say her name

IMG_1586I would never describe myself as a poet, but I did just complete a poetry manuscript. I was aiming for thirty poems but last night I hit 28 and knew I needed to take a break. If you add in the 30+ haiku I wrote, I’m well over my self-imposed limit. It’s not hard to write about police brutality when every week brings new reports of unarmed Black women and men gunned down by cops. It’s not hard to write about youth activism when students are marching across the country. It’s not hard to focus on the ways gun violence impacts Black women and girls—as this 11-year-old girl explains—but it’s tiring. I’m weary today and feel like I could go right back to bed but might take a walk instead. It’s a good IMG_1585day for the botanic garden. The snow from last week’s storm should be gone, and it’s nice to see flecks of purple here and there as crocuses welcome the new season. I’m thinking about revisiting an old screenplay, and I’ve got to revise The Return so I can get that novel out before the month ends…still thinking about returning to Scotland and moving to DC and maybe going out to LA with a friend who just got a job there. I feel itchy and weary and basically ate my way to the end of this poetry manuscript. But my agent emailed me from Bologna to let me know there’s strong interest among editors, so maybe this will be the year I self-publish less. It’ll always be my go-to option, but it’s nice to share the labor with others!


indexThat fierce dragon charm was a gift from Maya Gonzalez—and she has another gift on her blog this month: “5 weeks of expanding the mind and beautifying the world with Queer/Trans/Intersex fabulousness!” Do take some time to read and reflect on these critical essays, and if you’re an educator, make sure your students have access to Maya and Matthew’s latest books: They She He Me: Free to Be! and The Gender Wheel. It’s important to demand change from our leaders but as June Jordan reminded us, “We are the ones we have been waiting for…”

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Published on March 25, 2018 07:55
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message 1: by Bean (new)

Bean Thanks for sharing this multi-emotional reflection. I’m excited about the possibilities of having your different works published, and heavy-hearted from the intersectional impacts of anti-Black police violence on Black girls and women. It’s challenging to stay psychically afloat in a world that’s leaves it up to Black children to name the issues and ultimately fight against them — like how the largely-untelevised work of Black student activists at Margery Stoneman Douglas High is lifting up the fact that police violence is gun violence, but haven’t gotten the same platform as their non-Black classmates. I hope for all the areas of our lives to be more intersectional, and to better center the liberations of folks whose harms have been unaddressed for so long.

https://www.theroot.com/black-student...


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