Where The Brightest Minds Have The Darkest Corners
Tag Archives: jah’kaya

NaPoWriMo 4:30 ~ Tandem Inspiration

by The AOMuse

Together
have we
tiptoed tepidly
through the cargo cabin
of a craft in flight
at 15 thousand feet
in elevation
from initial point
of lift off
clasping hands
while coasting closer
to the eminent cracking
of our equally
fragile egos

Last minute
deployment
of chutes
our only solace
from an impending
social demise

Once we thumb
wrestled
whilst each of us
rode a unicycle
over a packet
of homework
three sheets in length
leading to an argument
pleasing to neither
leaving she
with teary eyes
and I a fearsome
throbbing vessel
in my right temple

At the furious core
of this continuum
leaking with the
radioactive
half life
of excruciating anger
love is still burning
nuclear fusion
temperately
exceeding
my ability to be
acutely explosive
thus a meltdown
was scarcely averted

Two emotional
national entities
declared a treaty
of disarmament
where peace
on Earth
is a tenuous
prospect requiring
a patient gardener
to tend the field

We take chances
dancing lightly across
challenges
she holds steady
her core
atop my shoulders
I measure the base
where gravitational
balance lives

We give
We take
We break
We bargain
We fold our cards
We finish, focus and start again

Together
have we tiptoed tepidly
through the cargo cabin
measuring space, weight and utility
of each object contained therein
she co-pilots my flight captain
navigating unfriendly skies
each teaching the other
the latest maneuver
no didacticism required
the object is to be receptive
so that no one knocks us off
our plane.

Hearts filled with fuel
and recharged by the sun.

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This I Believe: Co-Parenting

by The AOMuse

“Parenting is a dance.” ~ from This I Believe: Communication & Dance

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Out of a bedrock of false starts, opaque walls and denied inspiration does this essay arise amongst the most difficult feelings I have struggled to capture thus far in this series.  I find myself fixed between the desire to indulge the fierce honesty which courses beneath the surface my present writing life while being careful of the temptation towards copious verbiage realizing that saying too much can be as broad a shield as saying too little.  My art is the proof and substance of that proverb.  Poetry is a whimsical suit fashioned in an attempt to clothe my failures and frailties in colorful garments that you might attend to them more readily than you do those other ugly things you are soon to learn about me.  This is why I am ever in conflict when writing about a thing which inspires either vexation or pain.  Do you see how I crouch behind the myth of my words?

“Co-parent” and “co-parenting” are two terms for which I have developed a certain zealous affinity as of late.  The story begins in the course of one typically awkward moment which most co-parents may find familiar where both are present in some social situation and a third party poses the question “Is this your wife/husband?”  Always accompanied by a precocious smile.  Both parents turn to each other for a brief, uncomfortable glance before issuing a nearly simultaneous “No.”  This is followed by a halfhearted and habituated explanation such as “this is Jah’kaya’s father/mother”.

 

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After enduring yet another of these curious encounters, I began to wonder to myself why I had allowed my relationship with Auset to be truncated inside of a term which implied the only connection we held was filtered through the affairs of our child.  I have envisioned my life as filled with lessons worthy to be understood not only by myself, but made available for the growth of others.  I began to ponder how I could redirect the language towards a more fitting understanding of how she and I are presently positioned in each other’s life when I began considering the term “co-parent”.

I am sure that I overheard the term in some previous discussion, but I don’t think I had come to grasp the full comprehension of it until just that moment.  We do not operate mutually exclusive drop off centers.  We interact with each other and plan together.  We talk to one another and discuss new prospects happening in each of our lives.  The degree to which we have been able to initiate an open discourse in our parental relationship has abridged the amount each parent must labor to be aware of what is going on in the life of our child.  As her needs change, we are able find ways in which each parent may adapt for the lack of availability of the other.

