Thursday, March 31, 2011

Twitter Me This, Mar. 31, 2011

Okay, so apparently I'm at this Twitter thing early as hell this morning.  Maybe that's just my rediscovered dedication.  Or I could just need some Starbucks!!  Lol.  Either way, here we go:

A tweet a day: Mar. 31 - Every time I think about you, I feel so alive. I wish I could hold onto you forever!! 

I was shocked nobody had ever used that hash tag  before.  (Or maybe it was so long ago, it really doesn't matter anymore.  Forgive me.  New to this twittering stuff.)

But that line comes from one of my favorite Jay-Z songs.  It became like a morning anthem at one point, especially the intro and hook.

Enjoy your day, whether up early or late, because after it's gone, it's gone.  Live each day in a manner where you won't ever worry about getting it back.

And remember, you can follow me on Twitter here.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Twitter Me This, Mar. 30 2011

So recently, a friend was telling me that I need to get up on Twitter.  And though I've had an account for a few months now, I can't bring myself to consistently post these tweets (that's what they're called right?...lmao).  But today, an idea came to mind, that I'm going to stick with for the next month or so, and post it here, under the title, Twitter Me This.  One tweet a day, about whatever I feel like tweeting about.  Right now, I'm wondering why tweet doesn't show up in my spell-checker.  Suddenly I remember that birds have been tweeting for years.  And so, I digress.

Here's the first tweet:

A tweet a day keeps my thoughts in play:  Mar. 30  Within all these crazy dreams, lies all that happiness, waiting for me.  Still dreaming!

If you like, you can follow me on Twitter here:  http://twitter.com/#!/theRarePoet

 Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Finding That Space


The very idea excites me.  Reorganizing my current space in order for it to serve a greater purpose.  I need the area in which I spend most of my time and efforts to function and feel like it is properly accommodating me.  Currently, it feels like too much junk crammed into not enough space.  Because most of my writing takes place in my bedroom, there are usually some distractions that come into play.  Writers are often people who have minds that are easily sidetracked.  I think it comes with such a vivid ability to connect with the imagination.  Often our minds innate ability to branch off onto a tangent benefits us.  But when it comes down to actually accomplishing something, this talent often leads to procrastination.

For the last 4 hours, I've been dallying from one corner of this room to the next, picking up multiple things that have garnered my attention, and attending to interests I found it hard to ignore.  But at 2:00, I said I was about to start writing.  This post, and the one that proceeded it, is all I have been able to write so far.  But I've tracked items on eBay, read countless internet articles, reorganized my clothes hampers, and sent several personal emails during that same span.

The need for your space to reflect its purpose is not one that is monopolized by writers.  Everyone wants to be in a place where they feel they can get something accomplished.  I think the key is to know that before the physical space can fit your needs, your mental space must do so as well.  Which means I have quite a bit of ways to go before I can feel at ease.  It begins by reorganizing the dressers and desks of my mind.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Picture It, Rare (Mar. 30, 2011)

Unfortunately, I haven't consistently posted this segment of the blog.  But I'm back at it again.  Still awaiting some interesting photos from others (email them to me, along with your name and location:  therarepoet@yahoo.com).  But until I get some, I just post ones I've come across.  Hopefully, you enjoy.















Just a few of the images that caught my attention.  As I often note, I do not own the rights to any of these photos.  I just hope the owners are not opposed to the idea of sharing.  (If needed, I will gladly remove any photograph.)  Enjoy your day, everybody, and remember to try to picture it rare.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

The Tuesday Groove, March 29, 2011

It's once again time for the Tuesday Groove.  There are a lot of things on my mind right now, and the three songs I chose kind of go along with what I'm thinking.  Enjoy.



India Arie --- The Heart of the Matter

I think I really feel this song, because I am seeking forgiveness.  From quite a few people.  And because I am uncertain if I have it, or it is even deserved, I find it hard to move on.  I've said I'm sorry many times in my life.  And meant it.  Hopefully that was understood.





