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Poetry

Saw this on FB and stole it (hence the quotes). Please come out and support if you can. Sis is very dope.

“YES! Juke Joint is going down this Friday/ 28th. Extended Reader / Miss Missy/ Lo Anderson/ music man Aqeel Salaam andDDD! a SURPRISE guest!!! no profanity/ no xxx material/ 53 e 11th St/ @ Union Sq Sta. contact Kenneth/ 917 331 9189”

Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/urbanjukejoint

Website | http://www.poetry247.com/urbanjukejoint/

Twitter | www.twitter.com/urbanjukejoint 

A while back, over a year or so now, I went to the Nuyorican Poets Cafe to see my new mentee perform. It was my first time there so I wasn’t sure what to expect. There were a few other young poets who took the stage that night and one of them, Lo Anderson, blew me away. Listening to her spit, all I could think was, sis is dope. As soon as she was finished, I knew I had to find her and try to get her to agree to a feature in my magazine. I did and she did.

Here is the poem she recited that night and the inspiration behind it.

- Lo Anderson - A Photograph of the Poet as a Young Woman. Yes, yes, y'all.

So you like social consciousness eh?

There are women buying Che Guevara panties at Mandees

While virginity is stuck sticky black to the leather of a hot jeep

Stumblin dizzy through my country

They make fun of me,

cuz our women can Fuck a man straight off his bones

They say that I’ll learn one day

that my hips will bear the bitter bitch

cookin womanhood in your kitchen

We’re like ehh como se dice

ANIMAL PLANET

As if slut is a new name for mammal

Its like shhh as we learn the ways of the Dominican woman

Many of them, along with selling their bodies, act as thieves.

Upon meeting a new client, they will first ask him how long he is in town.

back in his hotel room,

seize any opportunity to steal from him.

her most natural habitat

your husbands mind & possibly his bedsheets

While approaching a man on the street,

she would get close to him and move her hands around to distract

At the same time, she will deftly pick his pocket

& it doesnt matter how young or pure she is

it doesnt matter how loose or whore she is

she is whore

she is

sprawled out across your hotel room floor

before u even push in the keys

so go ahead..

Ask me about my country

Why my spine smells like Las Terranas

And all the Rape rain

Will crush me

Trust me

Two possible jobs if you own a pussy in DR

You prostitute or work at the salon

Where the prostitutes do their hair

Normally I wouldn’t care

But when you catch a French man

Jugando buddy buddy

With a ten year old

It just bothers

And I was ten

And she was ten

And both of our ages combined were

Not old enough

2 have fingers

Laced with the lace of our panties

oh does the word panties make you uncomfortable?

or the swollen throats of children?

or the torso shifting and jaw clicking you hear when u sleep

they didnt give us these hips & this ass for nothing

this strut and this sass for nothing

so while your little girl is counting her sheep

tuck her tight in her skin

dont u dare tell her about the revolution

or Trujillo

or all the reasons we have to be who we be

just grow up

& be mariposa maravillosa

be whoever

she

maybe

(c) Lauren E. Anderson


I wrote this poem about prostitution in the Dominican Republic. I’m from Las Terrenas in Samana. It’s a really really small [place], really country—dirt roads, nobody wearing shoes, nobody wearing shirts because it’s too hot for that. A couple of years ago, I went back to my hometown and I was walking down my street and I saw a really really young Dominican girl walking around with a European tourist as his date and we were the same age. That’s disgusting and it’s something that resonated with me always, it just stuck with me, because it didn’t make sense. That’s why in the poem I mentioned there aren’t too many options for woman out there—there aren’t too many options out there for anybody, let alone a woman. Like in the poem, I mention this woman, or this ideological woman I’m talking about, she has a lot of kids to feed so like sacrificing her body and her time and self worth is not a question. It’s not something to be thought about, it’s something you do. That’s how you survive.

Prostitution is a semi general topic. But the good thing, in any good spoken word poem is it’s going to take something universal and make it really specific. This is something that I’m connected to.  I’m a big believer in backing up what you say. I saw that, I experienced that first hand. That’s what is real to me. It’s not because I went to Google and I researched.

“If I feel some kind of way about something, I’m going to write it down, because I want to make you feel some kind of way about something.” 

Read more about Lo, her life, her inspirations, her aspirations, and her poetry,  in the first issue of HomegirlNYC, on sale now. If you’re interested in writing poetry, check out Urban Word NYC, the organization that helped Lo grow as a writer.

Ladies! Today was a most-productive day! And I feel great!

After I finished writing my “I’m baaack” blogs last night, I stayed up and did something I haven’t done in a while…I wrote…and wrote…and wrote…until about 8:30 ish this morning.