 

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No one should be struck with the romantic notion that this level of engagement came easily for either one of us.  We parted households soon after Jah’kaya was born.  I was certain I had failed and withdrew from our circle of mutual friends out of fear that I might be called to account for that failure.  I had been fired from a position at American Pharmaceutical Partners on December 31, 2001 which saw me take a 7 month free fall during which we lost our apartment in Woodlawn and found our relationship rapidly fracturing by the time we moved to a new location in Hyde Park.  We lingered on as most separated couples do seeking to ascertain if there was still the potential for making it work.  I recall telling my mother even a year after Jah’kaya’s birth I was certain that Auset and I would be together.  This would not come to pass.

We each navigated our way though those 5 stages of grief.  Denial.  “This is just a growth phase that we must to go through.  All will return to normal soon.”  Anger.  “If you would simply stop blaming me for (x), then you could see what you are missing.”  Bargaining.  “How can I change (y) so that we can make it whole again?”  Depression.  “I never want to think about love anymore.”  Acceptance.  “I’m sorry.  I understand.  How do we move forward?”

In my journey to stop blame shifting, I had to find the flaws in my own character which contributed to weakening the relationship including an unrealistic portrait of manhood bordering upon dictatorial patriarchy, a lack of communication about our shared problems and a desire to be independent of any need inside of the relationship.  We share mutual blame for its failure.  In working to repair the fractures of the past, I have continually reshaped my ideal of the person I bring into future relationships even once finding myself a dogmatic proponent institutional marriage as I again grappled with internalized patriarchy.

 

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Here I stand now nearly 10 years grown from that point on July 15, 2002 at 9:59 pm when Jah’kaya Sirius Tekhen entered this life and discovered me hastily attempting to retool myself into the sort of father required of such a dynamic human being.  Auset and I have managed to trade off through most of those years.  She facilitated birth and primary years through age 3.  I was able to preside over her enrollment at New Concept Development Center and later guided many of her activities between Kindergarten and 4th grade.  During my most recent career and contract transition, Auset has returned to directing Jah’kaya’s schedule again.

Through all of these iterations and changes in our individual adult lives, we communicate with one another.  I seek to help her not simply with the affairs of the child, but whatever process she might be engaging.  I recognize that to the extent I can make life easier for her, I make life more stable for our child and the familial community we have created around that child.

I am fortunate to have come from a pair of remarkable role models for a non-traditional, non-nuclear family unit.  My mother and father divorced when I was a mere 5 years of age.  I moved south with my mother soon thereafter where she was remarried to my stepfather, James.  He came with a daughter and son, Washay and Jayvonnie who remained in Chicago, but came to visit us on occasion in Louisiana.  My older brother, Rahsaan, and I would return to Chicago each summer where we were welcomed into the arms of a larger family as my father had remarried my stepmother, Geneva.  She brought with her 2 sons, Willie and Denardo as well as 2 daughters, Shayla and Shenitha.

 

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My mother and father throughout their own transition have remained steadfast friends.  I always knew my father and both respected and feared his authority.  I felt his love not only for me, but for my mother.  His proximity as a continuing co-parent was even known to make some of my mother’s future companions jealous.  As I have grown in life, my mother was also in the habit of adopting many other individuals into the fold of our growing family.  I have cousins as close as my own siblings and godsisters whom my mother treats the same as her own daughters.  Did I neglect to mention my oldest brother, Antoine, and oldest sister, Danielle?

All of these growth experiences together and those which I continue to encounter have shown me that only part of family consist of the ties we share by blood and birth.  Much of what holds us taut to each other is the substance of what we endure that draws us nearer together as a family unit.  I believe in co-parenting.  Both the word itself and the substance behind that word.  Time has certainly changed how families are formed.  While we have seen some detrimental effects of these changes where children are caught in the middle, co-parenting offers us the opportunity to change the paradigm and create a space where children are richly nurtured and allowed to prosper.  I made more than one choice when my relationship ended.  There was the decision that although Auset and I might not be right for each other, we could still be completely right together.  There are no more awkward meetings.  This is Auset and she is my co-parent.

