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Showing posts with label sadness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sadness. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 04, 2026

MASS SHOOTING #9



“Two people dead in Detroit shooting at funeral repast, police say”

CBS News Detroit



by Ron Riekki





“Justice is what love sounds like when it speaks in public.”

—Michael Eric Dyson

from Can You Hear Me Now?:

The Inspiration, Wisdom, and Insight of Michael Eric Dyson



75 days since the last mass shooting in Michigan,
But that’s over with the warmth, having back-to-back
 
mass shootings on Feb 19 and Feb 27.  One in Flint,
one in Detroit.  I drive to the one in Detroit first,
 
the shooting happening at a “funeral repast,”
a phrase I’d never heard before, a gathering after
 
a funeral.  Where two more would be killed.
On the drive there, I see a park and think to myself
 
how nice that they have a park here, until I realize
it’s not a park, but a cemetery, that seems to go on
 
and on and on, and on the same street a billboard of
RECOVERY IS HERE / HOPE IS HERE next to
 
a cannabis shop, a couple of liquor stores, one
with a wide OPEN sign, massive glowing white
 
sign, a vulgar-sized sign, as if the OPEN has more
than one meaning, as I think of stores being open
 
late at night when everything else seems closed
and mouths open to swallow alcohol that turns
 
into acetaldehyde, toxic, classified as carcinogenic,
Jekyll and Hyde, and hid to the side is a closed club,
 
sign saying Escape Lounge, a cell-like building,
reminiscent of incarceration, windowless from what
 
I can see, and I think of Escape, its meanings,
fantasy, and for real, the risks of escape, and there,
 
so near, is the spot of the mass shooting, two killed,
two injured, and so many of these mass shootings,
 
over and over, are in areas that feel apocalyptic,
post-apocalyptic, pre-apocalyptic, barren, not one
 
person walking by the entire time I was there, empty
streets, the rare car, and fence, always fence, so
 
much fence, barbed-wired fence, but with gaps,
where it’d be easy to squeeze through the fence,
 
by the Smile you are on candid camera warning
that warns no one, ghosts, the creepy feel, always
 
so creepy, how empty these areas are in the heart
of urban populations, the two-thirds of a million
 
people in Detroit, none here, not now, a full moon,
and, looking up, an American flag flapping on a pole,
 
a pole that looks like it may have been set on fire
once, long ago, and the flag, absolutely battered,
 
comically tattered, tragically tattered, flicking in
the wind, its large holes, a fuck-you flag, a forgotten
 
flag that seems to scream to tell a story, the full moon
behind it, an alarm somewhere going off, a parking
 
lot that feels the opposite of a lot, feels minimal,
and across the street a strange abandoned-looking
 
warehouse with a massive pile of metal-like boxes,
stacked, left, rusted, the feel that this is the sort of
 
place for a where-they-hide-the-body Sopranos
scene.  I’m sick of visiting these mass shootings,
 
wonder why I’ve committed myself to visiting
every mass shooting in Michigan, searching, trying
 
to find out when, who, why, what, how, but all
that seems to emerge is where, the place sticking
 
in my mind, the constant poverty of these places,
reminding me of a therapy emotion wheel I saw
 
that lists the ‘feelings’ of being ignored and being
victimized as being rooted in the feeling of being
 
abandoned, which is all rooted in sadness, this
ignored + victimized = abandoned = sadness,
 
and these are ignored buildings, victimized
buildings, buildings of sadness, abandoned
 
buildings, except ‘building’ isn’t right.  They
do not seem to be verbs, to be expressing action,
 
but instead express inaction.  What’s the opposite
of a verb?  And an alarm alarms always as
 
I stand there, constant alarm, somewhere, dis-
embodied, and it’s cold tonight, somewhere
 
in the mid-twenties, but these shootings happened
when it had warmed up, the 75 days without
 
a mass shooting due to the winter, no mass
shootings because there was no ‘mass.’
 
There were shootings here, nonstop, all
winter, but one person shot, two, three,
 
not ‘mass.’  Now, with the warmth, they’re
back.  And I drive away, to see a Coney
 
Island restaurant selling Kentucky dogs
and catfish dinners, vomit in its parking
 
lot.  A sign for CHILD CARE, another
sign for CHILD CARE, and it feels like
 
a wish, an instruct, a plea.  I stop at a bar,
open, a man stepping outside to smoke.
 
