Revolutionary
I am
a revolutionary, fighting
for the ones who are
afraid, for the ones who are
unable, for the ones who are
here, and for the ones who are
not yet born.
I am
a revolutionary, screaming
at the top of my
lungs ‘power’ and ‘freedom.’ We
fight wars on the
other side of the world, in
the name of freedom and
democracy, but us—the
people in this very nation—
we don’t get it.
I am a revolutionary
writing these words down, unrhyming
and angry, broken
sentences and broken
lines, broken just like
me. Just like my mother
just like you. Just like
all of us. I write
our pain, our strife, of
our bondage and our
truths—our truths we hold
self evident that equality
is a lie and that only people
born with bleached skin are
privileged. They are free. They
get the life, liberty, and pursuit of
happiness. On our backs.
I am
a revolutionary, drowning
in anguish and helplessness.
I am drowning, I
cannot get my head
above water—I cannot
breathe. I fight the
waves but they’re so strong.
Too strong and I am just
one girl. One in a million,
one in so many. I am drowning in
the blood and tears
shed by those
like me.
Like us.
I am
a revolutionary, praying
for liberation, praying
that I can split this sea of
strife and voicelessness with
my cry of power—my
cry of power that
makes so many uncomfortable,
angry, confused, sad—
but the idea, just the thought
of true freedom is enough
to make my hands tremble,
enough to make my hair stand
on end. Enough to
make my eyes burn
with unshed tears.
I am
a revolutionary.
I am
fighting, screaming, and
writing, because
I am
tired of drowning,
and praying just doesn’t
seem to work any more.
I am
black.
And I am
a revolutionary.