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Johnathan ~ Jah’kaya ~ Auset

If you have found yourself on a co-parenting journey of your own, I highly recommend viewing the resources available at Co-Parenting 101.  While I have only discovered them within the past week of researching this article, I have found them to be an incredibly valuable resource for discovering new ways to make the act of parenting together a more richly rewarding experience for all members of the family.


Staking My Flag In Her Stability

by The AOMuse

Due to constraints of work, I have had to pull back in the level of participation which I can offer at Jah’kaya’s school.  While on the phone with her following cheer practice for a competition that I would not be able to attend, she and I were discussing her Young Inventors Project and the idea she had for building a solar house.  As scattered as a child’s mind can be, so was she.  She would jump to a discussion about practice and back to the solar house then forward to her trip to Huntville to see her grandmother.  The process can be exasperating when I am in one of my lecture modes.  I found this poem within me after that conversation.

See when I ain’t there
I ain’t there
But when I am there
I want to be all caught up
Underneath your hair
Like a neurotransmitter
Thought listening device
Embedded inside your skin
Like a splinter
You touched this Earth 5 days
After I honored my own rebirth
Nearness never got any simpler
So even when you age
When adolescence sees
Our luna(r)tic tendencies
Locked in mortal combat
I’ll remember
You named me “Father”
And our lifetime agreement
Offered no possibility
Of breach of contract
Therefore you can reach for contact
Or keep me as distant
As Earth’s surface
From the closest Comm. Sat.
I’ll still leave a line
Open for conversation
Never let my heart be closed
By parental consternation
Guide your feet towards independence
Like a North Star constellation
And when life is serving you losses
I’ll hold your ice cream consolation
For you are the #winning combination
Who slid to the midwife’s coaxing
With nary a complication
Burning conflagration
Tremendous enough to consume
Traces of my boyish exuberance
Maturity is the movement
And I’ll be damned if I ain’t doing it
Because I have one chance
To change her life
And the cost to this world
Is far too high to ruin it.

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Pride Is A Sin T’aint It?

by The AOMuse

well…i’ll be expecting my fall shortly cause i been letting it go before me for quite some time : and this was the culmination.
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it’s been two weeks since i and the other Shabazz parents attended the Xtreme Spirit Cheer Nationals : and i have not been able to stop obsessing over the vibrant charge that surged through me : as i watched this brilliant performance
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i was initially hesitant about putting her into cheerleading : when her mother posed the question : my mind surely wondered : “what the hell does cheerleading have to do with revolutionary thought?” : [image] : i was mum on the issue for a while : but auset : ever the tactician : cornered me : and demanded : that we must pick an activity for her before it was too late in the school year
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the first year was rough : kindergarten can be like that : i had to constantly remind her : and shadow her : to make sure she was developing a good habit of attending practice : at the end of that school year : she missed tryouts for the following year : and we left the team behind for the summer : entered into a far less extraordinary program at the park district : and became dissatisfied over the whole matter : as of the beginning of this school year back in august : i negotiated with her coach to give her another tryout so that we could put her back on track : and i haven’t let up since
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why? : you may ask : because i’m a hard ass : with a discipline deficiency that i have spent a lifetime trying to make up for : [image] : but aside from that : i now see the payoff : the confidence that she exuded on that competition mat : is sure to carry her far in life : by god and the universe : that and the lessons of life : i tender to her each passing day : the focus on academics : the mapping out of extracurricular exploration : will form from itself a well rounded being : who will know well what to do with the aforementioned revolutionary thought : upon whence it takes root
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from a tiny room with two queen beds : at the ramada inn : where her mother sat braiding her hair : to the kalahari resort : where someone we could not have yet imagined : did emerge and show herself glorious : we are now fully aware : that we have created a monster : and none of us would have it any other way
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her mother is a gem herself : i sometimes sit in circles of brothers : where is lamented the situation of shared parenting : and i wonder : how it could be that relationships exist with such vitriol and detriment : to one another and the children : while we did not start off upon separation at such a place : we arrive here : and stand in proud awe : at both results : the road was turbulent : we each had to concede : that neither of us had the answers to it all : that we would have to haggle through some of those questions together : and better to do it in collective good humor : then at the threat of blue faces : and the forced holding of one’s breath : no : we can find civility : where each of us is centered
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i picked up a book recently : at my holistic living course on wednesdays : by marian wright edelman : founder and president of the children’s defense fund : it was titled “guide my feet: prayers and meditations for our chidlren” : the first prayer is one for the gift and raising of children and it reads :
Dear God, I thank You for the gift of this child to raise, this life to share, this mind to help mold, this body to nurture, and this spirit to enrich.
Let me never betray this child’s trust, dampen this child’s hope, or discourage this child’s dreams.
Help me, dear God, to help this precious child become all You mean him to be.
Let Your grace and love fall on him like gentle breezes and give him inner strength and peace and patience for the journey ahead.

