#ForTheCaretakers

...and then there are those nights.

when shame and guilt streak

sheets.

Faces.

and wet eyes ask silent questions

you will never know how to answer

Because you cannot stop Time

or slow his march through their body

This disobedient body

that no longer takes orders

from the spirit it housed

that breathes life

into that house.

and haunts it still.

you will not be able to explain

why they look in the mirror and

do not recognize this disobedient

husk

staring back at them with wet questioning eyes.

all you can do

all you can do — is look in their face

and see your own tired reflection

and in that moment you take their hand and say

I know you.

I remember you.

I recognize who you are.

and time slows

for just a moment.

-Julian* ©2017 All Rights Reserved

 

Julian Long is a Writer, Branding and Marketing Strategist, Voice Actor, Caretaker, and Commitment Coach with roots in NYC and Kentucky. His passion is helping be up to big things. Like all good Southern-raised church boys he loves his God his Mama, his dog and good fried chicken. Not necessarily in that order. More Julian: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Big Ass Black Hair

I love black hair. Big ass, wild ass, ign’ant, in-your-face, black mothafuckin’ hair.

And don’t get me wrong, I like small black hair too. I dig the short shit. I can certainly work with the dirty-tennis ball look. But yo, there’s just nothing quite like a big ass, black ass hairdo. Nothing.

I mean can straight blonde hair ball up into a black fist and shoot into the sky proud and mighty or glisten in the left over Blue Magic scraped from the container? Can straight blonde hair sparkle like a crown of jewels from the thousands of tightly woven locks that curl over and twinkle in the light like power to the people?

Hell naw. Only black hair can. Because big ass black hair is a mothafuckin’ movement.

It’s a middle finger to White supremacy. A symbolic “fuck you” to European imperialism. Big ass black hair is a big ass black sponge...soaking up the never-ending streams of White tears that rain down from the eyes of Apple Pie-Eyed Middle-America.

Black hair makes my damn balls tingle. I cum strong off of big ass black hair. I’m nasty. I know.

Big ass black hair isn’t just about fros and waves. It’s thick. Nappy too. It’s long. Shiiiiid, it’s nothing short of a superpower when the braided black ropes dangle like the tentacles of the Diaspora reaching into our posterity to remind us we are fucking royalty. Kings. Queens. Princes and princesses. We are regal to the fucking core.

Grow your gawd damn crown. Sit on your throne of blackassness.

Man, if this shit were a video game, the great big boss you’d have to beat at the very end would have big ass black hair. And to defeat them, you would have to shoot some sort of gun loaded with poisonous White Privilege and strands of cottage cheese.

Apple sauce cups or All-bland-anything. Whatever you chuck, the video game boss with a name like Angela Bassett or Nina Simone would not be defeated. Nor would James Baldwin or Malcolm X. Not Eva Ayllón. Not Nancy Morejón. Not Marcus Garvey. Not Jesse Williams. Not any one of you reading this emancipation declaration aka proclamation of independence remixed and reworded because…

WE

...find strength in our big ass black hair.

 

Zay Boyed is an afro-latinx from Chicago. He's the creator of HereLiesZay.com and is a fluent speaker in Sarcasm and Brilliant Shit. When he's not joyously kicking down a kid's pillow fort, he is online trying to do the write thing. More Zay: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Crying Like A Tough Guy

Back in 4th grade, my teacher got so fed up with all the bullshit we had been doing all day in class that she went the fuck off on the entire classroom of students. She yelled. Screamed. Told us to shut the fuck up in about four different languages. She called us “Little Whiny Shits.” She even kicked over a desk and knocked a shit load of Elmer’s Glue and glitter all over the damn place. She was pissed as all hell.

And I cried.

I couldn’t even tell you what we did to her. All I know is that she spotted my ass from across the classroom with my head down, whimpering like a newborn poodle having its balls yanked with tweezers. That’s when she began talking all kinds of shit that could be basically summed up as her calling me a bitchass bitch and that I was too old to be crying just because someone raised their voice at me. 

I cried anyway.

The other kids laughed at me. They even resorted to calling me names. They called me shit like: Cry baby. Whiny baby. Sissy. Pussy. Bitch. Bitchass punk ass motherfucka. Little bitchass punk ass motherfucka. Pretty much every soft ass name combination you could think of.

