburgh that would shape and mold Wilson’s ideas for his plays.
Wilson’s talent as a writer started to emerge when he wrote a twenty page paper on Napoleon I of France while in high school.  Sorry to say, his teacher accused him of plagiarizing the paper so Wilson became discouraged and finally dropped out of high school.  After he had dropped out of high school he still continued to self-educate himself by going to the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.  It is here where Wilson studied many writers that would later influence his plays.  Legendary and influential writers such as Langston Hughes, Ralph Ellison, and Richard Wright inspired Wilson not to give up on his dream to become a successful playwright.
While Wilson taught himself, he also began to work on menial jobs.  On these jobs, Wilson began to meet different people who would later inspire Wilson’s characters for his plays.  When Wilson began to write, he first started as a poet.  At the age of twenty Wilson began to submit his poetry to Harpers Magazine.  Although, Wilson showed his talent as a writer his mother wanted him to become a lawyer.  So with this conflict of interest, Wilson’s mother put Wilson out the family home.  Now that Wilson had left his family’s home he enlisted in the military.  Although, he had joined the military, Wilson only served a year of active duty and then left the military to return to Pittsburgh.  In Pittsburgh, Wilson went back to work at jobs such as a short order cook, dishwasher, and a porter.  Working at these type jobs, Wilson continued to attempt to publish his poetry.
It was not until 1968, when Wilson and his friend Rob Penny founded the Black Horizon Theater, which was a starting place for Wilson to present his plays.  As a matter of fact, Wilson’s first play Recycling, was produced by the Black Horizon Theater.  The Black Horizon Theater used small theaters, schools, and public housing community centers to preform Wilson’s plays for only 50 cents a ticket.  It was the Black Horizon Theater, which lead to the maturation of Wilson as not only a playwright but as director as well.  While Wilson began to write his plays, he also discovered the need to direct his plays as well.  By doing both Wilson, was able to further his craft.  Wilson had the knowledge to direct his plays as well as write his plays and this made him able to expose his art further.  Wilson began to learn two crafts at once while he wrote and started to direct his plays.  Wilson began to become a better playwright, due to the experience he gained from directing.  Since Wilson did not have the experience of directing, he would then turn again to the resources that he started with which was the use of the library.  By Wilson doing so he began a long but slow process to a life of fame.
With his early success as a playwright in Pittsburgh, Wilson and his friend Rob Penny and poet Maisha Baton, started what was called the Kuntu Writers Workshop.  The goal of the workshop was to bring writers together as well as to help them with the process of publishing and production.  In 1976, Vernell Lillie, founded the Kuntu Repertory Theatre of Pittsburgh, and it was Lille, who directed Wilson’s play The Homecoming.  The Kuntu Repertory Theatre of Pittsburgh and The Kuntu Writers Workshop are two programs that are still active today.
In 1978, due to advice of Claude Purdy friend and director, Wilson moved to Saint Paul, Minnesota.  In Minnesota, Wilson began to write educational plays for the Science Museum of Minnesota.  It was in Minnesota, where Wilson worked as a cook for the Little Brothers of the Poor.  In 1980, Wilson earned a fellowship form the Playwrights Center in Minneapolis.  Through this event, Wilson would become connected to the Penumba Theatre Company of St. Paul.  The Penumba Theatre became a place where a lot Wilson’s plays where premiered.
In 1990, Wilson left St. Paul for Seattle, Washington.  Seattle was where Wilson became a part of the Seattle Repertory Theatre.  It was this theatre that the majority of his plays were produced. The Seattle Repertory Theatre produced Wilson’s one man show How I Learned What Learned.  Wilson’s famous collection of plays known as The Pittsburgh Cycle was produced at the Seattle Repertory Theatre also.   This extensive 10 play cycle also known as The Century Cycle included some of Wilson’s finest work.  Seattle was where Wilson would spend his last days as he died of liver cancer.  Wilson’s legacy will live on as a great testament of life and as a great tremendous impact on literature.  It is only literature that will stand the test of time and August Wilson, has made his mark on the American theater scene.
Despite Wilson’s dedication to the theater he had offers to have his award winning play Fences, turned into a movie.  Wilson wanting a black director for the movie, so the movie its self was never produced.  It was not a racial issue it was an issue about culture not race.  Wilson wanted a black director because he a felt black director could relate the African American themes which Wilson’s play was based on.  It was the genius of Wilson to capture the African American experience with a pen and a piece of paper and then turn it into play.  As a playwright, Wilson’s inspiration was the African American experience so in all phases Wilson never wanted to water down his message.  Wilson always wanted to make his plays as real as they could be.   If that meant having a black director for a play then in Wilson’s case that’s how it had to be.
Even without a formal education, Wilson had an awesome career and was honored with many honorary degrees.  He even received an honorary Doctor of Humanities from the University of Pittsburgh.   With all odds stacked against Wilson, he still found success not letting anything stop him.  So the story of August Wilson shows that anyone who has a dream can reach their dream if they don’t give up.