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i am nothing of the religious sort : but as a meditation for precise parenting : this verse could not be more complete : or magnificent in its candor : and for all of the children : that are “your” children : *for as sister edelman reminds us : they all are* : may you open and close each day with the notion of this prayer firmly entrenched in the forefront of your mind : pride goeth before a fall : and i should be so lacking in pride that i can fall to my knees in meditation : that a tiny foot : small frame : and nimble body : can more easily climb atop my shoulders

parenting…the(real)worldsoldestprofession!

the aoholdinghisground


Sea Legs

by The AOMuse

Remember the first time you touched the water with those wildly flailing arms and stiff, unsteady legs? Can you recall the touch of excitement meddled with apprehension of the chlorinated mixture that kept finding its way into your throat coupled with the resultant tummy ache from having swallowed a gallon of salt or pool water? Don’t you dare turn your nose up! As disgusting as it might sound in your adult phase, it happened to you too.

Think back to the time when you had thoroughly embraced your merman/mermaid heritage and you succeeded in ripping from one end of the pool to another. For myself, this was a summer at Camp Mathieu somewhere in southern Illinois. I was reeling from the recent disclosure that at age 8 or 9, I was a recovering bedwetter. It had to come out at some time. Hopefully this revelation will not come back around to bite me in any future political campaign since others can clearly relate to it. *Listens for crickets chirping amongst the audience*

In any case, I was in dire straits to find a success during that summer. Already, I had been bested on the cross terrain bicycle race due to my unfortunate discovery of a ditch on the far right side of the racing lane. I was also never able to keep up with the other children in arts and crafts who had mastered the magnificent art of making those braided rubber key chains. My fingers are still not nimble enough to this day to string one together especially when my patience is the width of that string, at least as far as craftwork is concerned.

In the midst of this tumultuous season, I found myself gleefully splasing about in the pool with 50 or so other campers that had been allotted pool time on this scorching summer day. As the whistle was blown announcing the end of our time, I found myself wading toward the wall intending to make my exit. I was halted by a counselor beckoning me to make my way down to the shallow end of the pool. I was immediately filled with a sense of danger since I had been in the habit of attracting the attention of summer employees who obviously earned their physical education degrees under the careful instruction of the Marquis De Sade. Fortunately this would not a new spin on table squats or bucket holding. This counselor just wanted to see if I would accept his challenge to swim from 3 feet to 9 feet.

I beckoned all of the courage my adolescent frame could muster. I was not in the habit of putting on shows since I can’t bear the thought of people staring at me. As I stretched out that first straight arm and cupped hand, I threw my face into the water in a frenzied manner. 4 feet. I twisted my head from one side to the other to prevent drowning in the drink. I reached out my arm as if attempting to grasp the safety bar at the wall on the 9 foot end. 6 feet. I found my wispy arms becoming weary against of the pressure of the waters they were churning through. 7 feet. The body could stand no more and the legs began to give out. 8 feet. The safety bar on the left wall was my salvation that faithful day. I swam maybe 20 feet which was a more sustained cardiovascular work than I had been accustomed to performing aside from the intensity of my bike rides. I will never forget the first time I earned my sea legs.


