Wednesday, 10 December 2014

Shine that Light Goddess!

I'm going to publish this musing on behalf of my best friend Teekay who is too shy to share her art and thoughts with people. I think it's wonderful and an introspective relation of a strong black goddess. Before it is a poem by Marianne Williamson which I dedicate to Teekay (as all as myself really) because I think we both need to constantly get these encouraging words. But for her, I would like her to forget ego and kill fear because she has so much light to shine on the world. Honey you are a storyteller and an amazing singer/ dancer/poet/ choreographer! Shine! 


Our Greatest Fear —Marianne Williamson

Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate.
Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure.
It is our light not our darkness that most frightens us.
We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous,
talented and fabulous?

Actually, who are you not to be?
You are a child of God.
Your playing small does not serve the world.
There's nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other
people won't feel insecure around you.

We were born to make manifest the glory of
God that is within us.

It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone.
And as we let our own light shine,
we unconsciously give other people
permission to do the same.

As we are liberated from our own fear,
Our presence automatically liberates others.

Teek ay's Musing (edited) 
I have lived to create a story that will be told through pictures and books when technology and peoples fictional lies no longer exist....

What a week I have been through! Its as almost as if I'm in a movie where I am my own enemy and my own savior. A simple door knock turns into a pool of unbelievable red to black stories. In life you can only forgive yourself for what you know you have done to create a path that has lead you to your reflections, and the comfort is in having someone who brings sanity to you.

The next chapter is spiritual healing, physical healing and belief in one self. As honesty is the best policy for decency of behavior, be a role model for yourself first before you become hijacked of your building materials that you haven't used to finish your model foundation. Never  leave any windows open with hope that it might not rain. Rather, take that risk by playing outside  and protect your internal treasure before the storm kicks in.

I have been blessed to still have my memory, as in it lies a map to guidance from all the things I have seen and recorded as important and crucial. 

Take each day as it comes because you have already created a universal connection with your future path. I now believe that there is nothing more important than loving oneself as the spiritual world, where ever or what ever it is, can sense when there is doubt and will return the favor. We are our own gods. It took me 26years to realize that all the powers that we seek are already within. We just have to embrace and believe in that instead of chasing what we cant use.

My eye will heal, my soul will believe, and bad energy will reek out of more jealousy...but I will forgive you.

(Granny thank you for protection) 

Life is a learning curve
— feeling thankful.

Monday, 10 November 2014

Dear friend

Dear friend. 

I hold no resentment in my heart towards you. I acknowledge that right now we are miles apart, mentally. 

Forgive me I can't stay. I have so much to do today. 
I'm running because it's what I do. If I could I would carry you. I've always been running, at times next to you. But right now you're holding me back. 

We all have struggles and I'm handling mine. I'm not your enemy, get yours in line. Comparing yourself to me is wasting time. I love you but you're taking me back. 

The politics of pretty: permed, pigmented and portioned.

According to media and general society up until recently, a beautiful woman was a thin blond with long wavy hair immortalized and perpetuated by the means of Barbie. I've never been Barbie. 
And up until I was 16 I always wanted to someday be like her. Well growing up I wanted to be a brunette white woman like that girl from Dawson's Creek. I thought she was really pretty. Until I heard a poem called "Barbie's suicide letter" by a South African poet called Masillo. I loved her for it! She had killed her inner Barbie and accepted what she really looked like. Accepted that she was beautiful in her black skin and baldness.

Up until now I've been on a mission to prove mainly to my parents that I can have beautiful well maintained natural hair despite the pressure to perm and conform. For a while I've been in natural forums and preaching the natural movement with other women who have the same passion, not against perms or weaved but for choice. Today I have to accept something that I've been running from for quite a while now. Welcome to my politics of hair and beauty. 

While I was transforming into a conscious teen I cut my permed hair as a statement that I was moving forward into true self discovery. I could not express this to the people that meant the most to me, my family, because I knew the ridicule that would come from it. When I failed to maintain it due to lack of knowledge I used to twist my hair into mini- locks in the weekends when I went out and hide from everyone until I got back and took out the twists. One silly day I forgot to wear my hat to hide my twists before I got back into the house and walked into my mom and older sister. They just burst out laughing at me. They ridiculed me and when I tried to explain it to them they told me I was going through a phase. My purpose and opinion was brushed aside just like that. I was told to clean up and look decent. 

The first phase of self esteem for a girl I would think, would be reassurance from parents and family that she is beautiful. I was no stranger to that. In my youth I was praised and told I was pretty as a picture. However when it started to matter, in my teenage years, I was told my idea of beauty was indecent and not normal. My natural self was indecent and not normal. My mom was afraid that my dad would see me that way and that his opinion would be worse. It was. But I wasn't to find that out till later. 

When I faltered under the pressure, I permed my hair again. The first day I went back to school with relaxed hair,  I had many compliments from the boys and girls ( but the boys mattered more because I was straight and crushing hard). They liked my permed hair. One particularly came to me and said, "You look beautiful. You should always keep your hair this way." I think any teenager likes to be told they look good. Was I satisfied that the boys thought I was pretty? Yes I was. Was I satisfied that my hair was permed? No. Perms have always been torture to me. The whole process is a nightmare. 

One of my early memories is being about 8 or 9, sitting in between the legs of a distant cousins while she braided my permed hair, pulling roughly at my scalp telling me to endure it because we girls have to suffer for beauty. At that stage, she was much older than me so I didn't argue. My aunt had asked her to "help" me by braiding my long thick hair because it would make getting ready for school easier. I remember sitting between her legs thinking " I am already pretty, I don't need this." And also thinking " If I'm not pretty, why should I suffer for it? Why shouldn't I just accept that I'm ugly outside and work on being pretty inside?Is this really worth it? Is she just doing this on purpose because my hair is longer than hers and she's jealous? " But that could've been because I was raised by a woman who didn't value beauty as currency but rather promoted hard work. I was used to being called pretty without pain added to it. This suffering for beauty notion was foreign to me. 

At the dawn of my empowerment,during college, I took charge of myself and cut my permed hair again, much to the dissapoinent of some of my new friends. Black people have this notion that cutting long hair is blasphemy since a lot of girls have trouble growing it. That's not an issue for me. I lost a significant amount of weight too in college. Suddenly, my natural hair was no longer a problem. It was liberating and kinda euphoric, being attractive and being me at the same time. Maybe it was because I was amongst educated people who could see my cause? I'll never know. When I went home, it was a mission. My friends always noticed that when I came back from home after the summer, I always had braids. My parents would have it no other way. Braids became my saving grace. 

Alas when I finished college I went to live with my sister for a year in Johannesburg and sported my natural hair once again, getting weaves when I went home to Maritzburg, until I decided that I wanted to really work on having my dreadlocks. One year of dreadlocks that wouldn't lock because my hair was too fine, I had them sowed up and was really patient until I had to move back home. My dreadlocks were coming along fine, I even got advice from the Rastas and they said I just need patience. I knew this was true. Then the doom started all over again. 

