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I love how Marian Wright Edelman moves so easily between the analytical and the spiritual, between devastating statistics and poetry. Her oratory posits great moral truths with quiet, almost casual, certainty - as if decency is common, and she expects it, and shouldn’t need to raise her voice or ask us twice. 

Jimmy Wayne speaks like the soul of country music - honest, full of faith but often irreverent, celebrating narrative. He also has a way of eliciting decency from us; like a friendly stranger on a Greyhound headed south, he shares the difficult story of where he’s been and the love that saved him, and invites us to give that sort of love to someone who needs.

Thanks Freddie Mac Foundation and Higher Achievement for allowing me to share a story in this lyrical and enlightened company. I am renewed in my will to serve children.

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We pray for children
Who sneak popsicles before supper,
Who erase holes in math workbooks,
Who can never find their shoes.

And we pray for those
Who stare at photographers from behind barbed wire,
Who can’t bound down the street in a new pair of sneakers,
Who never “counted potatoes,”
Who are born in places we wouldn’t be caught dead,
Who never go to the circus,
Who live in an X-rated world.

We pray for children
Who bring us sticky kisses and fistfuls of dandelions,
Who hug us in a hurry and forget their lunch money.
And we pray for those
Who never get dessert,
Who have no safe blanket to drag behind them,
Who watch their parents watch them die,
Who can’t find any bread to steal,
Who don’t have any rooms to clean up,
Whose pictures aren’t on anybody’s dresser,
Whose monsters are real.

We pray for children
Who spend all their allowance before Tuesday,
Who throw tantrums in the grocery store and pick at their food,
Who like ghost stories,
Who shove dirty clothes under the bed and never rinse out the tub,
Who get visits from the tooth fairy,
Who don’t like to be kissed in front of the carpool,
Who squirm in church or temple and scream in the phone,
Whose tears we sometimes laugh at and whose smiles can make us cry.

And we pray for those
Whose nightmares come in the daytime,
Who will eat anything,
Who have never seen a dentist,
Who aren’t spoiled by anybody,
Who go to bed hungry and cry themselves to sleep,
Who live and move, but have no being.

We pray for children who want to be carried and for those who must,
For those we never give up on and for those who don’t get a second chance.
For those we smother … and for those who will grab the hand of anybody kind enough to offer it.

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— Marian Wright Edelman, “A Prayer for Children”

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A couple months back I found myself on a boat in the Amazon, my hammock strung up beside those of about 80 fellow travelers. We would form an odd sort of community over the five day journey. Directly across from mine, a woman shared a berth with her young child, a girl, maybe two years old. One day around noon, after bathing the child, she gave her a chocolate covered galleta. The chocolate quickly melted  in the amazonian heat and when I turned over in my hammock to see what the squeals of joy were about, I saw a beautiful baby girl, naked, smiling and covered in chocolate. It’s become the metaphor in my mind for unadulterated, unabashed joy. That’s how I want to live - naked, laughing and covered in chocolate.

A couple months back I found myself on a boat in the Amazon, my hammock strung up beside those of about 80 fellow travelers. We would form an odd sort of community over the five day journey. Directly across from mine, a woman shared a berth with her young child, a girl, maybe two years old. One day around noon, after bathing the child, she gave her a chocolate covered galleta. The chocolate quickly melted  in the amazonian heat and when I turned over in my hammock to see what the squeals of joy were about, I saw a beautiful baby girl, naked, smiling and covered in chocolate. It’s become the metaphor in my mind for unadulterated, unabashed joy. That’s how I want to live - naked, laughing and covered in chocolate.

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What a man can know about Childbirth

The other night, a bottle of Barefoot wine in hand I made a passing jestful comment about childbirth. Several friends, young women, seized on the comment to the effect of, “How dare you talk about something you haven’t and cant experience?” The particular comment was, admittedly, in poor taste and I apologized profusely. Aside from embarrassment and deservedly busted chops, this interaction got me thinking: What can a man know about childbirth?

It’s true, I have not, nor will I ever, push new life out through my birth canal. I’ll never have that particular experience of childbirth and hold it separate and above any other. I have experienced childbirth though, in a few rather remarkable and life defining ways.

First, I was born once. I don’t remember it, but the particulars of that experience bonded me to the first and still most important woman in my life, my mother. Her pain and joy in that experience powerfully validate my existence.

Second, I have heard a story of my birth through my mothers eyes. That story deeply marks my narrative of self, particularly the part about how I came out hands first, “grasping, searching and eager,” in my mother’s words, “to create and explore.”

Third, as a four year old, I lay curled up beside my mother for hours as I waited for my baby sister to come. I dozed off and later woke up in a family friend’s arms to the sound of Safiyah’s first cries. Gray and pink and slimy, she was the strangest most beautiful thing I’d ever seen.

Fourth, as a six year old I watched alertly as my father, and the midwife, Sister Mudiwah, coached my mother through the final heaving push that brought my brother Qadir into the world. My father’s face was beaded with sweat, his hand tightly clinched in my mothers as he whispered loving words of encouragement. I came to understand then something powerful about what it means to be a man. He called me over, and with a nurses hand guiding mine I cut the umbilical cord.

These are just a few of the things that I’ve come to know about childbirth.

I know a little about the childbearing worries of the young pregnant Latina women in my mother’s perinatal classes, about waiting anxiously, about “going to get mommy more juice”, about a house full of helpful neighbors, and about eating fish finger sandwiches for two weeks because my father cant cook.

I know a little about the curiosity of a seven year old, flipping through instructional texts on birthing as if they were picture books and about burying a placenta in the back yard and planting a rose bush on top of it that would survive twenty winters and the destructive curiosity of kids with matches. That’s what I know about childbirth.

It is emphatically not the knowing of a woman, and doesn’t bear comparison to it. It isn’t nothing though.

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And we pray for those
Whose nightmares come in the daytime,
Who will eat anything
Who have never seen dentist,
Who aren’t spoiled by anybody,
Who go to bed hungry and cry themselves to sleep,
Who live and move, but have no being