“To be Black is something so special.”
Dr. Bettina Love
Dear Black Joy, Thank you. You have nurtured and sustained me my entire life. Before I could even name you, you showed up in Grandma’s slender hands as she cut articles about my first love, Prince, out of the newspaper for me to keep. When Bobbie Lee’s hands clapped in church on Sunday mornings, you showed up in fresh-pressed suits straight from Uncle Willie’s dry cleaners, and the tightly braided, fresh out of a bonnet hair of little girls like me who could not sit still. You were in the harmonies that ushered the Holy Ghost into Hurst Chapel A.M.E. Church and sent church mothers running up and down the aisles to convince us all to lift our hands in praise and join them in singing that we don’t feel no ways tired. I’ve come too far from where I started from. When we were all spent, you awaited me in the church kitchen in heaping mounds of macaroni and cheese, crispy fried chicken, honey-baked ham, collard greens, green beans, peach cobbler -- food that seemed to have no beginning or end. (Everybody knew this alpha and omega was Mrs. Moore, though. We don’t eat just anybody’s cooking. We don’t know where they’ve been.) Grandma’s been gone almost four years, but you, Black Joy, survived in the old Ebony and Jet magazines she proudly displayed in her Florida room, an orange and green sanctuary reminding us to give thanks for our family’s legacy at the university on Tallahassee’s highest hill.

Florida Agricultural & Mechanical University in 1946.
You outlived the one person I thought could look death in the face and tell it to get to stepping. You defy all odds! That a people could rail against the horrors of chattel slavery for centuries, spend every moment since emancipation fighting for our humanity and have you remain, unspeakable, in our hearts is nothing short of a miraculous gift from the ancestors. L I B A T I O N S When I left your sacred arms and refused to give you the time of day, because I was out there contorting myself and my dreams to please the white gaze, you paid my infidelities no mind and passionately pursued me anyway. You crushed yourself up -- like momma used to crush aspirin into orange juice because I didn’t know what was good for me -- so I would still take you. I’m so sorry. They taught me all about you, Black Joy, but nobody told me white supremacy is insidious, that it comes, like a thief in the night, to kill and destroy. I nearly died trying to appease it. But you never stopped calling me in (not out) and I found my way back to you -- the only venue that could host all of me, just as I am -- and relearned how to live in community with people who can wholly reflect who I am, people willing to die for my liberation. Thank you for escorting me through doors of return: the words of the ancestors -- Love makes your soul crawl out from its hiding place -- the poetry written on my heart -- I rise I rise I rise -- the song of my soul-- Shadowed beneath Thy hand May we forever stand True to our God True to our native land -- and those actual doors.

Thank you for saving my place at the table. Thank you for helping me return -- to the coil of my hair, the curves of my body, the sass of my mouth, the music that seizes control of my hips and emotions, the literature that feeds my soul, the comedy that conjures full-bodied laughter, and the peace in my heart. Thank you for giving me back vibrant head wraps, hoop earrings that touch my shoulders, brightly-colored lips, sister friends, and men who don’t need the manual about how to love a Black woman.

Thank you for making me love you so fiercely, so palpably, that a Mexican little girl reads "Black Teachers Matter" on my t-shirt, rolls her neck, and says, "That's true!" in solidarity. Thank you for drawing me so close to you that my rendering of The Undefeated touches a young Mexican boy brimming with machismo so deeply that he ducks behind a bookcase to hide his tears. Thank you for liberating me. Thank you for giving me life. Thank you for reminding me of how blessed I am to have overcome it all and have the luck to be Black and proud on this Saturday morning with my vow to you tattooed on my mahogany skin: Sankofa. Love, Aeriale

often associated with the proverb
“It is not wrong to go back for that which you have forgotten.”

Such a beautiful love letter!
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Aeriale, from your blog title to your captions, I love this post. The way that Black Joy is brought to life first by your grandma, then by its own power–
“You crushed yourself up,
like momma used to crush aspirin into orange juice
because I didn’t know what was good for me,
so I would still take you.”
and then by you yourself–that moment when THE UNDEFEATED opens to call all those children in (not out)–
thank you for this post.
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Oh, Aeriale. This takes my breath away. This was like a song, a sermon, a poem, and a romp around a room all at once. I wish I had known your Grandma.
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Aeriale, your poem is a mentor text for all of us to claim who we truly are. I recently read Stamped and felt the stab of guilt over and over again because I thought I was an anti-racist while most likely I’ve been an assimilationist. There is really no script for getting away from this; all I can say is I’m trying. Reading your poem helps. Thanks!
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Such a beautiful affirmation and articulation of #BlackJoy
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Aeriale,
So much emotion! I was captivated by every line. So grateful for your contribution. I’ll read it again and again.
-Charlie
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Kept highlighting sections I was thinking of using as an excerpt, then reading further and thinking, “No, wait, THIS.”
Am finally going to just tell everyone to read and savor all of it. Thank you for this.
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Aeriale,
This is the most exquisite writing. So many images really touched me- I love the part about your students- the little Mexican girl affirming that Black Teachers Matter and the little boy hiding his tears behind the bookshelf. The parts about your Grandma…the whole stanza “Thank you for giving me back…” This is a mentor text for writing a poem to an idea with words and images that bring me- a white teacher- into another world. I loved your writing and your story.
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