I: Everyday. Everyday. Everyday. It’d
be cataclysmic if it hadn’t already been rendered droll, if it
weren’t routine. You open your diary, you write down: Had that
dream, again, and flip through the pages where you scribbled the same
thing about that same dream. First with the earnest terror of the
newly-petrified. Then with frustration, vexed by repeated psychic
assaults. Now, followed by a dismal sort of boredom so refined it
could be described as graceful, it visits—the memory you can’t
not remember—then you write, but you don’t even know why you
bother to record anymore. You can barely react anymore. You just
wait for it to pass. What are you—charting progress? But if trauma
does anything it devours time, makes a mockery of any hint of
progress, hence: the eternal return of that same dream about that
same thing.
The common knowledge about trauma falls
by the wayside when trauma is everyday, when trauma ceases to be
traumatic because instead it is simply quotidian. Its subjects have
been inoculated against angst (by way of affective-exhaustion), again
and again.
II: Please, please, please, let this be
the last one, I think. Again. Still. When I have that dream or when I
read about the black boy last night who was shot or the black girl
who was raped two the street, the black girl who was raped then shot
because everyone else thought she was a boy. Impossible. I walk
around with a hole, we all do. A chasm I need to fill because it
keeps leaking bitter humors about the epidemic of Black Deaths in
this country.
III. What could interrupt the trauma?
Something beautiful. Look: The picture of him with his fist up in the
air—the picture of all of them, in black, with their fists up in
the air, summoning “Black Power,” summoning “Power to the
People!” Something beautiful. The spirit of our mother. She made it
to Cuba: Bless. The sainted revolutionaries that spirited her away:
Bless. That people died in prison or newly-released to ensure she
lived free: Bless. Our brothers may be dying, our sisters may already
be dead, but goddamn it, our mother is free. Our mother is free.
Bless.
IV: Catch for us the Pigs, the Pigs
that rape us, murder our children, kill our brothers. The pigs that
extort us. Remember the one your mother called on her boyfriend.
Remember how he sauntered in and told her she was ‘dealing with a
personal problem.’ Catch for us the men who abuse women, all women,
all children, too, and hang them with the pigs. Catch for us the
women, too, who “take it” from their girlfriends, who beat the
shit out of them. They act like men, so let them hang next to them.
Catch for us the morally vacant misers demanding we buy back
everything they stole at a premium. Even our land. Even our cultures.
Even our bloodlines. Catch for us all drone operators; catch for us
the human drones operating without consciences. This is an
incantation. It is all I have absent a movement. But then the
memory. Of how it was ended. Or rather how it was obliterated. The
huntings. COINTELPRO. Crack. Pigs. Jails. Disintegration. This
country is a curse. Truly, this country is a curse. The curse won’t
end until this country is ended. We have to end it. Someday, we will.
V: Is this trauma mine or my
ancestors’? I know the pain but I don’t even have a name to
associate with it. What was your name? What is mine?
Ancestor-I-Do-Not-Know, you will soon
meet my brother or sister,
Ancestor, they killed him or her
Mother of my mother and her mother, and
hers,
And hers and hers and hers,
You will know my sister or brother
Please tell my blood I am sorry we
haven’t yet made a better world
Please tell my elders they struggled
and we thank them.
VI: Something beautiful: Black girls
laughing so hard they heave and sigh, black girls proud of our skin,
loving our soft, wide noses, our cumulonimbus hair. Love. For
yourself. For our blood. See a glimpse of it and live it in all day
and all night. It is velvet warm summer nights with no stars and no
moon. Serene obsidian nights, rich and dark and soft as good earth.
Try to remember to put it in the chasm.
VII: But what of tomorrow? What can I
do with this precariously attenuated rage? My love goes to sleep
because to watch him die, watch her die. To see them buried in the
rich dark soil that would remind me of my sisters’ laughing if…
Please, please, please let this be the
last one, I pray to the ancestors whose names I don’t know. Again.
Still.
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