Friday, August 19, 2016

A Laid off Shepherd to His Main Chick

What if Christopher Marlowe were a passionate shepherd today? What might a letter to his love look like? I think it might go a little something like this if he lived here in America. (Please place tongue firmly in cheek while reading this ... Thanks!)

A Laid off Shepherd to his main chick

Come live with me and let’s pay this rent
And we won’t wonder how money’s spent
With Two incomes no need to be nervous
And bill collectors won’t withold service

Stable living might pull us off the rocks
Fuck getting a haircut, I can grow Locks
My people, your people still talking collapse
Keep talking shit, I’ll let the phone bill laps

Life for us has been no bed of roses
Two doors rarely open after one closes
Blossoms or not, I just want you to stay
You know I don’t make my bed anyway

(Sigh)
Constant applications with no reply
Talent and skill this world will deny
Have to remember, nothing lost but a try
I Sleep just fine, my help comes from the sky

Head up, shoulders back, I repeat to self
Confidence is key to amassing wealth
Certainty grows in your garden of love
No cliché to say you come from above

The baddest outfit and Red Bottom shoes
As soon as these job searches bring good news
At some point my life is bound for accent

So come on girl, help a brother pay this rent

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Big Brother and Little Sister

“Grief does not change you … It reveals you.”  John Green, The Fault in Our Stars

For a time, she seemed to be getting better. The doctors had removed all the tubes from her throat and my baby sister was able to sit up and hold a decent length conversation before exhaustion set in and she would need to rest. I tried to take advantage of those moments. I tried to talk about anything and everything that I thought would keep Toya’s mind sharp, and keep her spirits lifted.
We mainly talked about me and my life. I lived in New Jersey at the time and since she couldn’t travel much, on account of her twice-weekly dialysis appointments, she did a lot of traveling via my stories. We made a deal that once she was better, and had gone through her rehabilitation, she would come visit me. She had never been to New York and it made me feel so good that she was thinking about life after this moment.
“What is that?” she asked as I stood up to investigate out the window. “It’s a navy helicopter.” Its turbine engines were so much stronger than the hospital’s regular helicopter that the walls in her room shook.  The landing pad was just a few hundred feet outside of her window-- a reminder that she was a patient in the Intensive Care Unit. “It looks like they are practicing take offs and landings on the hospital’s helipad.” She relaxed her shoulders and leaned back, I always had a nack for explaining things in a way that put her at ease. We had a lot of practice being big brother and little sister.
“So you ready go to your new room?” They were upgrading her status away from the highly-critical ICU to the elevated-health-status part of the floor, a sign that the doctors didn’t think she was in as much danger. In retrospect, perhaps we were all in too much of a hurry. “Yeah, I guess so …” she sounded so tired I thought to myself then and I my heart whispers to me now. 

This was the last conversation we would ever have.
 
I did get to ask her a question. Her answer has kept me from loosing my mind in the years since. I leaned in close so no one could hear our conversation: “You aren’t trying to quit on us are you?” Her eyes locked in on mine, she frowned her brow saying “NO” quite firmly. Her body may not have been able to continue, but her spirit was always strong.

She went into cardiac arrest as the plane taxied down the runway, I would piece together later. By the time I was able to get another ticket and fly back, less than 24 hours later, she was gone.