The Exchange is the Weeklyâs poetry corner, where a poem or piece of writing is presented with a prompt. Readers are welcome to respond to the prompt with original poems, and pieces may be featured in the next issue of the Weekly.
This special edition is more than just an exchange. Itâs a marketplace where readers and writers have traded in an array of poems in response to a prompt that serves as the guiding theme for this Literary Issue:
âHow do you practice and experience radical self-love, revolutionary thought (or action), or the reclamation of freedom and community?â
ratios by C. Lofty Bolling
Determined to be equal parts poem and person.
I crawl into syntax like my double sided comforter
a comforter is comfortable and I recon
with my ambivalence very gingerly in the mornings.
before returning to bed, a choice, equal ratio of desire and intention,
work and rest
my morning coffee takes any shape it needs before we open our doors to the world.
Black People Deserve Beautiful Sentences. We Really Do. by Arianne Elena Payne
I returned to righteous riots, a realm
of crossroads for a college grad.
Chaos. Niggas violated
cause we had been violated. The bars
of the beauty supply bent like a wilted
bouquet, a topsoil of glass for a dad.
We wanted justice. My mom made gumbo
in waiting. Fixed a thick roux dark as Truth.
The okra seduced the onions & delivered
bell peppers covered in an ancestral storm.
Andouille sausage rolled dice on the corner
till the chicken came home to stew.
Fabulous, flush, & lateâthe shrimp
strutted in. The rice was seated.
An experiment in searching for warmth,
this meal caressed a desert
as if to say, I donât have the answers
& Iâm as scared as the fire is redâ
but I have this heart to share. I imagine
my granny packed a pot for her daughter:
this mirror now veiled by hard love showing me
beauty as what I was born for. Outside, designs
for tomorrow, endings like grass blades,
a hood heavy with sentences.
Not Your Good Girl by Shivani Kumar
after Dr. Eve L. Ewingâs âwhat I mean when I say I’m sharpening my oyster knifeâ
Can you hear me
being a good girl, mouse girl
speaking over your catch-all catcalls.
Glove me. Scalpel me.
Precisioning soul deep scars
over your lazy-tongued eyes.
Donât look. Donât touch.
Can you hear me
dropping poems
on your floor, down your throat
leaving you
wondering how grade school innocence grew
legs bronzed, mind goldened,
existence quick-silvered.
You must hear me take to my skies
ink soaked, tresses blazed, skin silked.
A flight you can no longer board.
I hear me
allowing you to think
you slipped your fingers into my mouth. But I
swallowed you whole before
you learned to speak. Before
you could stumble through my syllables
carrying my lineageâs legacied lore;
too bad, too loud, too messy
to hold still on your confused tongue.
From the dregs of my soul to the poorâ
The Jade Diamond by Lou Heron
âŠ
A tree is drawn
to the meaning of waiting
and earth is held there to knowledge
by the rain
âŠ
that leaf contains a triumph
to alter as the observer perceives
thereâonce a leaf
now a sparrow
held there to knowledge by the rain
âŠ
Place a small bowl within the foliage
and sparrows will build their nest at the azimuth
for all to see
âŠ
Sentient beings then shall walk through leaves chanting
I AM THE BODHIDHARMA
âŠ
two stone lions embark from stasis
trans-versing golden straw
âŠ
Where sages study the organ of dreams
to make conscious the field
giving birth to infinite awe
âŠ
Together now! What she does is sheâon earth
held there to knowledge
by the rain
..
Everyones on strike by Imani Joseph
Working like a bee for free
Waves crash in
Abundance or scarcity
Big up sleeping till noon
Getting my life together
May be a hot meal
In summer storms
the wind is sharp enough to drink
High up my room is nicely chilled
I will keep the bonfire fed
All night in between the function
Picking sticks off the ground
The lake gives off a breeze
Tanned ashy n glittering
Everything swoons in shade
I read novels in glumps
Biting into juicy pickles
Sharpeningggggg
My needs
A silly treat a day
Keeps the depression at bay
It’s the time of lonely months
Dating multiple accounts
I be up overthinking dust
I wish the buses werenât this crowded
Up late going south a beautiful person
Close to me smells like tea tree
Whenâs the last time we havenât practiced
Capitalism my neighbors hate gentrification
As much as we hate littering
A Fatherâs Dreams Disguised as You by Claude Robert Hill, IV.
One tree.
Father and son.
The same deep roots.
A future disguised as waving leaves.
Those precious times
spent together.
A daddy with his dream.
A mini version of himself.
His blood.
His immortality.
Love wins.
Son, never forget me!
As you go forth and becomeâŠ
The man that you are destined to be.
To become more than me.
My dreams and
Your dreams realized.
You are the Divine twinkle in
my proud fatherâs eyes come alive.
My future with you in it
is a treasured gift from the loving divine.
This is why I am glad;
that you are mine.
You are the reason that I cling to life.
You are the motivation behind my eyes.
That Arianne Elena Payne poem… good like it meant to break your heart good. “a hood heavy with sentences” forever and ever. amen.