Babyface --- Sorry for the Stupid Things

And there is someone who, right now, is being affected by all of my past issues.  Hopefully she understands that my stupidity has nothing to with how much I care.




Plain White T's --- Rhythm of Love

This song helps remind me that, whether for a lifetime or only one night, we should love those moments that make us happy, and treasure the people who make those moments possible.  I'm learning.


So there you have it.  Full of regret, steady making mistakes, and yet I'm still longing to float in love's clouds. Hopefully some day soon.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Monday, March 28, 2011

A Million Different Pieces



These thoughts were all forced from my head by an incident that occurred earlier this evening.

She touched me.  It was a simple touch.  She reached for my back, while walking past.  It was quick, lasted one or two seconds, and was over.  But here I am, still pondering.

She touched my back, and I flinched.  Not out of dislike or discomfort, but instead out of a strange combination between my body recognizing the familiar hand and my mind processing the contact as something that might lead to trouble.  I often would wonder how people end up participating in round number two with a former love, thinking that it doesn't make sense.  Isn't it simply destined to fail again?  I would easily state that I could never see myself doing the same thing.  And yet, right now, I realize how it could be possible.

Our bodies bond to other bodies, especially after spending so much time together.  It's been years since she's touched me in any way that could be considered intimate.  Well, actually about 1 year, 8 months and however many days, but who's counting.  The bottom line is that, even 10 years from now, I will still remember her touch.  After so many years together, I'd think it odd if I didn't.  Granted, it might not have the impact that it once did, but I'm not naive enough to say that it doesn't affect me.  But my feelings about her touch are not what this post is about.

This post is about the fact that I am still connected to her, even though we are no longer together.  Which I am finally understanding and accepting.  I make really strong connections with the women who come into my life, even if these women don't remain in my life.  I'm trying to figure out what this really says about me.  It's like I break myself into many pieces, trying to pack as much of myself into each piece, and I give those pieces away.  There is a piece of me in ___burg, NC, that I will never get back.  Not that I want it back.  This woman that I speak of captured the essence of my ideal companion from the moment we met, and loved me unconditionally because, in me, she'd found everything she wanted.  We fought hard to build something beautiful, weathered far too many trials together, and through it all, I was captivated by her fortitude and spirit.  Unfortunately, my restless nature would never allow me to fully reciprocate her love.  But those were some of the greatest moments of my life, producing my life's one great accomplishment, so I will cherish them forever.

But I realize I don't merely do this piecing, for lack of a better word, in a physical or emotional sense.  Right now, as I type this, I am well aware that there is a piece of me in ___boro, NC, with a woman I have never physically met.  This might seem a bit odd.  We have talked for hours, on and off, conversed by mail, email, and text, and perhaps even had mental exchanges from miles away.  But we have never been in the same physical place at the same time.  Yet I imagine that our souls traversed together long ago, sharing intricate details of ourselves with one another.  All the way back, in the beginning, and it was certainly good.  She has a magnificent way of lifting my spirits and we are akin in such a plethora of ways, that often it seems surreal.  I smile, thankful for her friendship and grateful for how she constantly allows me escape, into the beautiful world of "what if?".

These two women are not the only ones who have ever been given a piece of me.  I've been relinquishing  fragments of myself for as long as I can remember.  While these two take precedent, simply because they have the most significantly sized portions, there were others, all given their parts.  Some smaller than others, but all strong in their own way.  And all of these pieces equal some type of connection.  These connections linger, long after everything else is gone.