Reeewiiiind…

When I finished blogging last night it was around 2ish in the a.m. I was tired, admittedly, so I played with the idea of “taking a nap” for an hour or so and getting back up to do some work. pause for the cause. Now, that inspired little idea never quite works out well for me because a power nap quickly turns into a good night’s sleep, despite my best intentions. So, instead, knowing myself like I do, I decided to stay up and bang the work out. I hit my second and third winds (you know the point when you’re so tired, you’re not even tired anymore and your energy just picks up?) and really got some things done.

So I stayed up wrote until about 8:30, took a shower, decided to send off an application and then, around 10:30, I took a nap, (I had to do it). I woke up around 2 and I’ve been working through my “to do list” since then. It’s like, once I got started, I did not want to stop. I had to actually make myself go and get food, and you know that’s commitment. It’s like I actually wanted to see how productive I could be, instead of putting things off until tomorrow or the day after that. Procrastination, I rebuke thee!

In any case, that was not the topic of today’s blog, but I just wanted to share. Now I see why people with such a strong work ethic are so super successful- you really have to get too fed up not to something, want it so badly you can’t sleep and work so hard that you surpass being tired. I’m there.

So, while I did go and get food, I didn’t actually eat until half an hour ago. I was trying to hold off until my actual dinner time (after 9 p.m., natch) but I was starving, so I went ahead and ate.

While eating, I caught a re-run of Roseanne (if you don’t know, seriously, get familiar) that I loved! It’s the episode where Roseanne, proud that her child was finally being recognized for an actual accomplishment, forced a mortified Darlene to read a poem she had written for homework at school’s “Culture Night,” per the prodding of Darlene’s teacher. This poem marked like one of the first times that Darlene, resident smart ass and heir apparent to Roseanne’s biting wit, shows any vulnerability…and she does it in front of her mother and her aunt, and the entire audience. Here’s a clip-

To Whom It Concerns by Darlene Conner

“To Whom It Concerns, Darlene’s work will be late, it fell in her pancakes and stuck to her plate.

To Whom It Concerns, my mom made me write this, and I’m just a kid, so how can I fight this.

To Whom It Concerns, I lost my assignment, maybe I’ll get lucky, solitary confinement.

To Whom It Concerns, Darlene’s great with a ball, but guys don’t watch tomboys, when they’re cruising the hall.

To Whom It Concerns, I just turned 13, too short to be quarterback, to plain to be queen.

To Whom It Concerns, I’m not make of steel. When I get blindsided, my pain is quite real.

I don’t mean to squawk but it really burns, I just thought I’d mention it, to whom it concerns.”

Love it! And yes, I did cry when I watched it again (for like the 20th time), as I do every time. It always gets to me.

Just thought I’d share.

!!The New York Knicks and Urban Word NYC host Annual College Fair This Saturday!!

Date: November 7th

Time: 10AM-3PM

Place: Hammerstein Ballroom (34th Street @ 8th Ave)

According to the website, “This College Fair is one of the most unique annual college fairs around the tri-state area. High school students are encouraged to come out and meet with over 60 colleges and universities from around the country. While exploring the fair, you will be able to watch master poets and dance groups perform, listen to music and live bands, and interact with over 2,000 students. In addtion to all of these festivities, there are two dynamic Poetry competitions going on at the same time.

College application workshops will be conducted throughout the day and financial aid advisors will be on hand to answer any questions.

Special guests, including Knicks Alumni, will make peridodic appearances throughout the day and sign autographs.”

As mentioned, there will also be a Poetry Slam Program– one Spoken Word Competition and a Written Competition. Here are the details:

1. Spoken Word Competition — A Poetry Slam competition where students progress through an Open Audition, Poetry Workshops, Preliminary Slams, Semi-final Slams, all to compete at the Knicks Poetry Slam Finals at the New Amsterdam Theatre on Broadway.

Spoken Word Prizes

1st place – $10,000 laptop and printer
2nd place – $7,500 laptop and printer
3rd place – $5,000 laptop and printer
4th — 10th – $1,000

To be eligible for this competition, participants must prepare a 1-minute poem audition and perform before a panel of judges at the College Fair on November 7th between 10am-3pm. Top scorers will be placed in a 5-week writing workshop series taking place at sites across the city. Open to teens ages 13-19 years old.

2. Written Competition — students must submit a portfolio of original work including: an essay “The Reason I Write,” poetry samples, community service and a resume. The portfolio will be reviewed by a panel of judges to determine the winners.

Written Contest Prizes

2 full scholarships (4 years) to the University of Wisconsin
1 full tuition scholarship (4 year) to Mercy College
To be eligible for this competition, participants must register here. No audition is necessary. Open to High School Seniors.

Each person attending the College Fair MUST Register beforehand- even if you are not participating in the Poetry Slam! See the website to register and for more details.