And to be totally honest, to this day I still wear the shit out of my emotions on my sleeve. But the point is if the teacher would have paid closer attention to the signs I had been bat-signaling her mean ass all year, she would have known that my sissy-pussy-bitchass-bitch crying was literally a cry for fucking help. But she failed me.

You see back then, my father was a verbally and physically abusive motherfucker that didn’t tolerate when we so much as breathed too loud. After all, we lived in his house and in his house, we basically had to ask for permission to fart and even more permission to let our farts stink. Essentially, my dad’s constant yelling and bitching and ass-kickings for every little thing I did made me so fucking socially fragile that on the day my punk ass teacher decided to chastise us, I released all the energy that I had been forced to hold in for nine years in the form of tears that puddled on my 4th grade desk into a mixture of snot and spit and Elmer’s Glue and other unidentified nine-year-old bodily fluids.

Long story short: I needed to cry.

Nowadays, I have two sons. And I love them. I hug them. I kiss them. I show affection to them. And doing so isn’t making them Gay (as if that mattered). It isn’t making them weak. It isn’t coddling them either. Nor does it make them weak ass, punk ass, bitch ass bitches.

My endearment is medicine for them. They need it. I am making them stronger and wiser and better prepared for this fucked up world we live in by helping them understand that they don’t always have to be threatened by another man.

The lack of this kind of endearment among men, especially Black men, is partially what I attribute to the astronomical violence happening in my home city of Chicago and, really, any hood across the country. Young black and brown men are beaten down mentally and physically at every turn. And the weight of the negative energy that seeps from such transgressions just sags. Sags like a diaper full of the world’s shit. Until eventually we turn violent among ourselves and put bullets into our own asses.

Sure, the murders are for reasons such as drugs and gangbanging. But really that kind of hate — the hate required to take another life — is fueled by an energy from somewhere else. A place where you pack all of your negative experiences that you don’t know how to process. So at the wrong place and time, those packages of hurt and guilt and frustration come tumbling out like knocked over trash that many don’t even know how to pick up.

We have a whole generation of young people that are simply numb. They don’t know how to deal with adversity. They don’t know how to be independent. They don’t even know how to make gawd damn syrup sandwiches anymore (WTF is the world coming to?). They only know how to take a lifetime of built up frustrations out on young men that look exactly like themselves because they have basically been farmed to have no feelings.

I could go into this long ass annoying rant about the biological, psychological, and sociological importance of crying and its proofs...but you MFers don’t give a damn about that. You want to finish reading this in time to catch Judge Mathis because you care about shit that you can relate to and don’t need a dictionary to decipher. You care about real situations. So friends, it doesn’t get any realer than what I’m about to tell you.

You see, a few short months, my nephew was shot to death on the Southside of Chicago. It was a terrible situation for my family and still is. And that morning when I learned that my 17-year-old nephew lost his life to inner city violence, it stung me to the mothafucking core. For an entire day, I roamed the house in a state of wonderfuck and finally, later that afternoon...I sat down on the couch...and let the tears flow because there was really nothing left for me to do.

Moments later, my young son comes walking into the room and I immediately changed face and half-assed wiped the salty tears from my lips and cheeks and out of the wells of my eyes. He, smart as shit, wasn’t fooled a second and said, “Dad, why are you crying?” I replied with a bassy, but still trembling voice, “I’m just a little sad. That’s all. I’m sorry.” Then I picked him up onto my lap, changing to a more cheerful tone and said, “Everything will be fine! Right?” Ignoring my question he replied, “Don’t be sorry, dad...tough guys cry, too.” Then he hopped off my lap and walked away singing his favorite cartoon’s theme song.

The moral of the story is simply this: Black men are fucking human beings. Black men are people with genuine emotions and a genuine need to express those emotions in the form of tears and sadness. Teach your young Black boys that crying is okay, so that when they become grown Black men, they don’t have packages of hurt and guilt and frustration festering inside them waiting to explode and hurt the next Black man. Crying is for tough guys, too.

 

Zay Boyed is an afro-latinx from Chicago. He's the creator of HereLiesZay.com and is a fluent speaker in Sarcasm and Brilliant Shit. When he's not joyously kicking down a kid's pillow fort, he is online trying to do the write thing.