Months and months of my fathers continuous badgering me that I looked like a hoodlum with dreadlocks and that my personal style was distasteful. My mother would plead with me that my father was on her case everyday about the way I look. Way to go, me, for making my parents fight because of the way I looked being natural. Months and months of pleading with me that I didn't look decent or normal. In the end, I thought it was horrible for me to make my parents feel so ugly and unaccomplished by my appearance. How dare I, under their roof, be less than the image they want for themselves? I chose to respect their opinions over my own and I changed the way I looked. I permed my hair, I got a weave. I stopped wearing bracelets and started wearing plain clothes. I looked " decent". I did it for them and they were happy for it. I mean, who doesn't want to make their parents proud? 

But I didn't feel prettier. I didn't feel better. I felt used. Used for someone else's happiness. Used as an image, a front. Used as comfort. Used, in my own flesh, to be something that I am not. Yes, all these feelings came from the hair. It's THAT serious for me, despite what other people say about putting too much emphasis on "just hair". I am not beautiful to my parents anymore like I was when I was an obedient child. A permed child, pretty as a picture like they used to say. I'm not and I have to accept it. My inner being holds no water to what I look like outside when I represent my parents to the world. I just don't " look" the part that's associated with what they think is wholesome. I look like a hoodlum. 

The first thing I did when I got out of my parents house was transition my hair back to natural and finally cut the permed hair off. I've been natural for two and a half years now. I hope to never have to live with my parents again. I have since been learning my own hair and it frustrates me at times because perming would be so much easier but I can't forget the pain and dissatisfaction it comes with. I also can't forget how much I miss the texture of my own hair when it is permed, or even when it's hiding under braids for a few weeks or months. 

Being that the pressure came first from home, I was less aware of the pressure from outside of home because I didn't care much for it. But now that in alone, it stings. Now that I'm alone in a different country, it stings even more. 

Regardless of my hair, back in my home country, I was attractive. Being curvy or plus size isn't really an issue where I come from. But that's different in Japan and I've learned it's also different in America( which puzzles me because it's the worlds capital for obesity). Regardless of that, I wasn't bothered about it until I noticed that people actually do treat me different out here because I'm big. Those experiences may or may not come in a different post. Long story short , being darker skinned and fat is the opposite of what's considered beautiful in Japan. Japanese people don't really care about my hair, they think it's mysterious. Now seeing that I have a lot of American friends and socialize a lot with Americans, I have discussions about hair with them, especially the blacks. That's wonderful. 
However it isn't when it comes to dating. 

My third point of rejection comes from the black men of my race. I cannot keep my mind from flashing back to my teenage years where I was praised for a perm. Therefore when I'm dating someone and they say, " babe why don't you do your hair like her?" And they show me a picture of a black girl in a weave, sirens pop up everywhere in my brain. This man thinks I could " improve" my look by getting a perm. It dawns on me that he thinks I'm pretty but maybe not up to scratch according to his standards. I could be better. I admit I'm not a natural hair guru, but my hair is never untidy or dirty. As any girl I make sure I look my best in front of him. When he sees me, im pretty. Here, in a situation where my blackness is not offensive and weight is not a problem, suddenly my hair is a threat. 
Can I never win in this world? 

It dawns on me that I need to be the correct pigment and portion and be permed to be pretty in this world and quite frankly I'm tired of all these external stimulators. I am not an island, I would like to be accepted no more that everyone else does. But why does my appearance offend people so much? Why can't they see the beauty that I see in myself everyday? 

I can't speak for all black men, I don't know all of them. I just know that those are the ones in my society and those are the ones available for women in my society and of course straight women will feel pressure to appeal to them. Myself included. But if their idea of beauty is warped then we still have a long way to go, especially when raising kids. We're heading towards that age, some already there. 

I'll keep my natural hair and I'll be the triple threat: black, fat and natural. I can handle it. What I can't handle is being something I am not. 













Tuesday, 4 November 2014

Spheres ( 2014-5-29)

Spheres 
Turning points 
Spheres 
Melting pots
Spheres
A bouncy flip-flop spot of 
Turn me out
Turn me in
Flip me out 
Fold me in 
Above as below 
Balance. 
Settling at the semi-circle 
Rotating 
Until we are whole
Where everything possible is conceived

They said what needs to be will be 
And so it is
Starting here 
Beginning everywhere
Ending here 
Ending everywhere 
Spheres 

Intersections
Intersexes 
Complexes
Multiple directional flexes 
Rotations
Flips and turns 
Raises
Throws
Catches
Collapses
Pulls 
Pushes
Salutations
Revelations 
Exoduses
Geneses
Jesuses 
Iscariots 
Me's and Me's and Me's 

Spheres at the womb whispering of 
Rebirth 
Newborns
Pathways
Spheres at the foot gossiping of 
Journeys
Pathways 
Travels
Heels

( spheres at the head protesting of regeneration, rebooting, manifestation) 

Heal to tow 
Baggage trips to infinite release 
Shrines 
The galaxy trash can
The celestial ingestion of human 
Emotional defaecation 

Spheres 
Karma throwing her toys out 
Inside 
Outside 


Tuesday, 21 October 2014

My pieces of Peace


How can I explain the serenity of sitting in the approaching dusk next to a river, across from a world heritage site. Not afraid of harassment, not worried about getting mugged or raped or killed. Just hanging out with my own thoughts as company, contemplating these victims and a grander story behind them that involves me too. The pieces start to come together. My own narrative unfolds before me. Why am I here? To be remade. To have my faith, emotions and beliefs torn down and reconstructed. Much like these two cities, Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I've seen my devastation and now it's time to build. 

Saturday, 4 October 2014

Mdwabashu WaseLangeni

This next blog is about my brother , Philani Siphesihle Ngcobo, who has been missing since 2007.  It is a poem tribute to him in Zulu.I've written about him before and I probably wont stop here until I know where he is or what happened to him. My  soul will never rest until he is at peace.

My first born brothers' name is of great significance to me and the family. He carries the family title as well as the praise names as the heir and first born. His name, Philani, is a blessing meaning "live" or "prosper in health/life". His middle name, Siphesihle is a derivative of my fathers name (Sipho) which means "gift". It literally translates " wonderful/beautiful gift.

I view his naming as a word birthing blessing into the family that begun by him being the first child of my parents. They moved from being a married couple into a family with his birth. Thus his naming was significant and he carries my fathers name in him. It shows my parents and grandparents wishes towards our family. Hence his disappearance was and still is shocking and ill serving to the balance of the family whole.

