Poetry Month ‘22: Poem and Intentions
This is the first year I’ve moved into National Poetry Month with awareness and intention. It’s been a beautiful sunny Friday. After a rare day in the office, I came home and put on a little fashion show of some surprise bonus items that came with a recent purchase, dancing around my room like a Big Grrrl* (low stamina; not ready for tour, alas)! Beyonce’s ‘Get Me Bodied’ is always a cardio moment, as I inevitably get carried ALL the way away. Feeling hope for spring, and took Sissy dog for a longer walk than usual to run an errand and catch up on GirlTrek. Joy and peace in movement.
I plan to write at least a poem each day. If not write, revise.
To everyone in the In Surreal Life April cohort (I see you, bestie! :D) - HAVE A FANTASTIC TIME!
The poem below was written sometime in the last year, maybe in the fall… I was inspired, actually, by an episode of GirlTrek’s Black History Bootcamp (which also begins today, which I am SO excited about!!! What a good day of beginnings!). I hope it resonates.
Love,
A
What They Didn’t Tell Us Young Folks About Anita Hill
by Atena O. Danner
Facing
Such betrayal
From the people she served
Truth didn’t flinch as she told it:
Courage
Hand raised
Surrounded by
Rows of men like shark teeth
Closing, consuming, all in a
Day’s work
It’s work
Angling to break
A Black woman- just work
Like their father’s, and their father’s
Fathers’
Angry
At the way that
She couldn’t be made to
Cry out. Who and where she came from
Scared them
Power
She held in hand
Protection she’d carried
All the way from Oklahoma
To wield
(Confirmed:
Our ancestors’
cruelest nightmare, hiding
from the weeping Freedmen that haunt
his blood)
She knew
What moving cost:
Better than being moved.
Chose to spend her inheritance
On truth.