Think, Think

Think about the air invisible as it uncurls
a wave of toxins. Think about how its fingertips
trace the skin as a baton falls on the flesh
merely seconds later. Think about how heavy
metals brown the water and we are told to drink.
Think about how many of us wonder when
the roofs over our heads will be tongues evicted
from the languages of  home. Think about how every
person needs a doctor, but everyone doesn’t get one.
Think about how savings mean nothing to the crazy
fine print circumscribed like obsolete glyphs. Think
how law books fall open and hopscotch for anyone
who keeps writing checks. Think, think, think like
Aretha Franklin belting what you tryna to do to me?
Think how the law keeps shuffling the numbers to fit
some constant where acknowledging who is human
is posited in some philosophy or some mathematical
equation that pretends that logic is its function, when
blood needs to find something superior, something
that denies how human is defined by a much wider net
cast by some divine fisherman, or perhaps an African
goddess in a gown laced with sea foam, but place markers
for faith are constantly moved toward a crucifix. A human
can find more than one path, I hope. Think about how,
every day, someone is hoping for some simple thing
like fresh bread lightly toasted, the ability to walk without
pain, a chance to shower, a moment free of fist and jeer,
a moment singing victorious as if we could level the wrongs
and leave the world upright, like a gospel-drenched woman
singing freedom, freedom after forgiveness, after you change
your mind, ’cause you need to think (and act) to be free.

Notes:

This is part of a portfolio of work that appeared in Poetry’s December 2020 issue and is excerpted from Carving Out Rights from Inside the Prison Industrial Complex (Hat & Beard Press, 2020), a collection of poems and essays about human rights accompanied by foam block prints of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights by artists at Stateville Prison, edited by Tara Betts, Aaron Hughes, and Sarah Ross. Find the rest of the portfolio here.

Source: Poetry (December 2020)