Fuze
Mashiya amahle
Mdwabashu waseLangeni
Mshizi wezindlu
Mahlokohloko adla insimu ayicakaze
Mapholoba
Sipho esihle sikaMama
asiphiwa nguBaba
Ndlalifa

Ziyofika izesheli zami zivinjwe ngubani na?
Bayofika abakhongi bami bamukelwe ngubani na?
Zinkomo zikababa ziyokweluswa ubani na?
Siyophila kanjani uPhilani engekho na?
Ibizo lakho elasamukela selihlushuliwe phakathi egcekeni lakwaNgcobo
ugcobo lesuliwe phakathi kwethu

kanti kwakhala nyonini lapha ekhaya?

Ihlokohloko selathula

Ngilangazelela izwi lakho Zibulo
Ziyokhuluma izinsizwa soze ngizwe
Kuyothi mhla kungena izitha zizoqothula siyothi
Liphi elihle kakhulu?

Ngephuzile
Izitha sezafika kakade
isakhiwo sendlu kaBaba singaphelele sacekelwa phansi
silele ngikomzwelo
silele ngokomoya
sinqika nqikaza kushoda isisekelo
umphini wokuqala omkhulukazi onamandla
ungekho


Mdwabashu
Siyokwanda ngani na?
Siyofunga bani?
Ngimanxebanxeba angipholi
Umphefumulo wami uyopha

Monday, 29 September 2014

Juice and Biscuits

Dear Asha*

Remember that time when we were young, in Primary school when you went to aftercare with most of the white kids and I stayed outside on the school fields waiting for my dad to fetch me until they locked  the school gates and I had to wait outside?

My father was a school teacher but he was also a part-time student at the local university so I had to wait for him while he attended lectures until late and sometimes he would fetch me very very late after school and I would be tired and hungry. But most of the time I didn'tmind  watching because I could play with a whole lot of other school kids meanwhile. Except when it came time for cartoon network on  TV and all the after-care kids would go inside and watch and we would go sit at the banks behind aftercare trying to peek through the windows so that we could get a glimpse, and then fight over the best spot.

But you were my friend. You came out of aftercare to play with me. Until it was time for juice and biscuits. I remember that very well.

4'o clock. The dreaded time, 2 whole hours after school ended. ( that was 4 hours until I was in Senior pimary, grades 4-7) Everyone would be hungry by then since lunch would've been at 12pm.

    -                                  -       .
 
I remember how those biscuits became currency. Asha, you and I were friends until those biscuits came and then you would be queen of the playground and get some of the girls to do things for you in order to get those biscuits.  I remember how after a while I didn't care about the biscuits anymore and I secretly hated you for trying to manipulate me with them. For dominating the playground simply because you had the currency to. It wasn't enough that you were already faster and more athletic, that you beat us at games and your parents could afford to send you to aftercare. That your parents were richer than ours and soon bought a house near the school, you simply had to take away our dignity by bullying us hungry kids with biscuits.

I started carrying extra sandwiches to school to avoid the biscuit craze. I remember how beautiful a miracle it would be when a random kid would arrive at the playground after school and pop out their school lunch unfinished or even more wonderfully, untouched, and wither give away, break bread between the crowds or just use it to bribe everyone. More turns at a game. A sandwich for two after-care biscuits, sitting at the front of the line during line-up-time.

Or that angel kid that just gave her lunch away because she didn't like polony. First come first serve. The spoilt kid who never ate her lunch becuase the maid put to much butter in her sandwiches so she would only eat, juice-and-biscuits.

Asha do you remember you gave me my very first phonecall? I could never tell where I stood with you. First I liked you because you were funny. Then I distrusted you because I felt like you were making fun of me. Then you got a new best friend who shared a name with you and I was left with the other kids pining for your attention until your bestie suddenly left and then she turned into your enemy and we wouldnt stop hearing all her dirty laundry through you since she had been living with your family for a short while.

Then you gave me my first phonecall and that was sweet but I was nervous and I didnt know what to say to you. You asked me what I had had for dinner and I told you. I wanted to make it sound more special but I couldn't because I'm bad with lies. You giggled and I got even more nervous, wondering why you had bothered with all that effort to go get permission from your parents to use the phone to call me just to make fun of me. I asked you back and I let it rest until the next day at school you brought it up and laughed and laughed and laughed and I just sheepishly smiled and shrugged and left.
Why did you do that? Why did you enjoy making me feel like an idiot?

And  then there was the day it was just you and me, at the field after school. We were sitting on the grass, bored. We played a few games, found things to do and then ended up sitting again, bored. Then we started talking, about everything. Almost like we had been best buddies. And you said, can I tell you a secret? And I said yeah sure, you can tell me. And you told me you had started puberty, and I told you me too. And we talked about it extensively until you asked me if I wanted to see it. And I, a little surprised but even more curious, said sure, if you wanted to show me. And you did.  You lifted up your uniform dress and pulled down your panties and there it all was. I saw it and I was amazed. All that fur. Black and long and silky. And I was just weirded out that it didn't look like mine but we were both black. Yours was longer, darker, fuller, straighter.  You giggled and put it away. I was embarrassed and giggled too. Then you said I have to show you  mine because you had showed me yours. That had not been part of the deal. I said no. I told you I am shy. Then your face hardened and you said I had to because you had shown me yours. I thought that perhaps I was being unfair and I told you mine was different before I showed it to you. We both giggled. You then told me you hadn't seen it properly and wanted to see again. I protested and then eventually after your nagging showed you and felt embarrassed. I didn't have as much hair as you. I felt more naked. And when I covered up quickly, you just as quickly stood up and changed the subject. It was as if it never happened.  
I don't even know why all of that happened. But I had thought that we had gotten closer by sharing such intimate secrets with each other. Only to find out that nothing had changed really The next day you were to announce at the playground to a group of kids that I had shown you my private parts.  And I announced that you too had shown me yours, although I'm not sure who between us they believed. It was just strange for me. Why would anyone do that? I didn't feel hurt I felt embarrassed. But that was most of my primary school life. I didn't hold it against you.

And then came the day I slapped your little sister. I call that day blind fury.

