To the White Boys Who Sang Suwoop as We Passed on a PWI
— Jason Harris
for Jonathan Peters (1995–2016)
You are lucky I have control of myself my boys I have armed
all of us with patience We have had that conversation
& if we wanted if we really wanted we could have made that call
’cause where we come from everything that leaves the mouth in plain
speech or song has meaning Everything we say a message
wrapped in warning which is to say I do not want to do this
But away from flame a wick can only dance
so much
Where we come from everything we say a matter of concern couched
in safety You good? rhetorical for I see you be safe
rhetorical for please come back it’s okay, it’s okay in which
we mean I understand Strapped with patience we stopped
in our tracks & the tour guide o the tour guide kept speaking
When your mouth’s shaped like theirs you don’t realize the hurt
coming from it or when to stop Remember our conversation about micro -
aggressions? My lips trembled. That was one of them. Summer heat diffused
my patience into a puddle of humiliation in which later on the ride
home I sat in like grief Summer heat blossomed my fists
into opened palms facing God her light & goodness falling across my life-
lines This is why we have those discussions I say & the road the high
one we learn to maneuver early in adolescence needs love affection
a break because white boys who make light of the lives we live &
the colors we’ve chosen to claim leave us no option but to take it
the high road When we arrive there is a wait & traffic is jammed
How badly I wanted to call up Johnny from the grave who died
for an avenue which is to say property by gunshot wounds to the
head. Had he picked up I would have told him get the strap
but I have learned better & loved more warmly Johnny would have said
pulling shell casings from his head like flowers from earth we savin’
our bullets now we savin’ our bodies too for opportunity to occupy
space So keep ya’ patience bruh & let me rest & besides burgundy
ain’t a color we fight fo’ let alone die fo’ where we come from
Read more from Issue No. 17 or share on Twitter.