I approach.  By the time I get there, it’s
three men, smoking, chatting.  I interrupt,
 
tell them about the mass shooting so near
here, ask how we end the violence, tell them
 
I’m noticing it’s a theme of young black men
killing young black men.  These aren’t
 
young black men, but see themselves as
old black men, and they talk about young
 
black men, talking more than I’d have
guessed, opening up as if they’ve been
 
waiting to speak on this.  The first man
says, “I’ll kill someone before they kill
 
me.”  He leaves, goes inside the bar,
and another man replaces him.  We four
 
stand in a diamond shape.  Their names:
“Frank,” “Sam,” and “J.”  J is a hip-hop
 
artist, has no album, insists he’s not
a rapper, but a “hip-hop artist.”  It’s
 
open mic tonight.  The language goes
fast, faster than I can scribble: “A lot
 
of black folks go through poverty.”
“My grandma had fourteen kids.”
 
“I blame women.”  I interrupt, a bit
shocked at this, the first time this
 
has been said in the hundred people
or so I’ve interviewed so far at these
 
mass shooting sites.  And he brings up
childhood sexual trauma.  Again,
 
the first time this has been brought up
in the hundred or so interviews.
 
he talks about how this is happening
to young black boys.  I tell him he’s
 
the first person brave enough to say
this.  The man standing next to him
 
joins in, says, “I’m a victim of that.”
I say, “Childhood sexual trauma?”
 
He nods yes.  And the language takes
over again, this investment in their
 
words: “I’m not going to blame it all
on the women.”  “You need family.”
 
“Every person that’s a white person
has a family.”  “Kids raising kids.”
 
They talk over each other, at the same
time, not disrespectfully, but this isn’t
 
an academic question posed to some
academics.  I talked to two social
 
workers at U of M, asking the same
question, and their responses to me
 
felt textbook, crafted, safe, cliché,
emotionless.  This isn’t that.  They
 
talk bodily, about their bodies, arms
emphasizing, eye contact intense,
 
patting each other on the back, saying,
“Slavery fucked people up.”  “They
 
tricked us, man.”  “Get Trump out
of office.”  “No, no, that was way
 
before Trump.”  One tells us of his
Dad joining the Army, then becoming
 
a Detroit cop.  He says, “I stay in
the hood; I stay in poverty.”  “You
 
need the old wisdom.”  “They don’t
have tough love, so they don’t have
 
respect.”  “I’m a third-grade teacher.”
“The solution is putting that belt to
 
that ass.”  “I done seen people get
shot.”  The man to my left tells us
 
about his cousin being shot.  Where?
Right here.  Where exactly?  He points,
 
says his cousin was shot in the head
right here, in this hallway, right here.
 
He points at the hallway we can see
through the door of the bar.  Right
 
here, his cousin was shot in the head.
Where we’re standing.  Right here.
 
The pace picks up.  Adrenaline.
“Look at Emmett Till.”  “It’s all
 
about history.”  “I was in the Army
for sixteen years; I’ve seen a lotta shit.”
 
“We gotta get rid of these guns;
we gotta get rid of these drugs.”
 
“The government’s got to stop.”
“It’s the social media.”  “I play
 
saxophone.”  They smoke.  They
care.  They argue.  They agree.
 
“You gotta stop the guns.”  So
many of these interviews, no
 
one talks about guns.  The discussion
is mass shootings and no one
 
talks about the guns.  So many liberals
I talk to, they never talk about
 
the guns.  I talk to liberals who
own guns, and I don’t understand
 
it.  It’s like the NRA has tricked
them.  “Always stick together.”
 
“Everybody is in control of their
life.”  “This world is about dollars.”
 
What’s the root of the violence?
I ask them.  “Jealousy,” comes
 
the answer.  They talk about
poverty, about seeing wealth
 
on social media.  They “want.”
It’s getting colder.  Midnight
 
nearing.  People pour inside.
A man comes out, tells J he’s
 
about to go onstage soon, very
soon, telling him to get ready.
 
He’s got his hood up, red.
He’s a poet.  He’s about to
 
take stage.  I want to go in,
but I forgot to take any money.
 
I can’t go in.  I watch him
disappear into the hallway
 
where the man to my left
had his cousin get shot
 
in the head.  Right here.
Where we're standing.
 
 


Tuesday, July 15, 2025

THE TIPPING POINT

by Jill Rachel Jacobs




(Ode to an Unseen Migrant During Perilous Times)

 

When evil comes a knocking, 

it may arrive with a vengeance, or 

incognito, like some 

Bible-thumping

good ol’ Joe, 

humping a flag.

 

("What we've got here is a failure to communicate")

When rage is sadness and 

sadness is rage, and it becomes

impossible to distinguish the two,

it’s not surprising we may recoil,

hidden in the shadows of the 

reality of what has become 

the new normal. 

 

("But I don’t want to go among mad people")

Like a cancer gone undetected, 

metastasized, 

cell by cell, 

dividing 

conquering,

licking wounds,

stealing secrets, 

tempted by madness,

trying to make sense of 

how we have now become 

that which we once loathed.

 

("Thank youSirMay I have another?")