It was a sunny day at the playground and I was sitting alone cross-legged on the grass minding my business as usual. I was reading a book . All I remember is that I was alone and all the other children hadn't made it down to the field yet so I was waiting. I was 12. Your sister was about 9. I liked your sister. I think I liked her more than you, She was a gentle kid, always laughing. She approached me as I was sitting and we exchanged greetings and decided to wait for more kids to come before we could play and I went back to reading my book. Then she started annoying me. Looking back, she probably just wanted attention but started poking at me and getting in my space and I got annoyed. I told her several times to stop but she was enjoying herself too much, giggling and playing the fool. I told her to stop, and she didn't, and so I got tired and kept quiet. And she kept going and going and going and and I had stopped giggling too when out of nowhere my arm swung forward and my hand released a hard forceful slap across her face. Startled, I pulled my head back a little and watched her face turn red, light skinned child she was, and my fingerprints had left darkred marks on her face. She was just as startled. Me, the girl who wouldn't hurt a flea, had struck her. I'm not sure who was more startled between us. I apologized profusely. I didn't know where that hand came from, or the blind fury that drove its force. I pleaded for her forgiveness and asked her not to tell you. I wanted to cry too, she looked in so much pain. I asked her to hit me back as hard as she could. She didn't. She went running, crying and disappeared  behind the classrooms and I didn't see her again that day. Or for a while at the playground

When she appeared again a couple of days later she calmly told me that she would tell you  and that I would pay what I owe. I had seen you, and you hadn't said anything so I had figured she must've not told you yet or you were plotting to get me back by surprise. All the time I felt guilty for hitting a child smaller than me, one that couldn't fight back for being smaller in size.
Needless to say that playground activities continued as usual and after a while I had thought we had all forgotten or even forgiven but I couldn't have been more wrong.

One Friday, lord knows I no longer remember what triggered it, but you Asha told me that it was time to pay for what I had done to your sister. You and your friend called me and your sister to the girls toilets and you told her to slap me. She did. Right across the face as hard as she could and I didn't cry. I was ready for it. I was willing. I would serve the price for hurting a little girl. I didn't cry. and that made you mad. 
Debating between the two of you your friend and you decided that she hadn't hit me hard enough and that you would have to hit me instead, to make it even, because you wanted to see me cry. And you did. You were taller, stronger, bigger than me and you hit me so hard across the face that it stung, that itchy sting, and I felt the tears welling up at my eyelids. I didn't yell to your pleasure. I shut my eyes and walked away. I didn't even sigh. I left you debating again with your friend whether or not I was crying now. I breathed. I was furious. I couldn't cry.  And that is when I knew, that we weren't friends. 


*name has been changed 

Monday, 8 September 2014

Untitled

A whirlwind stirred 
And in it I grew 
Spinning amongst the worlds
Collecting dust and flowers and debris

I threw out the old ideas
Guilt and fear and wonder 
And once I thinned so drastically 
Learned that these had forged most of my being 

I swayed round and round so fragile amongst the mists
That in all the turmoil of the everyday spin- about
The shadows broke me
At the hip I fell apart 

Beat about in the rising dusts 
Pleaded with the earth for a rock to hold on
Pleaded with the heavens for for rain
And once the drizzle came, planted myself like a seed
Firm in the ground

Now I will wait for the sun
Now I will hide behind a rock and follow the light
Despite the winds, I will rest my head gently on the moss that grows on it 
and fix my eyes on the sun

Enjoy every beautiful day that preludes the winter 
Wear my colors proud against the grey 
Feed and breed and dare to dream of tomorrow
And never again be afraid of the wind. 


Friday, 22 August 2014

Izimbali Zebhalisamu. ( Balsam Flowers)

I've been in Japan two full years now. Okinawa to be exact, which really isn't Japan. It's very different. This next piece is one that is very special to me. Six months after I arrived in Okinawa, on December 6, 2012 I started writing a poem in Zulu. It was the first time I ever wrote anything in my home language that I felt was necessary for me. That I felt was profound. I was unable to express my feelings in any other language or way. A lot of thoughts had come together for me to realize how much I cherished my identity and  I felt like for the first time ever, I was connecting with who I really am. This is precious to me because it's one of the main reasons I had decided to go to Japan. It's not something I discuss with people, if I don't feel they're ready to understand it. Which is often, where I am now. It's a part of me that I feel that people who understand my context can truly open up to and share and enjoy. It also comes off a bit patriotic which wasn't intentional but I guess is also a shade of who I am. I like to think of it as just a celebration of my country and my people. I didn't publish it immediately because I knew I needed to add more to it that it wasn't complete. Not long after an Okinawan friend of mine, a music teacher whom I used to practice music with in our spare time, taught me an old Okinawan folk song which I have cherished since. It is in the Okinawan language called Uchinanchu and below the song I've put an English translation of it. I felt that it was the missing part of this piece since it resonates so much with me. So today I want to share this piece. 


I skipped a country to find secrets, beauty, wisdom, knowledge, courage, hope, answers, God. 
I found them all. Not very long  I realized that if had skipped a country to realize it's worth. My country has: secrets, beauty, wisdom, knowledge, courage, hope, answers and God. But what good is all that to people who don't realize what they have? 

Nighlwithe esiswini somdali 
Ngigxume ngasuka  endlini
Ngabaleka ngaphuma ekhaya 
Ngithe ngiyofuna okunye, Hhayi lokhu 
Cha mina ngifuna okunye, okwengeziwe, okungaphezulu, okunamandla, okukhanya kangcono
Okwengeziwe kunalokhu, okucwebezelayo, imfundo ephakemeyo, inkanyiso engaphezu kwaleyo enginayo. 
Cha mina ngeke ngihlale la. 

Vele angiselona ichwane 
Juba kangisilo kudala ngachuthwa 
Xoxo kangisilo kudala ngagxuma 
Angalanga kutshelwa kudala ngopha 
UMopho injwayelo, ngibhandisha ngeZwi 
Ngigeze amanxeba ngezinyembezi
Ngigqoke imiyalo njengejezi. 

Pho kunani! 
Angifungwanga ngingumagcino. 
Kwabathi kangimuliswanga kangibelekwanga nginezimpendulo
Ngafungwa ngamuliswa ngabelekwa phezulu! 
Idlozi lami lakudala
Idolizi lami lokuqala
Idlozi lami lokugcina
Isiqalo Sami
Nesiphetho Sami
Kalingamukelanga belingivunile kakade
Esiswini sikaMama

Mina ngesaba 
Ngahlwitha
Ngagxuma
Ngabaleka

Bengimusha 
Namanje ngisemusha
Indodakazi kangilahlekanga 
Ikhaya ngiyalazi 
Ngithe ekuhambeni emazweni ngibuka ngibona 
Imicabango yasanguluka 

Ngibone impithizelo 
Ngibone bedidizela 
Beya le nale 
Benemibuzo bengenazo izimpendulo 
Bengenandaba nempilo 
Ubumnyama bunzulu 
Benakho konke okufiswa amehlo 
Benethezekile kodwa bengenawo umthetho 
Bakhononda bebubula kodwa kungenadlame 
Benemfundo yonke kazange bayibambe 
Bedla balahle 
Bekhoseliwe bebahle   

Kodwa benozwela 
Belalela 
Benenhlonipho 
Bebekezela 

Amanzi okuphila ageleza umhlaba wonke 
Anikwa laba abacelayo 
Boba bayaphiwa Wona
Yena uvula Imithombo aqhumise umhlaba 
Uveza amachibi yonke indawo 
Ubusise ngemifula 
Wena owomile woza! 