When it comes to Wilson’s plays his most famous plays are Fences, The Piano Lesson, and Joe Turner’s Come and Gone.  It was Fences that earned Wilson a Pulitzer Prize as well as a Tony Award in 1987.  In 1990, Wilson’s play The Piano Lesson won a Pulitzer Prize and a New York Drama Critic’s Award.  Some of Wilson’s other famous plays were Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, Seven Guitars, and Two Trains Running.  Each of these plays were included in Wilson’s century cycle.  The reason why the Pittsburgh Cycle or also called the Century Cycle is because each play is based in a different decade of the Nineteen Hundreds.
The Legacy of August Wilson is so remarkable because it only serves as a testimony to anyone who has a dream.  August Wilson was a man who defied the odds that were stacked against him.  No matter the issue Wilson never gave up.  Here was a man that no matter what went down he just kept on with his dreams.  His heart was so huge for his dreams were even bigger and brighter.  The theme of Wilson’s Legacy will always be an example to anyone who has a dream and never gives up no matter what.









Sunday, May 5, 2019

A long The Way










A long The Way

Life along the way
embracing each
and everyday,
the people we meet
from passing in street
or those we great.
Friends along the way
they help us get through
things or inspire us
to go for our dreams.
Yet they do not
always stay
as we travel along the way,
their out for us
to meet them.
Which is not by chance
or by circumstance
not by mistake,
it is the divine
path that we take
so that makes us.
To be friends
through life along the way,
friends are who meet
as we embrace
life each and every day,
                                                       A long the way.

Monday, April 1, 2019

The Tears Of A Fool








The Tears of a Fool

  

I have cried the tears of a fool.
And those tears,
form a pool.
Bad choices I made,
so many times I have been played.
So many times from God I have strayed.
Trying to be me,
but I was never free.
From happiness
and success,
to a life of stress.
To only fall on my knees,
and then to confess.
From there to be blessed,
oh yes,
I have cried the tears of a fool.
And those tears form a pool.
                                                        Oh yes, I have cried the tears of a fool.

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Caged Bird Meant To Be Free












Caged Bird Meant To Be Free


If love was a caged bird,
then I would let it fly.
Before love could die.
I know love can go awry,
just like a dream can die,
or fade away.
Just like the sun,
on a beautiful day.
Love is like life,
a blessing ,
and a lesson.
So if love was a caged bird,
then I would let it fly.
Because all caged birds,
are meant to be free.
Then if it's true love,
then its meant to be,
then it will be.
Because all love is free.







Saturday, February 2, 2019

On With Change





On With Change


A hoody for Trayvon,
a prayer for Dr. King,
to keep the dream marching on.
One for the song,
“Only the strong
Will survive.”
Oh, alive
is the dream of Dr. King.
With Obama as his main theme,
oh, things are in a current change.
But what does not change
is the pain,
of those who we lost.
While trying to get our point across,
with that being known,
many bridges are to be crossed.
Along,
as life goes on
we must continue on
and stay strong.
The road we have taken,
is not to be mistaken
and we are not forsaking.
Although constantly we are awaken
staring at the dream.
With change,
as its main theme.
                                               So we must continue to bring on change

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

A Renaissance










A Renaissance 


I died once,
but had a renaissance
of the mind, body and spirit.
So out of these lyrics,
I formed my rebirth
on earth.

A soul,
and heart once torn now whole.
Gaining wisdom and hope,
with prayer I cope.
I once was dead in the spirit,
but I am alive in the flesh.
Although God sent me on a quest,
to regain
and maintain
my spirit and soul.
Through a renaissance,
I became a changed man.
That I am,
covered in the blood of a lamb.
By God’s grace,
I am now in a better place.
Because of my renaissance,
and dying once,
things happened for a reason.
For truth,
knowing God is all the proof
 I need.
So, I continue on and let him let lead