More Zay: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

The Inevitable Defeat of Kanye West

In what has now become as pervasive and insufferable as Snapchat filters, on Saturday night, our Lord, savior, and honorary Kardashian, Mr. Kanye Omari West, skipped his own baby shower in order to give birth to another tirade. This time at the expense of his fans who, in prototypical Mario Winans fashion, were the last to discover that their Saint Pablo Tour tickets were supplanted by a fifteen-minute diatribe. Thankfully, his abrupt departure was complimentary.

Elvis Kanye has left the building.

And as if the ass whooping of the century wasn’t already well deserved, he doubled down on the blunt force trauma by slandering Drake and DJ Snapchat for monopolizing radio, dragged his predecessor Q-Tip and that Mark Zuckerberg guy for being shitty friends, and in his coup de grâce, summoned the wrath of The Beyhive by exposing Beyoncé for holding her own performances hostage in exchange for an MTV “Video of the Year” Award. An act so egregious that in a brief flirtation with sanity, ‘Ye even begged Blue Ivy’s daddy not to “send his killers” after him.

Yes, this really happened.

At this point, these outbursts are so commonplace I’m surprised VH1 hasn’t picked up the pilot for “Unhinged”, a suspense thriller in which the most popular diva on Planet Earth marries a Bratz doll, uses his non-existent White privilege as tinder to burn every bridge his Black ass is in no position to, then squanders his immense talent on hysteria and hideous forays into fashion.

Listen, I love Kanye.

So much so that in the Golden Age of Piracy, with malware and guilt-free mp3s raining from the sky, I’ve committed the unthinkable act of actually purchasing every single one of his albums. And no, you bandwagon ass fans, I am by no means honored by your lateness. I was the dude running down every nigga with a pulse trying to put them up on his “Jeanius Level Musik” mixtapes.  And well before he provided Merriam-Webster with a synonym for Kevin Federline, I was fresh out of a four-month hospital stint when my girlfriend (at the time) dragged my ass to his concert just so I could be baptized in the restorative properties of his burgeoning arrogance.  

Me and my BFF on the day I got out of the hospital in 2004.

Me and my BFF on the day I got out of the hospital in 2004.

But much like Ashanti’s eyebrows, enough is enough. The uncanny resemblances between Kanye’s instability and Azalea Banks’ love affair with self-sabotage are not only alarming, but he has far more to lose. And as happy as I was to see him reunited with his prodigal son Kid Cudi, ‘Ye has transformed being petulant and irascible into performance art.  

It’s becoming increasingly difficult to respect his passion and desire to serve as an impetus for change when he’s not only arguably benefited more from radio’s antiquated paradigm than anyone, but prone to temper tantrums that rival those found in Kermit’s bedroom.

You can’t bitch and moan about the current state of radio, amongst other things, when you’re one of the forefathers of its format, my nigga. You don’t think nobody got tired of hearing “Now I ain’t sayin’ she’s a gold digger”, or T-Pain croon “Welcome to the good liiiiiiife!”, or “Ball so hard muthafuckas wanna fine me!” 50/11 gotdamn times a day?  

But most importantly, your premonition on “All Falls Down” came to fruition:

The people highest up got the lowest self esteem
The prettiest people do the ugliest things
For the road to riches and diamond rings

You aren’t the only one that misses the Dropout Bear and the old Kanye.

So before it’s too late, how long are we going to continue to ignore these symptoms? It’s time to engage in a serious discussion on Kanye’s mental health.


Listen to Episode 12 of The Extraordinary Negroes, "By Any Mean Necessary" (featuring Ronnie Man Hatcher and Nickolas Gaines).

After a stint in the military, and an extended crusade shepherding all of God’s children as a social worker, Jay Connor conceded to fate and relocated to Los Angeles in 2014 in order to chase the dream. When he’s not changing his son’s diapers or losing his grip on sanity while enduring 405 traffic, he’s a writer in the entertainment industry. Where currently he’s working on a number of projects, the most prominent being “Strange Angel”, a historical drama series produced by Ridley Scott’s Scott Free Productions that is set to air on the AMC Network in the near future.

More Jay: Twitter | Instagram

Friday Five: Jay's Weekend Playlist

Happy Friday! Welcome to our inaugural Friday Five situation, our weekly list of everything from books and chicken recipes to movies, movie recommendations, and whatever else the spirit moves us to share. As you Electric Slide into your weekend, listen to five of Jay's favorite jammy jams, sure to bring joy and purpose to an otherwise humdrum life. You're welcome.