Mina imifula ngiyibonile 
Ngicotshwe amachibi 
Ngaphala izibi ngazihlehlisa 
Ngifuna umfula
Ngazembula 
Bheka manje ngiyagezwa 
Imicabango emibi iyafadalala 
Izibi zezono zami sezizoba yindaba nje 
Mina ngifunda imfundo yaphezulu 
Kumanje lamagama angicoca umqondo 
Ageleza njengempophomo ephemela emlonyeni wami 
Nasepheshaneni lami 

Phuza  nawe ukhombise abanye 
Umthombo kaKristu. 



Tinsagunu Hana  ( The Balsam Flowers)- a warabe uta ( song) 

Tinsagu nu hana ya 
Chimi sachi ni sumiti 
Uyanu yushi gutu ya 
Chimi in sumiri 

Tin naburi  bushi ya 
Yumiba yuma  rishiga 
Uyanu yushi gutu ya 
Yumin naran 

Yuruha rasu funi ya 
Ninu fua bushi miati 
Wan na cheru uyaya
Wandu miati 

Takaradama yatin migaka 
Niba sabisu
Asayu chimu migachi 
Uchiyu watara 

Makutu suru hitu ya 
Ataya ichi madin 
Umuku tun konati 
Chiyun sakai 

Nashiba nani gutun 
Nairu gutu yashida 
Nasan yui karadu 
Naran sadami 
Nasan yui karadu 
Naran sadami 

( English translation) 

Just as my fingernails are stained with the pigment from the balsam flowers, my heart is painted with the teachings of my parents. 
Although the stars in the sky are countable, the teachings of my parents are not. 
Just as ships that run in the night are guided to safety by the North Star, I am guided by my parents who gave birth to me and watch over me. 

There's no point in possessing magnificent jewelry if you don't mantaining it. People who mantain their bodies will live wonderfully. The desires of the person who lives sincerely will always run true and as a result she will prosper. You can do anything if you try, but you can't if you don't. 


Friday, 25 July 2014

Waking dreams

Silences
Waking dreams
More silences
Kisses
Wistful sigh's over the telephone line
In my head I'm leaning on your chest
In my heart our fingers are intertwined

Our bodies may be miles apart
But not our hearts

Not our hearts

The Poem

Someone in my English- conversation class suggested that we all bring poetry and read it for our next session. I volunteer at an English- conversation circle with local Japanese people that want to practise their English. We have a 2 hour evening session every week.

I imagined that this could've been a difficult task due to the cultural differences and the varying levels of English comprehension in the class, but I wrote one anyway. Even if it is just for me to read. And maybe one day I'll share it with the person I was thinking of:


If forever has already begun
then you have already stolen the title
as the theme of my thoughts

I title your name on maps, books, pictures, labels, pariphanalea
You are branded in my smile now.

Let's make minituire models of you
We can raise them
Let's take it a step further and make them limited editions
that only we get to keep
We'll make them with our own bodies
We'll name them after YOU

Let's start a  start a closed corperation
A company of you, me and our beautiful babies

While the author of our lives transcrubes new chapters
We'll skip through pages, colouring them with our smiles and joy
Shining our light through captions
Whispering HIS prasies in every reading

Phela u "mina" akasekho enhliziyweni yami
Usulekile
Njalo mengithi mi... mi... mi...
akusavu-mi

Kumele ngi-thi THINA

2013 Diary entry

I am a little depressed

A year ago I was broke but happily working for an organization I believed in, with all the important people in my life around me. I had my parents, friends, mentors, and I had even found love.
Now, a year later, I have fulfilled some of my dreams. I am travelling, living and working in Asia,  but at the cost of leaving these very things behind. I was happy, and I changed that for bigger things. Things I have always wanted.

Lets be straight. I am not unhappy. I like it here. It just came at a cost and I'm feeling the pressure of it all. I wanted to learn lessons, I am learning them. The process of that is not easy adn i am maturing in ways that I didn't think I was ready for. These are the years that shape into who I will be for the rest of my life. Well, that sounds too final but, they mould my outlook on the world and influence some of t he biggest decisions I will ever make.

That said, it doesn't help that my mentors and spiritual advisors aren't close. All in all, I feel lonely. And heroes walk alone, yeah?

Saturday, 19 July 2014

Sunday Morning KwaMachibisa.

Sunday morning,the choir woke me up. 

They bellowed at the top of their lungs as if to wake the whole neighborhood and let them know that Jesus is King. Even those who were reluctant were now on their way. Streets cluttered with well dressed commuters. Shiny polished shoes, pressed dresses and glowing weaves. Children running about in the church grounds, spilling onto the congested road. Cars moving slowly through a narrow road. Cars parked on either side. Sun hats and umbrellas. Bright colors. Loud exchanges of greetings through the clamor of church drums and insistent keys. 

We could hear the hum of the engines as they trail down the road in single file, revving as they got closer. Black leather coats and denims. Gloves. Hats. Dreadlocks. The bikers were on their way to church too, making a grand entrance that has everyone excited. 

At the convenience store next to the church, old men would slowly drift in to buy cigarettes, juice, hot chips, vetkoeks, nursing their hangovers. Next to that, a bar. Sunday morning and some are already having the hair of the dog. Children run about. Stray dogs lazing nearby hoping to get lucky. 

A few houses away, another church is already in session. Sunday school children sing for The Lord. I drive by on the way to my place of worship. Wave at the girls at the salon next door, floor filled with extensions as they're already at work.

I'm late again. 

Tuesday, 17 June 2014

Something happened here.

Something happened here. 

I've been here and not known where else to go. 
I've been here and wanted to be here. 
I've walked up and down this long passage at 6 and 7 and 8 
And at 16 cried and said goodbye to these walls one sudden day on my birthday
As you rushed us out and threw us into the gates of emancipation 
That lasted only a year. 

I've dreamt of this place and longed to be there. 
To be back again, hanging out the half open kitchen door, gazing at the stars
Singing my lungs out to the walls that listened
I've loved these walls
And upon returning embraced these walls and my fate within them
I've hated this place until I loved it evermore

But something happened here
Things have happened here
Things that the walls scream so deafening 
Every time I think of here because despite the fact that nobody wants to talk about this exhausted topic of why and why and why are we 
Like this, these walls remain and echo silently day to day
These walls that are still here listening
When someone else should be here listening instead. 
A person. 

The prayers we utter under this roof fall short when breath hits the ceiling 
The words are swallowed in this concrete, never to penetrate through
There's no seeping, saving plea or utter that will deliver the message further than this enclosure 
But the words will bounce around from wall to wall until we entertain them
In our hearts
That someone here is missing and has left us with these echoing walls as a reminder of it 

Because these walls heard his prayers too when nobody else would listen
These walls heard his screams and his tantrums and his pleas and his cries
When we chose to look elsewhere 
They probably know him better than we do
These are the witnesses.