Currently, in ___ham, NC, there is another woman, who, if I wasn't already broken into so many pieces, could probably easily have me whole.  She is beautiful, physically and mentally, has a smile that only wants to make me smile, always makes it known that she cares for me, and only wants to matter.  While she matters far more than she may ever realize, there is a part of me that is afraid that all I can offer her is in pieces.  There is a restlessness in me that has never been calmed, and I fear I will let it lead me.  When I am with her, I celebrate each second without hesitation.  I am trying to enjoy as many moments as I can.  I don't want yet another idle connection, lessening with distance and time.  Because I'd rather have her in my life, that not have her there at all.  Knowing this much has to mean something.

I don't know why I split myself so easily, forever sharing only just enough.  A piece, no matter how substantial in size or depth, will never be more than just a piece.  I want to give my all.  I'd at least like to feel like I could.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Here You Go, Have a Laugh



Who says condom commercials can't be funny?  This was a laugh that I needed, as today has been rainy and dull.  Plus the North Carolina Tarheels lost, today.  Oh well, here's to finding those silver linings, and occasionally stumbling upon a good laugh.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Who Comes Up With This Stuff

Lately, I've been getting tons of scam email from people claiming I am owed large sums of money.  Many of them tie in to the Bank of Africa in Burkina Faso (which has the coolest capital name, Ouagadougou...lol), but others include the Australian lottery, or my favorite, a prize from Bill Gates, through Microsoft's United Kingdom division.

It made me wonder:  who writes this stuff?  None of it sounds credible, it is usually riddled with typos and grammatical errors, and anyone with common sense could see right through it.  No, I'm not going to allow your bank to route questionable money through my account, in order to receive a 50% split.  Last time I checked, that's considered money laundering.  Below is one of the most recent emails I received:

Hello,I write to confess what you are presently going through with my Boss. I was a member of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) on Local and Foreign Debt attached to the World Bank office in Washington, DC, USA. I resigned my official duty when I discovered the activities of my colleagues during a private investigation I carried out. I suspected some kind of foul play in their act which they would never inform me because they know I would never be a party to such as a Christian. 
I discovered that my Boss was conniving with some top officials of the World Bank to divert funds approved to settle Lottery winners, International contractors and Inheritance. The World Bank has already given approval for the payment of your fund while they are deliberately delaying your payment. They continue to issue one fee or the other from different quarters. I wonder why you haven't noticed all this while. I can assure you this will keep happening if you do not do away with those officers.
Well I just hope you believe me, because if you don't, your fund is gone. Your fund is currently authorized to be paid to you from a financial consultant in the UK or US, approved by the World Bank with a Key Tested Reference/CLAIMS CODE Number, which was supposed to have been issued to you, but they have decided to divert your attention by telling you that they have something to do with one committee or the other especially here in UK or Africa and making you believe that the fund will be transferred into your account - FALSE! 
The reason why I am giving you this information is because of the fact that I was aware of it and my doctrine does not permit me to withhold such information. The only help you can get from me now, is the actual link to your payment, please do not give this information to my boss as it may lead to them influencing a total blockage to your payment, so you have to be very careful with this information. 
Upon your response to this message, I shall give you all you need to contact the affiliate Payment Office in UK or US. BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON
Yours truly,
Ms. Rosalia J.Ramos

The things people come up with, to try to get some money.   It really is a shame.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Lucky, Because I Come Across Some Rare Gems....


EYE OF THE STORM | Lovett from Lovett on Vimeo.

As I've stated several times, Vimeo offers a selection of some of the most creative videos I've ever seen.  This one, which must have taken a great deal of dedication and talent to create, inspired me so much, I've decided to write a short story based on it.  And furthermore, I'm delving into a genre that I don't really know much about:  science fiction.  So hopefully it turns out well, and all of you enjoy.  Will post it as soon as I'm done, but until then, enjoy the video.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet



Tuesday, March 22, 2011

A Comment about Comments (Or the Lack Thereof)

Most bloggers aren't in it for the comments, but we appreciate seeing them from time to time.  They remind us that this mindless banter is relevant to someone outside of our heads.  Which is important for helping a blog get better.  So those of you who spend your time, soaking over my carefully thought out words, I ask you one small favor:

COMMENT PLEASE!!!!

