A free-verse poem, experimenting with something 'edgy'. |
I was born the third child to a teenage mother. Never knew my “baby daddy”. Grew up poor, hungry a lot, scared, too. Life be hard. Dropped out of school at fifteen ‘cause school is for losers. Wasn’t learning nothing no way. Besides, easy money on the street – if you man enough to take it, and I was man enough! Shot my first fool at sixteen. Law didn’t scare me none. White man’s rules don’t have much to do with ghetto life. Went to prison, learnt all I know 'bout doing crimes. Got out, joined a gang – a man got to belong, got to have someone to count on. We had it all for a while – our territory to sell our drugs, to steal what we wanted, plenty of money coming in, cars, bling, clothes, whores… I wasn’t ‘fraid of nothing or nobody. And nobody talked down to me. Many a rich, educated man pissed his Armani pants when I shoved a gun in his face and took his money. I had power. I sure strutted my stuff… right up ‘til I got shot in a drive-by. Died right there in the street, with my mama wailing her heart out. Dead at age twenty-two. What you gonna do? ‘Aint no way to break the ghetto cycle. Just ‘aint no way. Please check out my ten books: http://www.amazon.com/Jr.-Harry-E.-Gilleland/e/B004SVLY02/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0 |