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On Monday I had a sudden craving for tomato. Not in salad or anything, just a whole tomato, to eat like a peach. I thought it was peculiar, but I indulged the craving that night, and these two nights since. Tomatoes are delicious whole, but messy. There is only one person I’ve ever known to enjoy biting into a ripe tomato, eating its juicy entirety - my brother Malik.

This week marks nine years since he left us, and I suppose my subconscious is reminding me of this. I’ve also felt inclined this week to hear live jazz, another fitting remembrance of him. I still struggle with the regret of failing to love him better, and I’m anxious to understand what an involved and tender love looks like with the brothers and sisters I have remaining.

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Everyone once in a long while I run into someone, on some long-gentrified block of the city, wearing DDTP World gear. I’m reminded on these occasions that this is not the city I knew growing up, but also of some of the brighter moments of a childhood in Anacostia.
DDTP (which stood officially for ‘Designer Discount Trading Post’ and unofficially for ‘Dis Dat and all That People’ before its owner rebranded it ‘Zoe’s World’) was one of few black owned businesses - and one of fewer non liquor store businesses - around.
The store, and the family that ran it, was no less than an institution in the hood, providing fashions to a generation of SE DC’s flyest. My brothers were good friends with the proprietor, Zoe’s, sons and would take me with them on frequent visits to check the latest styles and shoot the shit. 
Even my parents - who considered fashion frivolous and completely incidental to education, home ownership and a host of other virtuous things - could get down with spending a few of their very-hard-earned dollars at this black and Muslim owned establishment.
This Urban Dictionary entry for ‘Drop Socks’ (one popular accessory to 90s DC style sold by DDTP) speaks to this iconic store’s place is the culture of old DC:

girl from uptown dc circa early 1990’s:”Imma wear my lil Madness tee wit my parasuco strech jeans, some drop socks and some chucks” girl from southeast:” Oh, Imma wear this lil dress i bought from ddtp wit my susie wong MCM” girl from trinidad:”I wanna wear my joan & david tennis shoes but i dont know if i should where some slouch socks”

As one DC blogger recalls of the briefly great urban brand:

This line was hot hot hot in the early 90′s then poof – like a blunt around Lil Wayne -they were gone. A lot of people believe DDTP “jumped the shark” going nationwide and appearing in Up Against the Wall losing its credibility as a “DC” fasion. But DLR cant hate on any body going out there and getting that Scrilla……

Everyone once in a long while I run into someone, on some long-gentrified block of the city, wearing DDTP World gear. I’m reminded on these occasions that this is not the city I knew growing up, but also of some of the brighter moments of a childhood in Anacostia.

DDTP (which stood officially for ‘Designer Discount Trading Post’ and unofficially for ‘Dis Dat and all That People’ before its owner rebranded it ‘Zoe’s World’) was one of few black owned businesses - and one of fewer non liquor store businesses - around.

The store, and the family that ran it, was no less than an institution in the hood, providing fashions to a generation of SE DC’s flyest. My brothers were good friends with the proprietor, Zoe’s, sons and would take me with them on frequent visits to check the latest styles and shoot the shit. 

Even my parents - who considered fashion frivolous and completely incidental to education, home ownership and a host of other virtuous things - could get down with spending a few of their very-hard-earned dollars at this black and Muslim owned establishment.

This Urban Dictionary entry for ‘Drop Socks’ (one popular accessory to 90s DC style sold by DDTP) speaks to this iconic store’s place is the culture of old DC:

girl from uptown dc circa early 1990’s:”Imma wear my lil Madness tee wit my parasuco strech jeans, some drop socks and some chucks” 
girl from southeast:” Oh, Imma wear this lil dress i bought from ddtp wit my susie wong MCM” 
girl from trinidad:”I wanna wear my joan & david tennis shoes but i dont know if i should where some slouch socks”

As one DC blogger recalls of the briefly great urban brand:

This line was hot hot hot in the early 90′s then poof – like a blunt around Lil Wayne -they were gone. A lot of people believe DDTP “jumped the shark” going nationwide and appearing in Up Against the Wall losing its credibility as a “DC” fasion. But DLR cant hate on any body going out there and getting that Scrilla……

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I saw a photograph today, of a yellow rotary telephone. The Western Electric 554. It seized me, transporting me back through time, conjuring a wave of emotion so powerful I literally fell out of my chair. It was the telephone that hung on the pancake-colored wall by the kitchen doorway at 1342 U, my childhood home.
It was the one I used to call Bekah on, wanting more than anything to hear her voice on the other end telling me that she could come out and play; the one that Mom whispered anxiously into that night when a gang of lost boys came looking to settle a score with my brother.
I could write an entire novel about that phone.