Thank you.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Just a Bit of Randomness (Maybe)

(Hopefully this is a bit of reassurance to those of you who thought I'd lose my randomness....lol)




I need this little girl's outlook on...well EVERYTHING!! So I can do anything good, too.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

The Tuesday Groove, March 22, 2011

So, I've been doing some 'blogger soul-searching' lately, and have come to the conclusion that this blog has no real focus.  It's random, like I am, which is not necessarily a bad thing.  But random posting is hard to organize, and hard to get people to relate to.  So in the spirit of organization and presenting things that are easy to relate to, I have decided to only post music on Tuesdays.

Yes, I know.  *sad face*  It hurts me, too!

But instead of one song, I'll upload at least THREE for your listening pleasure.  So maybe it'll all balance out in the end.

So without further bantering, I present the Tuesday Groove:

With one of the music industry's most well received festivals wrapping up this past Sunday, I am still pining all the killer artists and bands that I didn't get to see at SXSW (South by Southwest). Though the Cool Kids and B.o.B. would have been near the top of my list, here are some other acts I wish I could have caught.






The Kills --- Satellite

I remember when a friend of mine put me on to this group back in like '05 (with an awesome song called Superstition), and I was expecting them to really hit big.  While they have always held weight on the indie scene, it finally seems like the rest of the world is read to take notice.






Lenka --- The Show

Lenka is such a feel-good indulgence, that you don't care who looks at you cross eyed while you're singing her 'awaken the karaoke star in you' lyrics, while in line at the local supermarket. Or maybe that's just me...lol. Don't judge me:  this song just demands that I sing along!!








Fitz and the Tantrums --- Don't Got to Work it Out

One of the coolest and most unconventional R&B groups on the scene right now, Michael Fitzpatrick and company deliver funky performances in a genre that could use a few alternate sounds. I personally am sick of hearing Trey Songz and Chris Brown all the damn time!!  Besides, Noelle Scaggs is so awesome.


So there you have it, the Tuesday Groove, for March 22, 2011, with emphasis on just a few of the amazing acts at this past week's SXSW music festival.  I, for one, am already planning to be in Austin this time next year.   Have a great Tuesday, folks, and spend today trying to find a way to truly enjoy your groove.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

The Occasional Crazy Rare Quote # 7

“People become successful when they’re helped by others. No one wants to help an asshole.”
                                                                   ---  Anonymous



Makes sense to me.  Let's not be assholes!!

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Because This Poem Never Fails to Move Me

I've posted this before, but every time I am luck enough to stumble upon it again, it reminds me of the power of poetry.  Anis Mojgani, I say thank you.




I am preparing to shake the dust.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Friday, March 18, 2011

In Honor of the Looming Weekend

Weekend Wars

Friday mornings always find you restless,
stressed beyond compare, you are
Tuesday stretched too long,
your feet tap dance on the wrong side of anxious,
uptight, ready, nervous, waiting,
too long, waiting, nervous, ready,
you’ll forget how to be grateful
by the time the sun is gone

Friday night greets you, weightless,
an airy anchor poured neatly
into an eight dollar glass,
you become a shot put, soaring
on the throngs of beating drums,
each thump, pulls you closer,
each sip pushes you further
from your normal reserved nature,
checked, like a coat, at the door,
three more shots past your denial
and you become
a merry-go-round with no conscience,
it is funny what’s forgotten in between smiles
and the miles that your neediness circle upon
never quite equal true happiness,
by midnight
you are former self apparition,
a ghost disappearing in bathroom mirrors,
as you eye what you swore
you wouldn’t become

just before the sun rises early Saturday,
you’ve been humbled,
a taxicab’s confession,
rosary pressed to the backs
of cheap leather, God’s voice
is Pakistani, or West African,
and you only want it to steer you home,
stumbling, reeling, your innocence is
a broken heel struggling with the curb,
it’s a miracle on nights like these
that either of you find your pillow

