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Urban Nightmare #WEPFF Challenge featuring Driving Home #amwriting #poetry

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This recognition means a lot to me and anyone who can directly relate to this poem. Thank you to everyone for all the kind and encouraging words.

Driving Home

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It’s cold outside, but I can’t wear a hoodie.

My pants are too tight, but at least it doesn’t look like I’m carrying.

My car is run down, but at least I’m less likely to get pulled over.

I just need to make it a few more blocks…

#BlackLivesMatter

~

NCCO- 49 words- Driving Home 2020 Copyright © Toinette J. Thomas

Please visit other entries in this hop and enjoy some funny, scary, touching, and thought-provoking stories. You’ll be so glad you did.


Thank you for taking the time to read this post. If you like it let me know and share it with others. See you next time, Toi Thomas. #thetoiboxofwords #blacklivesmatter

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By Toi Thomas

Author and illustrator of children's books, as well as clean adult fiction and nonfiction. Toi is a geek-girl blogger, vlogger, reviewer, and advocate for a healthy reading lifestyle. She finds comfort in faith, family, and creative expression. Toi believes in the dream of world harmony and hopes all your dreams come true.

51 replies on “Urban Nightmare #WEPFF Challenge featuring Driving Home #amwriting #poetry”

You’ve said so much in so few words. You’ve eloquently described a fear that’s unimaginable for many of us, but all too real for people of color. This world needs to change. It has to. #BlackLivesMatter

Thank you, Tricia. I wanted to write a lot more, but these are the only words that came. Ultimately, I don’t think I needed to say anymore.

This poem made me feel so sad. It’s beautifully written and relevant to what’s exploding right now. I agree with Olga – packed with emotion.

Hi,
it is horrible when a person has to fear for his or her life because of the color of their skin. Being born and raised in the Deep South, I know what it feels like because I lived through it, thinking it was the only place in the world where segregation and the color of the skin mattered. That is until I became an Expatriate in Europe and saw the hideous things done to other minorities living in other countries. I then realized that racisim is a deadly disease that runs through humanity.
Loved your poem. Short, it spoke out the fear one has being different from the others.
Shalom aleichem,
Pat Garcia

So powerful Toi. It reminded me of that meme on FB where it was pointed out all the things that were unsafe if you were black. No white person ever thinks that way. Pat’s right, this disease of attacking anyone ‘different’ is widespread. Your poem could be at the beginning of a story. I could see it unfold in my head as I read. Despite all his precautions, he gets picked up by the cops, is brutalized, dies. Another black life that didn’t matter.

Very topical. Awesome for the prompt.

Wishing you good health and good writing!

That’s why I left the last line open. I wanted people to think about whether he actually makes it home. Thank you for your kind words and wishes.

I hate it when I see a cop behind me, but I do know it means something different for a 55-year-old white woman to be pulled over than for a black person. I had one cop who was so condescending to me that I just wanted to reach out of the car and slap him. But I consider myself fortunate that I never for a moment thought he would try to kill me.
~Cie from Naughty Netherworld Press~

Every black person in American thinks they might die if they get pulled over. One headlight on my car went out earlier this year and refused to go out at night until I was able to get it fixed.

So eloquent, so powerful, so poignant! This just turned both my heart and brain inside out. How the world treats its minorities needs to change drastically and needs to change now. In every country, not just in the USA or UK.

When the word minority actually applies to a group of people with a smaller population than the majority, mabe we’ll be on the right track. You’re right, the whole world needs to re-evaluate how people are treated.

This is stunning. It’s amazing how you capture so much with so few words. This is a daily reality for so many people, and a lot of others are simply unwilling to see it or take action. I hope things change for the better.

#BlackLivesMatter indeed. A powerful piece about the reality for too many. Racism has to end. The privileged, like me, have a responsibility to end it with constructive means. Our silence does nothing, nor does our insincerity.

Hi Toi – too close to the bone for many … that constant fear must be so draining. Well said … #BlackLivesMatter and all lives matter. Well said … as Shannon says … ‘succinct, yet heartbreaking’ … take care and stay safe – Hilary

Relevant, beautiful, poignant. The last line caught my breath in my throat and the poem leaves one’s heart rending for change. #BlackLivesMatter

Wow! This took my breath away. Succinct and searing. The thought process no one should have to have, the ambiguity of the ending no one should have to contemplate. Powerful! Thank you.

Congratulations Toi on your WEP win … it is a very powerful, appropriate piece at this time … take care and all the best – Hilary

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