 

When horror is contained, 

darkness has lifted, 

emerging from the underbelly,

dreams intact, 

still blinded by the 

innocence of children’s eyes, 

resting comfortably;

We wait.

 

("We have learned to see the world in gasps")


Unencumbered by reason,

justice now a luxury, 

in a world unrecognizable,

where compassion no longer prevails.

 

(How long? An hour, a year, a lifetime or two?)

 

When will we say when?

When prey becomes the predator,

When captors are held captive,

When cage doors are flung wide open.



Jill Rachel Jacobs is a New York based writer, poet whose poetry has been featured in numerous journals. Her features, commentaries, interviews have been published in The New York Times, Reuters, The Independent, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, The Los Angeles Times, The San Francisco Chronicle, The New York Post, Newsday, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Chicago Tribune, NPR’s Marketplace and Morning Edition.

Wednesday, November 06, 2024

THE RECKONING

by Julia Griffin




But for the young, I might not care too much.
I’ll go on reading in my little hutch
And typing quirky poems, as before;
I don’t in fact expect a civil war:
This outcome leaves small danger of a putsch.

Books, dogs, Prosecco—I intend to clutch
My pleasures, drifting further out of touch.
I’d be content just to enjoy them more
But for the young.

Here’s four more years of vicious double dutch,
The crumbling earth denied a vital crutch,
More guns, bent laws, less safety for the poor,
Billionaires’ bribes—all this I might ignore;
It’s not for me my misery is such,
But for the young.


Julia Griffin lives in south-east Georgia.  She did what she could.

Monday, May 22, 2023

HEADLINES

by Howie Good


“Springtime” Claude Monet 1886 Fitzwilliam Museum (University of Cambridge), Cambridge, UK


Baby dies in attic fire. 400 dead in floods and landslides. 3 killed, 6 injured in New Mexico shooting. “All of life,” the Buddha said, “is sadness,” as if he’d been reading the same headlines as me. Cops seek masked gunman. Ukrainian attack looms. 12-year-old charged with murder. Every day the mirror held up to existence only darkens further. Then the spring melt reveals there’s been grass alive under the snow this whole time. Birds return to the marsh from the hot countries full of excited chatter. Sunshine grows brighter and more frequent and falls like a benediction on old bent trees and fat buds and us who don’t even deserve it. 


Howie Good's newest poetry collection Heart-Shaped Hole which also includes examples of his handmade collages, is available from Laughing Ronin Press.

Thursday, April 27, 2023

ANGUISHED SOUL

by Jerrice J. Baptiste and Roodly Laurore


Dèyè mòn, gen mòn. (Beyond every mountain, there's another mountain.)
—Haitian Proverb


A woman walks past local authorities removing the bodies of men that were set on fire by a mob in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Tuesday, April 25, 2023, a day after a mob pulled the 13 suspected gang members from police custody at a traffic stop and beat and burned them to death with gasoline-soaked tires. (AP Photo/Odelyn Joseph) April 25, 2023


Sadness in his chest, 
his spirit weakens,
enemy of our race.
 
I’m still a young girl grinning, watching him smile. 
Now, his smile vanishes quick, unlike gun 
powder floating in air, we both know the scent well.  
 
“Free my heart,” he says.
His mango tree awaits, bandits pluck his luck.    
Our island is still awake, sleepless 
1,460 nights, and centuries of anguish. 
 
You snooze, you lose your life.
 
No banana leaves to fold his skin. 
Wrap, wrap his chest to become 
a bullet vest, impenetrable.
 
No difference from his friends’ ashes 
at noon or during the early moon.    
 
“My soul courts pain and grief,” he sighs.
I fall deeper in disbelief. 
Nothing to catch either one of us. 
No net large enough from any fishermen. 
 
When will the rays of hope appear?
Sunshine after anxious nights. 
 
Loss of kinetic energy. Craves the little joy of
scooping young coconuts like we used to  
in the countryside. Flamingos on a distant beach.
 
Now, my uncle wishes 
one day to enjoy 
the pink side of life. 

 
Roodly Laurore was born and raised in Haiti. He is an engineer and poet. His poems are published in Kosmos Journal, Autism Parenting Magazine, Solstice Literary Magazine, Jerry Jazz Musician, and others.  Roodly lives in Haiti with his wife and two sons. He collaborated with his neice Jerrice on this poem.
 
Jerrice J. Baptiste is an author of eight books and a poet in residence at the Prattsville Art Center & Residency in NY.  She is extensively published in journals and magazines such as Artemis Journal, The Yale Review, Mantis, Eco Theo Review, The Caribbean Writer, and many others. Jerrice has been nominated as Best of The Net by Blue Stem. She has been facilitating poetry workshops for eighteen years.