Actual Words

by The AOMuse

“Daddy, are you going to take my training wheels off tomorrow?”


Birthday Afterthoughts

by The AOMuse

These thoughts have been postponed for quite some time. Mostly because I can speak them more clearly than I can write them and partly because I know that in writing them they become concrete objectives of the ongoing mission statement that I have aspired to since that very first birthday on July 15, 2002. I recall the the pigment deficient head as it ascended from the water, eyes struggling to grasp the concept of light. I recall my desire to shove aside the European midwife so that I could coax you the remainder of the way as clearly as I remember reminding myself of why we had sought her services in the first place. Fortunately, she was kind enough to respect that I would like to be one of the first two people to greet this new soul arriving to join us on our journey.

5 years later you have broadened your already large personality to consume one experience after another. I can’t say that I know another child who takes on tap like you, who plays baseball like you, or who approaches sign language with your enthusiasm. You show yourself to be more precocious and innately sensible each day I know you. An heir to the throne beside the other daughters of Katherine Mackey in every respect. I used to have a habit of saving up every witty challenge you presented to your old dad. I would make notes of any major quip that crossed my radar that caused me to question who was in fact the elder in this situation. At later dates, I would present this evidence to my mother and father that someone was playing a game with me. Something was definitely afoot. Someone had found Auset’s womb and inserted this “child” there only to make me look ever the fool trying wrangle and raise up someone that keeps proving to me how little guidance they actually need to attack every experience in life with vigor.

In the days leading up to this celebration, I had to ask myself how I should go about honoring and celebrating you properly. I am not a big fan of birthdays in the traditional sense as I understand them in the same regard that I understand holidays. They are excuses to do something different and I don’t think human beings should need excuses for exercising their right to celebrate living, family, and freedom. Only days ago on July 10, I had let my own birthday pass by without so much as a peep. A traditional afternoon was spent at your little league practice trying to motivate you to focus on the coach and the field. I apologize if I push you too hard sometimes. I try to follow each such experience with an embrace or an affirmation of Love so that you will know that all of my behaviors are rooted there.

As we walked into your grandmother’s house that evening, I noticed your keen eye peering about the room for any signs of traditional birthday paraphernalia. There was none to be found. As interesting as this was, I found it even more interesting that you did not move away from this initial state of excitement to one of disappointment. Instead you spent the first half of the time playing with the basketball your grandmother had given you and waiting with anticipation as Mike and I tightened the bolts on your new bike. We then enjoyed a few bites from the Sponge Bob ice cream cake from Baskin Robbins before we put your helmet and padding on and went outside to test out the bike.

In the end, I want you to know that I was proud of how you handled that day. I know other children that would have thrown a tantrum over such a spartan celebration. My objective here was to teach you the value of honoring the people and relationships that exist around you instead of honoring things. The love you draw from these relationships will sustain you far longer than the temporal satisfaction that you derive from the things that people use to prop themselves up in the world.

I have my reservations about diving in so early to these values as I still have the traditional parental ideals to grapple with in wanting to give your children everything, but I hope to bypass these feelings to show you “everything else” that is traditionally forgotten while children are learning the art of accumulation. Every gift you receive from me will follow the continued pattern of the piano and the guitar. They will all be chosen to guide you toward a new experience where you might ultimately find your way in Life. I look forward to holding your hand as we flesh out the rest of this parent child experiment.

PS: I have given up trying to figure out who you really are. I understand that sometimes we are not allowed to reveal these things early on. I am sure that someday you will reveal yourself to me. Until then, I hope you don’t mind that I continue addressing you as Jah’kaya Sirius Tekhen.


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