Our Present:

Chapter 6: Connect

Unity is the Salve of Our Isolation

Join in the Unity of Our Cumulative Community

 

I looked into their eyes, drank their wine 

through my hands and heard their humming.

Annoying–Aggravating–Agonizing.

 

I cringed–until–I looked toward Tukayo.

Oh, how eyes can frown ‘n reveal sadness.

Fortunately, no mouth to scowl.

 

How, unkown, but harmony ‘n beauty

slowly–very slowly–emerged–

from the cacophony.

‘n I was hooked.

 

Humming, helping, healing.

Receiving so much from them,

from their well of abundance,

all shared so readily.  


When you get these jobs you have been so

brilliantly trained for, just remember that

your real job is that if you are free, you

need to free somebody else. 

If you have some power, 

then your job is to empower somebody else.

This is not just a grab-bag candy game.

–Toni Morrison. 1931-2019.


We cannot seek achievement

for ourselves and forget about progress 

and prosperity for our community …

Our ambitions must be broad enough to inlcude

the aspirations and needs of others,

for their sake and our own.

–Cesar Chavez. 1927-1993.


Every social movement that I know of 

has come out of people sitting in small groups,

telling their life stories, and discovering that 

other people have shared similar experiences.

–Gloria Steinem. Born 1934.


You’re never gonna kill storytelling

because it’s built into the human plan.

We come with it.

–Margret Atwood. Born 1939.

 

So much was exchanged through the resonance,

you know, like when your bones

feel the heavy beat of a song.

We call it Humthrum.

 

I listened; their stories quenched me;

learned I am not alone ‘n shared my own.

Don’t even remember

when I began to humm with them.

Really liked humming with Tukayo, the most.

Then, darkness.

Heaving in emptiness.

A major relapse: Incredulity.

I balked, Recovery, humbug.

 

Lack of courage leads to cruelty.

–Lailah Gifty Akita


I think the importance of doing activist work is

precisely because it allows you to give back and 

to consider yourself not as a single individual

who may have achieved watever, but to be a 

part of an ongoing historical movement.

–Angela Davis. Born 1944.


I sometimes see people say that social change is

impossible. But this is just not true. 

Social change is inevitable.

What isn’t inevitable is 

the timbre and shape of that social change,

which we decide together.

–John Green. Born 1977.

Have you taken a gander?

Wilst in this pathetic state?

Get on with you!

After I fight back ‘n get outta here.

That will be my recovery! My Victory!

Tukayo reached out to console me. 

I turned. 

Just get off my back!


But Tukayo pleaded with me to pivot back,

so together we could defeat the alienating hurt.

Tukayo tenderly touched my shoulder.

 

Didn’t just flinch. Didn’t just bend.

Jerked with force

to throw her hand off.

What do you want from me?

You don’t get it.

You don’t know I am so empty

I got to get out.

Been stuck here so long,

you have come to accept it.

I pounded my chest! Pounded again!

No surrenderin’ happenin’ here!

I don’t need you.

 

We need love, and to ensure love,

we need to have full employment, 

and we need social justice.

We need gender equality.

We need freedom from hunger.

These are our most fundamental 

needs as social creatures.

–David Suzuki. Born 1936.


I’ve found the cure for depression is action.

–Yvon Chouinard. Born 1938.

 

The thought caused me a good deal of grief.

What a terrible thing it is to 

wound someone you really care for

–and to do it so unconsciously.

–Haruki Murakami. Born 1949.


Forgiveness is the needle 

that knows how to mend.

–Jewel. Born 1974.

Had to do it. Had to be mean to Tukayo. Had to.

Just so the one closest to me must feel my pain.

Thus the transference of the real contagion,

personalized, tailored cruelty, was complete.

I deserve nothing. 

Made sure no one made that stupid assumption.

Made sure no one deserved nothing

–no carin’–no lovin’.

