The kid won 1st place in
her chess section. She just moved up recently, and won first place in two
separate tournaments. I’m sure the family is cheering for her tonight as she
lifts her giant trophy over her petite body.
Tonight, I know that secretly they
think their kid is smart, very smart.
I know it is true because of the
way they cheer for their girl and push her to win. My guess is that she wants
to win.
Others can duke it out over who
wants to win more. Who will win??? Now, that’s a competition!
Isn’t this an interesting navel
gazing exercise.
That is not a question it is a
statement.
A man, in a red wheelchair, on the
subway was screaming about black supremacy and I looked around at dark skinned
people who were rolling their eyes and smirking at his rant. He was loud and
scary. He kept yelling at us to recognize him and the triumphs of blacks. It
was so aggressive that it made it hard to listen to his words and sympathize
with his passionate message. I almost felt like stopping him from screaming,
asking him to speak softer, so that I could listen. Maybe everyone would
listen. He was threatening and even began his rant, “these are times of
uncertain violence and danger!!” I wasn’t sure if he would set off a bomb, pull
out a bunch of knives or attempt a spontaneous violent attack. So I kept my
head down and read.
Next to me sat a man I will call
Rocco. He was giant stranger and had a small hoop earring pierced in the center
external fleshy part of the ear that connects to his cheek. I whispered to him without
turning my head, “ I am in no mood to be screamed at today.” He just barely
smiled and kept his eyes locked on his aging yellowing paperback. The pages
were slightly ripped and his hands were so gigantic that they covered almost
the entire page as he held his book. I guess I felt safe sitting next to this
giant. He might protect me? I doubt it.
I was sitting in the first car of
the train. The rant was escalating and I wanted to scream at him, beg him to
shut up. I wished I had ear buds and was listing to music to block him out. But
he kept going and going.
Finally, the conductor, a black woman,
came out of her enclosed driver’s compartment, opened the door- almost hitting
him. “Young man, will you please keep it down!”
She closed the door and proceeded
to move the train along.
“I won’t keep it down! “ he screamed.
“I will never keep it down! That is the problem, people want us to keep it
down!” His screams continued as he moved
away from where the conductor spoke to him.
He moved through the train screaming, unrelenting.
He left the car.
I continued reading, but also
thought about what he shared. A word trophy to consider.
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