Something happened here.
I'm not sure what it is anymore. 
All I can say is that it happened to me too. 
It happened to all of us. 
But we won't talk about it.
It's bigger than the elephant in the room. 

And evident in the absence of a soul in this stratosphere. 

Surely now the walls reveal to us the secrets he whispered for so long to deaf ears
I gaze about wondering if I can be here or there and still understand so implicitly that some things cannot be expressed in words and neither will they be heard with the ears 
But felt with the heart 
So much that shut hearts cant decipher the thoughts of a babbling man
Desparate to connect to his root
But instead plucked from there and cast out like dirt into the rubble

The rotten apple that fell not too far from its tree
It's worms now gnawing away at the bark through the root that refused to  nourish it. 

And now this fortress losing it's branches one by one. 



I am watering this place with my tears to feed the boabab.
I'm praying to the sun. 





 


Tuesday, 20 May 2014

Untitled.

Forgive me if I'm a little strange 

I've been strangled free of desires for the most part of my early memories. From the earliest bouts of spotlight lust I was told to hush and retract. I've been believing and I've been trusting. That maybe this love- lust secret relationship with the stage is the beginning of my moral deterioration. That maybe the nail that sticks out will be hammered down and being that nail, never quite able to fit my fat ass in appropriate holes, never quite bending out of sight. I stick out so I can poke you. 
I don't mean to hurt you. I'm just...
Inappropriate.

And this stage has scorned me. My whole life. 
I don't  want it anymore. After all, who wants to be owned? 
I've been told that desires can consume people beyond recognition of themselves. 
It seems to me that happiness is a deathly love, cheering at us while we waste away into it. Embracing tight while we slip away. After all, don't they say that pain makes you feel most alive?

My parents love me.
My parents love me at home. Where they can see me. Where they can protect me. 
I grew so attached to those walls, I started talking to them. I sang to them and under that red roof was my biggest stage. In the kitchen, the walls glowed in admiration of my improvisation as I scrubbed the pots and dishes clean. The walls echoed my sweet sonata, a perfect choir in the bathroom, embraced in the mist of my bath water. 
How can an introvert like me feel so trapped? 

Because I belong here, 
I should stay here, 
within four walls 
safe from my desires. Safe, from the world. 
It seems, the stage never left me though. I've been living as if my fourth wall was invisible. I've been dying to put my life on the stage. I've been writing this play as if telling my own story to the universe. I argued with the wind, I quarreled with the light. This sweet soliloquy drenched pages and pages of literature as I lost myself in the wonders of other peoples experiences and fantasies. 
I began where they ended, thousands of concluding pages announcing that my tale had just begun. Maybe I won. 

Friday, 18 April 2014

Sawubona, Namaste!


Sawubona ( Zulu): From si- (we-ya- (present tense) -wu- (you-bona (to see), therefore literally meaning "we see you".

Namaste: ( nah- mah- stay) - my soul honors your soul. I honor the place in you where the entire universe resides. I honor the light, love, truth beauty and peace within you because it is also within me. In sharing these things, we are united, we are the same, we are one. *


At which point on a dating site do the people stop becoming people and just become faces. Covers of meat bags. Shades of potential fucks. Paintings on a free art show. Images on a passing screenplay. Just faces with no meaning nor depth nor personality. 
While you're scrolling down deciding that you'd rather have your heart broken by someone who actually looks worthwhile, when is the hope lost in finding more? 

Is it initial? The carelessness and disregard of layers that make up a human being or are we just unaware that by the time the online dating account is setup, we've already lost much hope for meaning,  in people who like ourselves would rather hide behind a screen than expose themselves to torturous scrutiny at a public venue while endlessly trying to shine, simultaneously without upsetting cultural expectation and norms? 

Do we upon engaging already know that this, this has more potential to being a waste of energy and time rather than create something beautiful or do we naiively act on, hoping to illude someone long enough for them to get trapped in us so that upon discovering the truth they may wanna stay. Or are we hoping that what we find here will be indeed enough, and start something real and lasting. After all we've heard of worse beginnings. 

And in time, these pseudonames and aliases start to have meaning. They detach the person behind the screen with the person on the screen. Souls detached from being. Just shadows on a playground. Beautiful figures to look at. Artistic works of advertising campaigns marketing products that CAN be sold. Bodies that can be bought with the right bidding. So much variety, bodies that can be disposed just as quickly. Suddenly, faces that can be bold, behind the screen... 

I think I prefer to smile at strangers. 
After all, looking at these profiles, after a while all I can see is myself. I see no souls. Just me. Looking back, lonely and empty and waiting to be filled. Waiting to be entertained and loved and cherished. Demanding from my audience a fulfillment which is really my own responsibility. And the physical  says, fall back into yourself because all you will ever need is already right here. 

Where is the god in you? I see no gods online, just faces. I want to smile at strangers  and greet them. Back home they would greet back. Here, it's a gamble. I want to say, namaste, I recognize god in you and afford you depth before you prove it. Give you the benefit of the doubt. Treat you like a human being. Treat you like a somebody with layers. Show you Ubuntu. 
That is still a concept to be learned out here. 

Even this language I'm using now has it's shortcomings, for me. I can't express in it some of the things I want to communicate to you. I want to say hello. Sawubona: we see you! We, my ancestors and I. The people I carry in my very DNA, the blood that runs through my veins, these legends and stories and accounts and ideas and memories and concepts and dogmas and souls. We see you! We recognize you, human being. Muntu! We see you, living soul,   breathing spirit of God. We acknowledge your presence and rejoice in you being. Sikhona: we are here, siyaphila: we are alive and how are you? Unjani? How are you, all of you! From the mind to the body to the spirit, how are you? 

I want to greet YOU.

But here it's a gamble. Everyday seeing faces that don't smile sometimes. Don't greet most times. Faces become empty vessels. Just bodies, in motion. Everyone on ther way. I may as well  be behind a stupid screen, scrolling through profiles. Disposable pictures with faces I won't remember. Responsive robots I needed for conversation. Ego boosters I needed for motivation. 

I think I'll take more walks. I think I'd rather smile at strangers who don't smile back. At least that way, even if they won't show themselves to me, they would've seen ME. Even in passing. I am here. I am alive. Im so full of everything inside! We are here! Niyasibona. Content with ourselves and our heritage. Through my smile, you will see all of US! 


* source unknown but definitions accepted by general public consensus


Wednesday, 16 April 2014

An Ode to our first kiss

I struggled to find a title for this piece because I don't know what to call this situation, sitting in an office all the way across the world 9 years later and still feeling guilty. I feel more loss than guilt. I only have immaturity to blame. Just youth and inexperience, and maybe a little pride.
So here I am on a rainy day on an island in the East Pacific, listening to Des'rees' "I'm kissing you" and all I can think of is you. My stomach knots up just like that day we broke up and  I want to be sick again. Because now I realize how it all falls into place.