Saturday afternoon,
a fly trapped in a widow’s web,
finds you on your back, reserved to the couch,
trying to rake up how you landed
in this mess, and searching
for some way out,
your head is killing you, which fits
since you’ve resigned yourself to mortician,
hopelessly prettying up the few things you can remember,
just to bury them, long before Monday comes,
from noon till sunset, you cozy your closet’s skeletons,
your conscience, a yet uncovered tomb,
still piled beneath sordid history

but soon, it is Saturday night, and again
you’re an accident, on cruise control,
rambunctiously swerving across the lanes:
one bad decision to the next,
as if tequila and bare flesh just fit together,
and one more shot will really make this better,
common sense front ended by a pitcher of Guinness,
you black out, in the depths of your revelry

Sunday morning is
waking up, face first in the air bag,
body feels the effects, mind circles the shame,
a sleeping stranger lies close, whose name escapes you,
so you take in surroundings to see
who should leave,
if it’s your place, you’ll escape to the bathroom,
a splash of cold water, so you can
scold the other stranger,
whose eyes search anxiously
for scars, in the mirror,
any tears can come after the
first stranger leaves,
but if it’s their place, the tears must wait longer,
a soft roll from a foreign bed, followed by
a quiet search for shoes,
don’t want to wake them,
not due to the unease
caused by a night you don’t remember,
but simply because you don’t need more to regret,
getting home is a pilgrimage across loneliness,
unfortunately, you’ve trekked this barren land,
far too many times,
your door slamming shut behind you is an alarming reminder:
Sunday is blunt force trauma, delivered
to the fractured mass that you are,
it is a day of picking up pieces,
taking glue to uneven edges and
trying to reattach composure and self,
once more promising ears that forgot how to listen
that you won’t get this bad again,
afternoon cocktails help ease the pain,
but this time you won’t go over,
by Sunday night you are penitent
and only a few bad memories remain

Monday mornings still find you weary,
a damaged fighter trying to hide the unhealed wounds,
worn out, you are Saturday, amplified too loudly,
having found that the next battle
might equal your surrender,

it is Friday, much too soon






An Overwhelming Sense of Purpose

De Luna

my eyes always look up,
perhaps trailing after
long lost thoughts, now reserved
to bask
in soft white glow, floating,
peppered amongst the stars,
they whisper
of what they might become

some say dreams,
but I’ll call them the hidden keys
to some ancient codec
my mind was once gifted,
other worldly blueprint reminder
that my soul will one day
touch the moon

soaring, celestial,
larger than life,
unbound by this world,
there have always been
greater things
than those that my eyes have seen

which is why they always look up
scanning horizons, remapping
boundaries,
searching for that message
lingering in the light

I will know
when my purpose
has found me

Thursday, March 17, 2011

The Occasional Crazy Rare Quote # 6


"Don't tell me the moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass."

                                      ---  Anton Chekhov

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

A Little Something

On Abraham

I picture the glistening blade,
shining in the sun, a blinding reminder
of how that which is given
is never really ours

I wonder how he slept the night before,
hours passing slow, but much too quickly,
announcing a mourning
that was yet to come,
I imagine the trepidation
brewing heavy in the pit of his stomach,
leaving him unsettled by that which
his faith had settled,
did he stare up at the moon
contemplating what must be done?
cursing those lazy days,
the ones previously accumulated
when he didn’t give quite enough thanks
didn’t take enough time out
to enjoy their little moments,
I imagine him
grasping young Isaac in his arms,
tears running freely
as he understood sacrifice

I picture the glistening blade
shining in the sun, a reminder
that eventually
we must cut ties

and I wonder
would my heart be so willing?

