February 23, 2020
(for Ahmaud Arbery)
The night I understood what it means to be
Black, a line of bats perched on my roof,
owls fell into my room like rain.
In the day, a 25-year-old boy
in a distant land made his chest a shelter
for homeless bullets while jogging
(And when your body becomes a nest
for flying bullets, your ghost relocates
into the petal of a roadside flower.)
When you’re away from home
your body is a highway a truck
of grief can pass through at any time.
Anywhere you sit, you lap insurgency.
A parasite eats into your
sense of smell so you do not know
that you stink of gunpowder,
that you are a concierge of terror, that you follow
a history of explosion down its memory lane.
And to survive as a Black away from home
is to allow a city of folly grow on your skin,
is to say your father’s name lacks poesy,
is to pay double to use a public toilet.
The night I understood what it means to be
Black, I looked in the mirror and saw nothing.