How insignificant is a school girl crush on a school boy who fades into the background always?
And she, for five years, falling with you, fading and dissapearing into the wonder of your world because for her, that was all the light she needed.
I asked you to take of your glasses and you did.
I asked you to unveil your soul to me and you did so, both times without restraint or hesitation.
And, peering in I spent a number of days and weeks and months just splashing around in a deep pool of wonder.

We were children, never lost, just discovering a world of our own.

And then one day you wrote me poetry.

Your words challenged me.

I was not ready to drown.

This is an ode to our first kiss, the one that never happened.

I realize that I am still that child. I'm still that child but now I'm ready to drown. I've been ready to drown for years but now its too late.

I still have your poetry.

Where are you now?

And just like Des'ree, out here today I am kissing you.

If my heart is honest, my heart has kissed every thought of you since that day I walked away.
Caressed it gently and held it tight. Gazed into the moments that we spent in conversation with the teacher interrupting us to make us do algorithms we didn't care about. While we waded the shores of consciousness, entering unexplored territories together we embraced more than most teenagers would at our age. Our hears were bonding long before we became a couple.

So if I bow out of the earth today I want you to know that I have loved you. That may not mean much now but save  the thought under the filename: high school, and reference it to the girl who upon meeting you boldly walked all the way to the front of the line and asked you to take off your glasses just to see YOU. 
And know  that that was my truth.



Des'ree- I'm Kissing You 
   
  Pride can stand
A thousand Trials
The strong will never fall
But watching stars without You
My soul cried
Heaving hard is full of pain
Oh, oh, the aching

'Cos I'm kissing you, oh
I'm kissing you

Touch me deep
Pure and true
Gift to me forever

'Cos I'm kissing you, oh
I'm kissing you

Yeah hey
Yeah

Where are you now?
Where are you now?

'Cos I'm kissing you
I'm kissing you, ohh

Monday, 14 April 2014

Ocean

Yesterday the preacher said that god does not have reactive love but that love is a part of his being. Like, he can't help but love us. It does not have reason. He is love. 

I thought about myself. I thought about how people hurt me, intentionally or unintentionally and I go back when there's absolutely no reason to.I thought about a lot of people that do this. I thought of my relationships. Am I mad? Do I think I am god? 

In the past three years I've said more goodbyes than I care to recall and initially I thought, since I have to get used to this each year, it will get easier with time. My heart will get stronger. This is how things work in this country and they seem ok...
It has not. Not one struggling bit. Each time it gets worse. The more I hurt is the more I love.
Am I mad? Am I god? 


Eros, agape, philia, stroge! Name them all and in my being it's a champuru of heart strings tangled in a mess with frayed knots and scarred laces trying to pull it all up together before it falls apart. 
There will be no falling apart here. No spilling. Somehow I manage to twist and contort this heart muscle into a different position so love can shine it's light again. Buttocks in the air? My heart has been exposed to more wind than that.  

I've learned to keep my things though. Selfishly hold them in now so that unlike Ntozakhe Shange, nobody has any chance of running away with my stuff. I keep mine and if you feel like you wanna run, you may go ahead and the wind will chase you. I'm too busy taking care of my things and pondering over this love-god that has no sense to forsake a hypocrite like me. 

So they come,these wonderers, exploring my shores.
I have yet to meet a conqueror. 
Before long though, it's clear that a holiday at the beach can only last so long. A splash to refresh the soul and they're gone. 

I have been a tumultuous rage of squalls in my lifetime, throwing many a ship onto the rocks and icebergs. I had also been a healer of singed souls. 
I don't wish to be any of these things at all. Have I lost my mind? Have I crossed the bar to the far left? Where emotion rules and there is no trace of intellect? Was I ever even slightly to the right? With the calculating fusion that would make me human? Was I ever like that or was I just pretending? 
Or do I keep sliding back and forth, in seasons? 

I choose this side. 
After all, what calculating god would look at us humans and say, hey, they deserve kindness? What calculating love would look at the fickleness of my heart and say, yeah she's never been loyal to me but I'll just bless her to please myself? 

Call me ocean. Kiss my forehead before you go, and smile. I will dream of you despite not wanting to. And tomorrow I will bleed you onto a page for the world to see.


William Shakespeare- Sonnet 116


Let me not to the marriage of true minds

Admit impediments. Love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds,
Or bends with the remover to remove:
O no; it is an ever-fixed mark, 
That looks on tempests, and is never shaken;
It is the star to every wandering bark,
Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken.
Love's not Time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks 
Within his bending sickle's compass come; 
Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks, 
But bears it out even to the edge of doom.
   If this be error and upon me proved,
   I never writ, nor no man ever loved. 

Sunday, 30 March 2014

Skitz Gemini

Just before I turned 15, in high school grade 10, someone pissed me off. 

I wasn't a really happy teenager, in fact  things sucked badly. One day, after my Saturday Math and Physics classes, I stumbled upon some interesting looking teenagers outside the city library on my way home. They looked all hip-hop. I had just started falling in love with hip hop.
Among these I spotted some people that I knew from primary school. A friend told me that inside the library, at the basement, there was a poetry session going on. I was thrilled. I was curious. So I asked the girl I was walking with, a friend at the time, if she wanted to come with. It was all good. We had a bit of time before curfew at 5pm. 


It was dark inside as we walked in. Only the stage lights were on. There was a tall, brown man standing at the back with long dreadlocks dressed in rasta colors with bohemian shorts and a scarf on his head. We were told to join the rest of the audience sitting on the floor. I found it strange but beautiful. It was all kumbaya-peaceful like. We sat towards the front. On the stage were two teenagers, a guy rapping out his lyrics as a girl sung a melody and then they would swop. It was mesmerizing for me, the beauty of their art. 

As they finished the tall dread-locked man at the back approached the stage and started rapping on his way up, all the way to the stage. I was so surprised! It was just majestic. I was wondering who all these wonderful people were and why I had never met them before. As he reached the foot of the raised floor he took his shoes and scarf off. It was sort of like a ritual as he laid his shoes neatly to the side and stepped on the raised floor, un-scarving his dreadlocks as if unwrapping his nakedness, ever so carefully and laying the scarf, folded at the corner of the stage next to the shoes. Under my breath I mumbled "Oookaaaaay, whatever makes you comfortable..."

To my surprise he, at that point exclaims mid-poem: " So, whats wrong with being comfortable?!" with so much feeling and passion that I was embarrassed I had said anything. Honestly I didn't know he could hear me and he carried on nonchalantly as if it was part of the poem . It could've been, but at that time I was so stunned that I wasn't listening anymore and kept wondering if that was part of the act or if he had actually heard me and took offence even though I wasn't offering any.  