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Reminders



The van pictured above was being driven by my 18 year old nephew when, in order to avoid a swerving car driven by an idiot with a cell phone, he turned off the road.  Unfortunately, when trying to get back on the highway, my nephew lost control of the vehicle, it spun around, flipped over, and collided with a tree.

The damage above is the result.

How my nephew managed to escape the car and avoid injury, except for a minor cut and some back pain, is a testament to the miraculous.  Call it fate, luck, or the grace of God, but the bottom line is that Death was not in the equation, which I am certainly thankful for.

I can only imagine what went through his mind.  Near death experiences have the power to both cripple and reinvigorate.  I am hoping it's the latter.  I know I've thought very much about it, since seeing this photograph. It made me question my motives.  What's driving me?  What do I want to be said, when life is no longer apart of the equation?

I was fortunate enough to read the wise words of an acquaintance earlier today:

The objective of life is not to make it through. The objective of life is to make it count.

When it's all said and done, will my life count?  And for what?

Seeing what my nephew endured made me tired of simply asking questions.  It is time to produce some emphatic answers.  So that, when it's all said and done, I will know without a doubt exactly why my life mattered.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet
 

Rare Grove, Mar. 15, 2011



Kanye West --- Through the Wire

Though I am become a member of a dying breed, I am still a Kanye West fan.  I understand he makes it hard for a lot of people to like him.  Plus his sound constantly evolves.  But much of my fandom (is that even a word?  somehow, I think the folks at Webster's will say no) is based on his first two albums.  College Dropout is one of the greatest albums of all time, in my mind, and this song helps demonstrate why.

Plus, there's a personal story that kind of ties in to the theme of the song.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Hiatus No More

Hello, you rare beauties you!  Did you miss me?  Because I missed each and every one of you.  I really didn't think this hiatus thing was going to last so long, but I look and realize I haven't posted in five whole days!!  *Gasping*

Well, enough of that nonsense, I'm back.  And about to overload you guys with a bit of rampant posting for the next few moments.  Hopefully you enjoy it all.  First things, first.  This place seems a bit drab.  It needs a little music and, most definitely, some poetry!

I'm so glad to be back.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Thursday, March 10, 2011

On a Short Hiatus

The demands of school and my day to day life have taken away from my ability to post so frequently.  I apologize to you, my faithful readers, who continuously make this place all that it is, and make me strive to push it towards what it could be.  That drive and determination has not dwindled.  It is simply off, on a short hiatus.  See you all, as soon as it returns.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Monday, March 7, 2011

Amen, Mr. Randall


A Poet Is Not a Jukebox


A poet is not a jukebox, so don’t tell me what to write.
I read a dear friend a poem about love, and she said,
“You’re in to that bag now, for whatever it’s worth,
But why don’t you write about the riot in Miami?”[1]
I didn’t write about Miami because I didn’t know about Miami.
I’ve been so busy working for the Census, and listening to music all night,
and making new poems
That I’ve broken my habit of watching TV and reading newspapers.
So it wasn’t absence of Black Pride that caused me not to write about Miami,
But simple ignorance.

Telling a Black poet what he ought to write
Is like some Commissar of Culture in Russia telling a poet
He’d better write about the new steel furnaces in the Novobigorsk region,
Or the heroic feats of Soviet labor in digging the trans-Caucasus Canal,
Or the unprecedented achievement of workers in the sugar beet industry
who exceeded their quota by 400 percent (it was later discovered to
be a typist’s error).

Maybe the Russian poet is watching his mother die of cancer,
Or is bleeding from an unhappy love affair,
Or is bursting with happiness and wants to sing of wine, roses, and nightingales.

I’ll bet that in a hundred years the poems the Russian people will read, sing and love
Will be the poems about his mother’s death, his unfaithful mistress, or his
wine, roses and nightingales,
Not the poems about steel furnaces, the trans-Caucasus Canal, or the sugar
beet industry.
A poet writes about what he feels, what agitates his heart and sets his pen in motion.
Not what some apparatchnik[2] dictates, to promote his own career of theories.