1. A Tribe Called Quest “Dis Generation” (Feat. Busta Rhymes) - A Tribe Called Quest is back. Nuff said. 

2. October London “Black Man In America” - This dude got next. I’m calling it right the fuck now before he blows up and niggas hop their happy, pigmented asses on the bandwagon. If you fuck with 70’s soul, the boy London is right up your alley. A Snoop Dogg and Jazze Pha co-sign don’t hurt either. 

3. Rashad “Slow Jam” - Dude is one of the illest artist/producers out and I find it extremely offensive he isn’t a household name. Check out his albums “Museum” and “The Quiet Loud” and thank me later. I will generously award Rick Ross’ weight in yams and collard greens to whoever can name the sample at 2:24. 

4. Dam-Funk “Missing U” - Because I’m willing a Dam-Funk/Anderson Paak collaboration into fruition and this is the exact type of shit I want to hear Anderson sing over in said forthcoming collaborative EP. Make it happen, ya’ll. We all win. 

5. Mac Miller “Dang!” (Feat. Anderson Paak) - Ice skates are doing triple-axels in Hell ,Trump is president, and pigs have sprouted wings. The rumors are indeed true: I finally found a Mac Miller song I not only can tolerate, but thoroughly enjoy. Everything about this song is perfection. Except, of course, the White guy rapping. So just ignore him and enjoy the rest of the ride. 

Check out the latest episode of The Extraordinary Negroes, featuring Ronnie Man Hatcher of New Era Chicago, "By Any Means Necessary."

Check out our Extraordinary Reading List #1.

I Want To Live, Not Survive

Shawn, post-election.

Shawn, post-election.

I don't know about ya'll, but last Tuesday's election hit me hard. I mean, "James Evans died in Alaska" or "Ricky was about to go to USC but a Blood in a red Hyundai 'merk'd' him" hard. I didn't go to work. I didn't turn on the TV. I didn't even wash my ass. All I pretty much did was delete Facebook friends and typed "If you didn't vote then you need to STFU" about 217 times.

But now that I'm back with the living I've noticed a lot of people talking about, "We're going to be alright. Black people are strong" or "Our ancestors have been through worse," and even though that might be true, may I be the first to say what a lot of people were probably already thinking, which is: NIGGA, I DON'T WANT TO GO THROUGH ANYTHING LIKE WHAT MY ANCESTORS WENT THROUGH!

No, for real. You can miss me with that, "We gon' be alright" stuff right now. It's a great hook Kendrick used, but there's a reason why he kept rambling about "Luci" and hinting about his alcohol and drug problems in the past because Black pain is real and he needed to self-medicate to cope.

As long as I've been Black, "We gon' be alright" and "It's ok" went hand in hand with Black tragedy, even in movies. Remember "Paid in Full"?

Ace just got pistol whipped, shot in the face, and a family member and friend were murdered. He's lying in the bed talking to Rico and Mitch, and what does Rico say? He told him, "You'll be alright, nigga."

No, nigga, I'm not going to be alright. I just got shot in the face and don't have medical benefits because I'm a cocaine dealer, so I had to go to county!

My point in all this is, don't tell me that we're going to be alright because neither of us know that. To me, even saying, "We're going to be alright" makes me think that you may be suffering from trauma and accept the abuse this country gives you.

And who the hell is "We"? Because "We" sure lost a lot of Black folks during those troublesome times.

 

Shawn William is lyrically handsome and probably much taller than ya baby's father.  Addicted to Blistex, French toast & drama. Once got busy in a Burger King bathroom.

Favorite movie quote "Shorty can't eat no books, dog."

More Shawn: Web | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Alex Gotta Eat #2: Redemption By Burger

My first encounter with Harlem Shake was that one time when I needed a hug so very badly and wept into my homegirl’s glorious bosom and had coffee and rambled and nibbled on a few of her jerk fries, which, no.

I’ve been struggling to describe exactly why the jerk fries don't work for me. The most I can come up with is that the seasoning situation reminds me of how chip making mofos go super hard to endow a single potato chip with the full flavor profile of a Meatlover’s pizza or  Thanksgiving dinner. As Lady Laurieann “No Inside Voice” Gibson would say, “Too muuuch, too muuuch.”

The second time was with a friend and his fine-ass coworker for lunch. I had fries. And a skrawberry milkshake. No fireworks. With the fries, that is.

And then.