The poetry continued and I was already immersed, having acquired comfort in this new zone. It felt like home. The people there were friendly and spoke to me like I'd been with them at those sessions all my life. It was easy to make friends. Before long though, my accomplice pointed at her watch and said that we would get into trouble if we didn't leave soon because it would get dark and we would run out of taxis. I told her to hang on a while, one more hour before the session ended. It was 4.30pm.

She wouldn't hear of it. 

I told her that our parents were the same, maybe mine even stricter than hers. I knew I would get into trouble. I was thinking in my head that for the first time in my life I didn't really care. I wasn't doing anything wrong by enjoying WORD. I told her that if we stay together, since our parents know each other, we could vouch for each other in telling the truth. Its not like we had decided to go drinking or do drugs or have sex in dodgy places like our parents were always insinuating we somehow would. Like some of our peers, however few and between and distanced from our daily lives, were doing. Surely truth counts for something?  

Despite my pleas, she left me there to decide for myself. I chose to stay. I have never regretted it. And then my old best friend from primary school pitched up out of nowhere! She recited. She was wonderful! An hour and a couple of new friends and excellent poetry later, I left for home. Got a taxi and got home 6.30pm on the dot. 

My dad was at the dining room table working on something as I walked into the door. He looked up and didn't say anything, the way he does when he is mad at me. In his head, I can imagine all the thing she had invented as to the reason his wicked daughter was home so late. Class ends at 1.30pm and she arrives 5 hours later.

Mom calls me into her room and tells me that they were worried about me. As I'm explaining where I had been she tells me that she received a phone-call from my "friends'" parents. I sigh in relief thinking I'm exempt since obviously my friend had made sure they knew where I was. Only to find out that that wasn't quite the story...

My friends parents were very worried about their daughter but were glad to hear we were together at the poetry session. What they didn't understand is why I refused to leave when it was getting late at 4.30pm. My friend had had the sense to leave and tried to convince me that it was best this way but I had refused and tried to coerce her to stay, drag her into my defience. The disapproval of my character was blatant and discomforting, never mind the insinuations that were coated onto my insolence. I mean, how can they be sure I actually stayed at the poetry session, a whole hour more and got caught up on the frequent long queues of commuters heading home on a Saturday afternoon after a day of shopping in the city? How do they know for sure that 4.30 was interval time at the poetry session so people could get refreshments and a bit of air after sitting in a dark basement for two and a half hours? How do they know that 4.30 was the end of the session and I had gone with my old best friend to do...god forbid!
I remember thinking to myself that she would have done better not to even say I was with her that day, now that my reputation had been tainted by imaginary sins. I was mad. I got so oooooo mad!

My father gave me a hiding that day. 

I seldom get angry but that day my anger BLEEZED. 
In my room  I sat down with a notebook and a pen and just started jotting down all my thoughts. I was mad. At her! I had obviously taken the fall for both of our guilty pleasures. Guilty for loving word and pleasuring my ears. This sinful indulgence called art. And she was chaste. Chaste as a blooming daisy. 

So I wrote and wrote down all that I felt, expelling her from my system , lacerating our friendship there and then. When I finished crying, I had my first diss rhyme filling my page. Suffice to say that SKITZ GEMINI was born on that very day. 

A few weeks later I was to recite this to my emcee boys at school and back then I didn't even know what punch-lines were but, I was officially team. 

Skitz Gemini is the schizophrenic gemini that is me. She has a dual personality. On ordinary days she's really sweet but when really really pissed off, which doesn't happen often, she pops out of me and starts spitting venom. I have no idea why she needs to be really angry to do this though. And I was plenty angry as a teenager. There have been less than a handful of people able to make me angry enough to bring her out. Its usually women, too.

 Lately  I feel her wanting to show her face.

Thursday, 20 March 2014

Zulu girls Can...

I am sure
I am very very sure 
Of the abilities of Zulu girls. 
Despite their background. 
Despite their upbringing. 
Regardless of their social limitations, 
Whatever their programming. 
Aside from their challenges. 
That they can: 

Travel anywhere they want in the world. 
Adapt. 
Learn. 
Get by with the language barrier. 
Make friends. 
Make interesting conversation with strangers. 
Touch a heart. 
Be someone's secret sexual fantasy. 
Inspire. 
Invoke anger. 
Invoke jealousy. 
Teach. 
Love. 


Trust. 
Abandon their hearts for something bigger than themselves. 
Tell stories. 
Make sacrifices that others would find surprising. 
Keep faith. 
Cry long and hard. 
Whine sometimes. 
Carry the weight of the world on their shoulders, with a weak but determined smile.
Carry their men to glory even when they are not aware they need to be carried. 
Protect their youth.
Fight for their families. 
Punish. 


I am well aware of the abilities of Zulu girls, that too are aware of themselves. That too hold, the power of self knowledge. 
 


Thursday, 6 March 2014

Fire and Ocean

Whenever I look into her eyes I see fire.
She once told me that I was pacific
Calm, and calming like the sea. 
I've been drawn to her since the day we met. 

I've been going through my whole life thinking surely, 
surely there must be someone out there that understands...
Surely there exists more than just me. 
And there she was. 

Eyes sparkling, fierce and untamed, 
looking as if laughing at me- with me- at my silliness for not believing 
(as if saying, "Of course we exist!")
- staring right inside without a blink.

I'm holding her gaze, looking inside and she is smiling. 
Outside she giggles. The way only she can giggle.
Wild child, like the universe just threw her right there in front of me. 

We're friends now, hanging out sometimes. 
Busy bees the both of us but its OK. 
When we talk, its special.
We go out. We dance. We drink. 
I meet her plethora of friends. 
They become my friends.

She falls pregnant. 
I don't see her for a long time, but its OK. 
She has a beautiful baby girl. Saggitarius.
We rejoice. 

When I see her again its a happy accident.
She's on her way to a performance. 
I'm waiting for someone who isn't committed. 
So I follow her and get mesmerized again, 
capturing these moments on camera. 

I have to go. 
She walks me to the bus. 
We hold hands and walk silently together.

On the interweb I tell her just how I feel.
She say's she's been wondering what that look in my eye is. 
I know she can see.

Nothing changes.
Except maybe, we live in different cities now. 
We keep meeting briefly. 
I am no longer friends with her friends.
She is no longer friends with some of those friends.


We meet briefly again before I leave the country. 
I tell her I came only for her because my heart has already left. 
We embrace for a long long time. 

My boyfriend tells me she is the only one of my friends that he likes.
My boyfriends' often tell me too much.
And then I am gone. 

In my mind those wild eyes are imprinted. Spirited windows with the fire I have always wanted to have. I guess now I have it. In her. She is Gemini. I am Gemini. Like two parts that fused together form the air element- 
FIRE and OCEAN.