Yeah, maybe I’ll write about Miami, as I wrote about Birmingham,[3]

But it’ll be because I want to write about Miami, not because somebody
says I ought to.

Yeah, I write about love. What’s wrong with love?
If we had more loving, we’d have more Black babies to become Black brothers and
sisters and build the Black family.

When people love, they bathe with sweet-smelling soap, splash their bodies
with perfume or cologne,
Shave, and comb their hair, and put on gleaming silken garments,
Speak softly and kindly and study their beloved to anticipate and satisfy her
every desire.
After loving they’re relaxed and happy and friends with all the world.
What’s wrong with love, beauty, joy and peace?

If Josephine had given Napoleon more loving, he wouldn’t have sown the
meadows of Europe with skulls.
If Hitler had been happy in love, he wouldn’t have baked people in ovens.[4]

So don’t tell me it’s trivial and a cop-out to write about love and not about Miami.

A poet is not a jukebox.
A poet is not a jukebox.
I repeat, A poet is not a jukebox for someone to shove a quarter in his ear
and get the tune they want to hear,
Or to pat on the head and call “a good little Revolutionary,”
Or to give a Kuumba Liberation Award.[5]

A poet is not a jukebox.
A poet is not a jukebox.
A poet is not a jukebox.

So don’t tell me what to write.


[1]  In 1980, perhaps one of the severest race riots of the century, in which Blacks took revenge for the killing of a Black man by four white policemen.
[2]  Flunky, minor civil servant.
[3]  Site of nonviolent civil-rights demonstrations led by the Black leader Martin Luther King, Jr., which were met with attack dogs, tear gas, cattle prods, and fire hoses.
[4]  Napoleon, French conqueror of Europe, married Josephine in 1796 and divorced her in 1809; gas ovens were only one feature of Adolf Hitler’s extermination camps.
[5]  Randall received a Kuumba Award in 1973.

----

I decided to include the notes that came with the poem, because they help to explain what the writer was feeling at that time.  This is one of my favorite poems, by one of my all-time favorite poets.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Just a Bit of Randomness (Maybe)


Coolest name ever!!

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Just a Bit of Randomness (Maybe)

Congratulations to the North Carolina Tarheels on winning the regular season ACC champions!!



Now let's take all this momentum into the ACC tournament!!

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Rare Groove, Mar. 05, 2011



Kings of Leon --- The Immortals

This song is such a great mood generator.  Makes me ready for combat (which usually takes place with pen and paper, or keyboard, involved).  They make those epic sounding songs in the same vein as bands such as Coldplay, U2, Foo Fighters, Pearl Jam, and the Red Hot Chili Peppers.  How can you not be a Kings of Leon fan?

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet

Friday, March 4, 2011

My Journey Continues (Or Maybe, It Finally Begins)

Awakening

I have always been.

even when unaware,
I am a breathing lung,
an opening eye,
light raking slowly over
understanding’s horizon,
I have hung myself in darkness, for too long,
my lips remained idly parted for too long,
anticipating, eager but
madly uncertain
of how that which is
happens to begin

I have always been.

even in my stilted silence,
but now I cry out, defiant
moans replace whispers,
a commencement of screams
forms in my soul,
roaming this agitation,
I have stationed myself in idleness, for too long,
my feet have been fruitlessly anchored for too long,
impatient, willing but lacking direction
towards steps that are
already predestined
to be made

seeing,
listening,
understanding,

I have always been.




The Occasional Crazy Rare Quote # 5

"It is of course precisely in such episodes of mental traveling that writers are known to do good work, sometimes even their best, solving formal problems, getting advice from Beyond, having hypnagogic adventures that with luck can be recovered later on."

                                                          ---  Thomas Pynchon


Perhaps my sleeplessness is good for my writing...lol.

Marcus Jamison, the Rare Poet