Sunday, September 22, 2024

untitled: 9.22

A year ago I had a group of friends sitting around a fire in my front yard. 

A year ago we were sipping cider, talking about life as young professionals, saying goodbye to summer and hello to fall. I fell asleep with the smell of smoke from the fire still in the air. 


I had no idea that when I woke up the next morning, my whole world would come crumbing down. I woke up to my phone ringing so much it fell off the night stand. 


My eyes groggy I was trying to read the dozens of messages while also trying to call them back. 


Our baby had been killed. 

I didn’t understand. I must have been too tired or too in shock to believe them. Tears on the other line confirmed it. 

I had to call my part time job and tell them I couldn’t come in. 

Our baby had been killed. 

I apologized through tears, He also apologized and said not to worry. 

Not to worry. 

Not to worry but our baby had been killed and I couldn’t seem to get off the floor. 


A year and one month ago… that baby had been volunteering at the center. He was raising a little girl. He had breath in his lungs. 


And in an instant. That ended. 


I couldn’t protect him.


For a year now I have questioned whether or not being alive is worth it. Whether being in this job, in this city, in this body even makes sense. 


I’ve had so much hate built up in my soul that it’s slowly killing me… at least that’s what the drs tell me. I have nothing to offer his little girl, his siblings, his mom. Because the hollowness feels contagious and I fear spreading it with hope, joy, memories is more harmful than helpful. I know that can’t be true. But it’s how I feel. 


Grief is weird. Heavy. Sticky. 


It keeps me up at night and asleep during the day. It makes me more angry to the so called friends that left him on the ground than the boy who shot him. 


I know shooters. But more unfortunately I know cowards. This city is full of them. 


I watch their stories, see them in the neighborhoods they do nothing to support. No amount of T shirts made or tattoos added to skin will remove the reality of them being cowards. And perhaps I am one too. Because I’ve allowed a system, institution, fear… keep me from stepping to them toe to toe. They have a sickness I wish I could remove because they refuse to do better, be better, dream or live. And I know I’m not supposed to think that way, but sun touches us all. 


I am ashamed that I’m still here. My desire to see people free from grief, bondage, sickness, addiction and lies somehow keeps me from targeting the very people that keep us reliving this pain day after day, year after year. 


A year ago I fell asleep saying goodbye to summer not knowing I’d be stuck in fall the rest of my life. 


Perpetual death. Browning plants. Dark hours creeping up more than light. Coldness wherever I go. I’ve lost loved ones before. And I’ve lost them since. But for some reason. When they killed our baby, they took me too. As if it were the final nail in my coffin. Maybe I wanted to go with him. Maybe I wish I could trade him places. I do know I want him here, with us… I’m not sure how I feel. But I am exhausted at thinking days keep going by and every single time fall comes, I am reminded of how they took our baby. 


I wish desperately to ask them why. I do my best to tell the next wave of kids just how exactly things have been or should be. All I can do is pray… or is it? My fight is almost nearly gone. But some days I get a good sense to keep going. Others, I really just want to lay down and close my eyes and not worry about having to open them back up. I don’t question God anymore. All my questions are for the humans he created. And let this serve as an open invitation for questions, for a conversation. I’m not scared to be threatened or to die. I’m more worried that a coward controls the narrative of my life. 

Thursday, August 15, 2024

An Open Letter to our OG

An Open Letter to our OG


We often forget to give the greats their flowers while they are here.

Whether it be because of their humility in not accepting the accolades,

or maybe more because we think our heroes never die.

We spend our time working hard to emulate them, in thought, word, and deed,

but somehow expressing love in the moment doesn’t come as easy.

Especially someone as tough as you.

It’s not until they are gone do we truly realize just how much

influence and impact they had on us. 


We lost an OG this weekend. And he didn’t want anyone to know.

Just in his true fashion, he suffered in silence.

And I sure as hell know he is ripping and running with God in Heaven

in a healthy working body.

The pain and suffering for him is no more. All the while,

he worked so hard to comfort those in pain

while he was here. That’s how it goes though, isn't it?

The strongest of us never show our cards the whole way.

Not to be dishonest, but to be “brave”.

We adopted that from him, for better or worse.

We hold our hand close to the chest to ensure folks don’t see the cracks

while we simultaneously hold them up

in love and accountability. 


For the longest time I have said we wouldn’t be where we are today without him.

I certainly wouldn’t.

The way I move throughout schools, throughout the city, is because of him.

Flaws and all, that man cared deeply about young people and made sure to remind folks

that you didn't need to have formal education, training or

letters to your name to be successful.

You needed rapport. You needed the community's co-sign, and man did he have it. 


It’s easy to think about people's shortcomings while they are here,

but I’d challenge that thought and say,

we really want to celebrate and honor folks while they are here.

On the good days and the bad.

Because we truly do not know our last days.

And suffering alone feels less than heroic. 


May we remember Aaron not just as he was on his worst days or his best days.

But may we remember and honor his legacy woven in us,

throughout this city in a way that replicates the mission but breaks free from

individual demons.

A legacy that doesn’t take ourselves so seriously but is very serious about

sharing the gospel and eradicating darkness in our city.

A legacy that literally saved people's lives by stepping in the gap and crossfire daily.


I have so many folks to thank for bringing me up in this life…

but you instilled a skin of armor so thick around my body.

You are the loud voice in my end that breaks through my darkest nightmares telling me

the light is still here. And you saw something in a little white girl from around the way…

that earned your blessing when so many others didn’t get it.

And I will never take that for granted. 


You are a cherished hero whose name is in the Holy book my friend. You are free.