POEM: SOMETIMES/BLUES FOR SARAH

photo by Alex Lear

 

 

 

SOMETIMES/Blues For Sarah

(a meditation in 6/8)

 

         Hello.

 

sometimes we be talking but not sharing

all the thoughts we need to say/

need to hear

even as we mean and appreciate

every word we exchange

 

1.

how typical and terrifying

for a Nanny spirited sistren to spend mature years

up to her ears in tears and fiscal vexations

the scratch simply insufficient to do more

than skim the surface of survival

but what if there was dust on your tracks?

what if you have enough money to meet the man?

what then? would it matter? would you be happy?

the immediate answer is yes! hell yessss!

but i think not

it is not money we miss most, sometimes

all of us are so alone

sometimes worriation starts with just a longing

to be wrapped in the home of another body who cares,

to go liquid and be drunk by a thirsty lover

who will be rejuvenated by the brewing,

to sing hip movements and the fine feathers

of squeezing nakednesses together,

to grow in a space where talk is silence

but communication is real, is live, is flashing

instantaneous music,

—black music, bright and beatific—to be a vibration

and become the shape of the flying piano keys cascading

masterfully up and down,

strong upthrusting drum notes,

cymbals shimmering,

rimshots skittering to the outer edges of giddiness

and a bass blowing huge in the dark,

sometimes to be music and be together and still,

between tunes, between sets, be right up under each other

doing all the things you are in unison

 

but no.

this is america.

we are black.

         and our music—even the fast tunes—

         is all blues...

 

2.

sometimes, we try, we really try harder

to be sane amidst the chaos surrounding us

we skillfully host cultural programs,

we reluctantly go to the slave,

responsibly raise our children

and sometimes wait

for the phone to ring

 

sometimes

 

as we choke on a chest full of songs

wishing only for an opportunity to join

a serious band

 

 

P.S. the money does make a difference

especially when all the gigs are one nighters,

it's just that, out music demands so much more

than merely solos

 

         Goodbye.

 

—kalamu ya salaam