Lingered feelings of vengeance against 

me–them—everyone

My slugs of tar came back, climbed my legs

–imports of the oppression

–vestiges of internalization

My toros, neck ‘n head, out my arms

–all of me, covered by my slugs of tar.

Warmth, Fire burning–ragin’–within.

We all return to our ugly sea of tar ‘n misery.

I ran ‘n ran ‘n ran … trying to slaughter my enmity

Tukayo chased–until we–our legs–stopped.

Heaving for breath. Trembling. Knotted.

Tukayo turned me around, pulled.

Held ‘n hugged; risked contamination

as the slugs of tar enveloped us.

Slinkering, sliming, strangling. 

We convulsed.


If we really want to love, 

we must learn to forgive.

–Mother Teresa. 


Never be afraid to raise your voice for

honesty and truth and compassion

against injustice and lying and greed.

If people all over the world …

would do this, it would change the earth.

–William Faulkner. 1987-1962.


We can draw lessons from the past,

but we cannot live in it.

–Lyndon B. Johnson. 1908-1973.

 

Those past-induced feelings

from memories of injury

hold us no longer.

 

We can weed out those festering

feelings sprouting from regurgitated ones,

compensate and correct their distortion

‘n transform them into fuel to resist

‘n the strength to elect to evolve

‘n into the passion to belong.


Our glow increased 

and the slugs of tar began to sizzle

and could not drop off fast enough

and scury back to their sea of misery

as we gave them the boot.


Our capillary pull surpasses

our reality of Isolation by Injury–

the terminal disease of coexistence.

 

That intermittent pressure on my chest,

the seductive one, oscillating between

embrace ‘n pending suffocation, ceased–

as the last of the little slimy slugs of tar slid off,

‘n slithered away, gone for good.


Justice grows out of recognition

of ourselves in each other–

that my liberty depends on you being free too.

–Barack Obama. Born 1961.


I am no longer accepting the things 

I cannot change.

I am changing the things I cannot accept.

–Angela Davis. Born 1944.


We become not a melting pot but a beautiful

mosaic, Different people, different yearnings,

different hopes, different dreams.

–Jimmy Carter. Born 1924.

The mosaic

of regular

‘n irregular forms,

of varied colors,

of large ‘n small shapes

of glass, shell, tile ‘n stone,

where each piece is captivating

‘n their collection is breath-taking,

all held together by the mortar of love.

So Came Their Fourth Gift:


The Feeling of Oneness.

My worst experience

led me here with them.

Within the dark silence,

amongst the faceless ‘n nameless.

They invited me to heal with them.

A unifying strength through belonging.


True belonging only happens when we

present our authentic, imperfect selves to the world. 

Our sense of belonging can never 

be greater than our level of self-acceptance.

–Brene Brown. Born 1965.


Home is that person whose touch heals you.

They teach you it’s okay to love again,

and this time, it won’t hurt.

–Kirsten Corley. Born 1993.

They had come to be me, or i had come to be them.

Don’t know which: me, them, both the same.

Just knew they were my people.

‘n Tukayo had become my new home. 

Forever, I will have to earn her.

 

We gasped;

our lungs

in ‘n ex–hale.

We feel our hearts beat.

Massess of mouthless, stateless citizens

begin to humm, to move, to dance;

make sounds, music, patterns become rituals;

embrace, initiate, join, partake, support;

as the communal emerges,

built upon the individuals.

Healing, we heal.


It is when we start working together

that the real healing takes place.

–David Hume. 1711-1776.


The breath is the bridge

which connects life to consciousness.

Breathing in, I calm my body.

Breathing out, I smile.

Dwelling in the present moment,

I know this is a wonderful moment.

–Thich Nhat Hanh. 1975 & 1990.


If we invest in ourselves,

the collective good,

we all thrive.

–Cory Booker. Born 1969.

 

Join ME and become We;

when WE heal, we will strive;

then WE will become ALL and thrive.