Author: CMS

  • WHITE NOISE

    by PAULA 

    white lights, red and blue ones, too
    white-hot fire in my stomach
    bile in my throat
    someone, overpower the white noise
    and me,
    screaming, “white supremacy”

    it makes me sick

    I am not my ancestor’s mistakes
    no longer influenced by their ignorance
    though I live with the repercussions
    they say I’ve never known racism
    because I’m of a light tone
    I need more Coppertone at the beach
    not extravagant enough in my preaching
    but i grew up in a family
    where being called a “n*****-lover” was
    thrown in my face, laid on the
    table everyday over dinner

    not so much anymore

    they grew used to my differing opinions
    the kind where the amount of melanin
    in your skin does not have an effect
    on the amount of love I can give you
    so it hurts
    it really hurts when the assumption
    is that I’m racist, just another
    white girl
    ready
    to yell “hate crime!”

  • ILLUMINATI BABY

    by CURTIS B. 

    Illuminati baby, came from the pyramid. If I’m reading,
    I hope that you’re hearing this. Triangles, your soul, they
    put fear in it. I can peer into it. Never basic,
    always exclusive, when I’m creating something
    my foot goes into it. That image, I drew it, had
    things on my mind then came to a conclusion—
    Illuminati baby, that’s all illusion.

  • LITTLE CATERPILLAR

    by ARIEANNA

    I see a little caterpillar at the park. This little caterpillar is black and reddish orange. I named him Jermamy. He was very fuzzy. I disturbed him from his walk in the park. I picked him up with lovely stick. Then he fell. And scared me. Then me and my sister got into a huge fight, and the caterpillar ran away. I hurried and grabbed him before he could go further. Then I picked him up and put him down in the park. He was swirling,  and I thought he died. He was spitting stuff out and so I put him back in the mulch. I turned my head, and he was crawling fast! Away. I was sad, but I can imagine how scared he must’ve been. It’s okay. I let his fuzzy self go!

  • HERO

    by SIERRA

    A 13-year-old girl stands on top of a 24-floor building. She looks down at the crowd of people, then she closes her eyes and reflects on the eighth-grade lifestyle she had to go through. The names they called her—b****, fishy, and many more names that made her shed a tear. As she took a breath to look up at the beautiful sky, she was in tears. She stood at the edge and her head was held high and his arms spread wide. Then she fell off that building. Out of clear blue sky, a man jumped out the 16th floor window with a group of dancers called the D.A.R. One of the people jumped out and caught her in mid-air. It was amazing it was like she was Elastic Girl or Mr. Fantastic. But she wasn’t. She was an ordinary girl who landed on her feet.

    That’s a hero.

  • THINGS I WOULD SAVE

    by CHELSEA M.

    The things that I would save . . . Well, will that make me brave? Let’s start with family and friends. It will be great to join each hand. Next, I would save my favorite animals. But it would be hard to save the sea. Mammals. Just wondering, how cool it would be, for everything on the planet to be saved by me. But that’s only when the world will end. So, no worries until then.