I saw a photograph today, of a yellow rotary telephone. The Western Electric 554. It seized me, transporting me back through time, conjuring a wave of emotion so powerful I literally fell out of my chair. It was the telephone that hung on the pancake-colored wall by the kitchen doorway at 1342 U, my childhood home.

It was the one I used to call Bekah on, wanting more than anything to hear her voice on the other end telling me that she could come out and play; the one that Mom whispered anxiously into that night when a gang of lost boys came looking to settle a score with my brother.

I could write an entire novel about that phone.

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Barefoot

I’ll never forget how you standing barefoot in the kitchen,
made that lonely beige apartment home for a while.
We didn’t have the ingredients for guacamole,
but you made do with lime and Indian spices.

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"One of the saddest days of my life was when my mother told me ‘Superman’ did not exist. Cause even in the depths of the ghetto you just thought he was coming … She thought I was crying because it’s like Santa Claus is not real. I was crying because no one was coming with enough power to save us."

Geoffrey Canada, Waiting for ‘Superman’

This resonated soo deeply with me. I remember feeling this way, growing up in SE DC. I still feel this way sometimes, like there’s no one coming with enough power to save us.

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I come back here every time I’m in DC to remember that year of hustle I put in and how far I’ve come since.
In @4 after school, out @10, then home to work on my business and hw til midnight then up @6 to finish hw.

I come back here every time I’m in DC to remember that year of hustle I put in and how far I’ve come since.

In @4 after school, out @10, then home to work on my business and hw til midnight then up @6 to finish hw.

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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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"Finish each day and be done with it. You have done what you could. Some blunders and absurdities no doubt crept in; forget them as soon as you can. Tomorrow is a new day; begin it well and serenely and with too high a spirit to be encumbered with your old nonsense."

Emerson

I wish I could find that librarian, Mrs. Kelly, to thank her, to let her know how she saved my life during a really rough spell by introducing me to Emerson (the quote above), and how many times it’s given me comfort since then.

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Satin Doll

I went to Christian McBride’s tribute to Herbie Hancock last night and it reminded me of you, Malik. I miss the sound of your trumpet.

I know there were some good times before we became strangers and I wish I could remember them better, like when we used to serenade mom in the kitchen while she cooked.

After the concert tonight, I went to the CoHo and ordered the Satin Doll. It is the only food I ever eat there, mostly because of the name; Satin Doll the song was a favorite of yours. Today would have been your 26th birthday.

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Gilbert and me, year two

I acquired Jack Gilbert’s collection, “The Great Fires” the other day at City Lights in SF; I returned there to celebrate the anniversary of my first poetry purchase, also Gilbert, a year earlier. I gave away “Refusing Heaven” to someone worthy of it. Now I begin what is certain to be an extended affair with this new collection. One early poem reminds me of why I fell in love with Gilbert - his irreverence, quickness, humor.

Lovers

When I hear men boast about how passionate
they are, I think of the two cleaning ladies
at the second-story window watching a man
coming back from a party where there was
lots of free beer. He runs in and out
of buildings looking for a toilet. “My Lord,”
the tall woman says, “that fellow down there
surely does love architecture.”

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This article reminded me of something. Stanford was my “dream school” even before I really understood what it was about.

I had a Stanford poster in my locker since the 7th grade and across from my locker back then (coincidentally) there was a framed educational poster on the known sub-atomic particles and the Stanford Linear Accelerator. People thought my preoccupation with the school was absolutely ridiculous, and it was. Stanford was inseparable in my mind from the idea of California, of sunshine and immense opportunity. And it was far away from my parents.

I turned in my application 5mins past the deadline - I was trying to get last minute edits from my brother, who was drunk at the time (he was still telling me how much he loved me, and how great I was when I decided to go ahead and press submit). The invitation to the Farm came last of all my acceptances and up until the second I opened the packet I was sure that my procrastination (I wrote my app essay mostly the day it was due) had done me in. My parents tried to sell me on a certain east coast school, but I could not be persuaded. I’m definitely ready to leave the Farm now, but I have absolutely no regrets about coming here. Cardinal Love!