One Saturday night, while watching old dancehall videos with a friend, we communicated with Harlem Shake via the ancestors and demanded that two Hot Mess Burgers and fries be delivered to us within 30 to 45 minutes. Oh, we demanded macaroni and cheese, too, just because it was on the menu. No expectations. Fuck it.

The Hot Mess Burger is their classic burger topped with pickled cherry pepper and bacon relish, American cheese and smoky chipotle mayo. My friend raved about it. Okay, fine.

I used to be into spicy stuff, but lately, I’d rather taste my food. A few weeks ago, I attempted to plow through my friend’s gorgeous seafood pasta, as I do with everything, and was greeted by more jalapeños than my spirit was prepared for. Look. It's hard enough making it home nightly without being trampled by a wayward Eugene on a motherfucking Citibike. Battling mouthfire? For why? It was muy yummy, but I couldn't finish it.

I'm now the friend who asks, “So, like, how hot are these wings?”

Ain't no hot sauce in my bag.

I don't have time.

I say all of that to say, I was skeptical about the pepper situation on that burger. I trusted that my friend wasn't setting me up for misery because I didn't want to have to set his apartment on fire.

Even smushed inside the wrapper and biked over the river and through the woods of Harlem, it was good. Good as a motherfucker, in fact. There was heat but nothing sinus-clearing. It got a little messy, but that was part of the fun. Thankfully, ze bun is a potato bread bun.

The fries, having traveled and wilted, were inconsequential at this point. But having just murked that burger, I was more than fine.

But then.

It came time to try the macaroni and cheese. I was hesitant, because there was a sole burnt spot on top, which told me:

  1. This situation was unlovingly broiled merely for cosmetic reasons.

  2. (after research) That American cheese burns this way.

Oh dear.

I called those motherfuckers up to confirm my suspicions, having been traumatized by the American cheese-based horror at Junior’s.

Hello.

Uh. Yes. Hi. Would you happen to know what cheeses are in your macaroni and cheese?

No.

Uh. Could you please ask someone who knows?

(She asks someone who asks someone else, returns 30 seconds later.)

Cheddar and American.

Me: *sucks teeth* Okay. Thank you.

I took a calculated risk and tasted it anyway. Somehow — and I hate that I know this — they managed to recreate the taste of Cheese Whiz, that spreadable cheese substance that, brushed across a cracker, was part of a well balanced struggle snack. This is not a good thing. And they were selling it to the masses with nary a smidgen of guilt. I need not elaborate beyond this except to note that they broke a major tenet of macaroni and cheese preparation:

CHEESE IS NOT A MOTHERFUCKING SEASONING.

Anyhow, I only took a second taste to confirm my cheese wiz suspicions. My homie, a Jamaican from the Land of Macaroni Pie, didn't see much wrong with it, and that's all I'm going to say about that. But that burger saved the damn day.

My third encounter with Harlem Shake was for another Hot Mess Burger and a peach milkshake, which was everything I needed in life at that moment. Te lo recomiendo. 

Have you ever been thisclose to passing on that scratch-off card, but you were like, “Aw what the hell,” and bought it and wound up winning $10?

Or you were circling the block for a fortnight looking for parking, and right when you were about to give up and park on the sidewalk, ticket be damned, you turned one more corner and found a bombastic parking space?

That is the joy I felt after I ignored that inner voice — the one with my waistline's best interests in mind — that told me to skip the sweet potato cheesecake on my fourth visit and say NO to sweet, delicious ecstasy. Had I been sensible, I would have missed my blessing. Never again. Fucking being sensible.

You must have it.

If I impress anything upon you today, it's this:

  1. When in doubt, always get the cheesecake.
  2. Sharing food is overrated.

Amen.

Holler at my foodie page, @AlexGottaEat.

New York City-based food-lover Alexander Hardy is the dance captain for Saint Damita Jo Jackson’s royal army and co-host of The Extraordinary Negroes podcast. He is an essayist, freelance copywriter, cultural critic, chicken enthusiast, lupus survivor, mental health advocate and educator who has written for EBONY.com, Eater, Courvoisier, Esquire, The Root, CNN, Gawker, The Huffington Post, Saint Heron, and Very Smart Brothas, among other wonderful outlets. When not writing on TheColoredBoy.com, he enjoys cheese grits, power naps, sweet tea, and all things chicken-related. Alexander does not believe in snow or Delaware. More Alex: The Colored Boy | Twitter | Instagram | Writing Portfolio | Mental Health Work