‘Solace On The Subway’ By Lora René Tucker

I know most Harlemites are considerate, thoughtful people, but whatever we consider ourselves hits the third rail when we are on the subway, jockeying for that seat, positioning for that personal space we are going to claim for the ride home.  I must admit, we often travel the subway with our ipods on, defenses up, and game face blaring. I am sure that the most centered yogi or Buddhist monk would get in touch with stress for a New York minute on the “A,” “4” or “2” train.

But there are moments in time that we can be a witness to that underground rainbow; when the subway illuminates with a random act of kindness, a shared thought with the person sitting beside you, or a group laugh.  Those times are when we live in the moment and just appreciate the wonder of goodness. Yes, that really happens in the most stressful city in America.  (Any “strap hanger” knew that before CNN made it breaking news.)

I would like to share a “for instance” with you.  One day, riding from Brooklyn to 135th Street, I had my trusted journal and Waterman fountain pen out, writing what was on my mind that pre-rush hour evening.  (I’ll admit) it was mostly babble, opinion and pontification, until a young man came on the train….then I felt a poem coming on….

Tall dark and handsome, a young brother came on the “2” train looking mighty stressed, he became a brother from another planet; bringing in the train with him a “vibe” that could not be ignored.  Like a painter sketching a moment, I began to observe and write:

Thugs

Twisting mouth

Sucking teeth

Long

Lean

Aloof

Glide

To seat.

Shifting weight

Like sediment

Claiming turf.

Size 13

“just do its”

Sweeping across floor

Asserting dominion

Over sling back pumps

Florsheims.

Stainless steel eyes

Cutting through

Paper maché piñatas

If only there was

A tattered end

To grab

Pull

Watch the edges fray

Seams loosen

Fabric

Unfold

Unravel

Go beneath

In corporate pin-stripes

Hanging on bars;

Wrapped around poles

Mark of territory

With spray

Of hip hop

Homeboy

And bad attitude.

Tightly wound rage

Dressed in

Loosely wrapped package

Of gangsta couture

With Shar-pei [1] folds

From head-to-toe.

That mummified

Gangsterized

Chock full ‘o’ attitude

Go where

Momma still loves you

Sista still trusts you

Baby

Feels safe

In your arms.


Throughout my artistic channeling, I felt his eyes catching my glances as I wrote, looked up, and verbally sketched him.  I also knew the brother had a right to even think I was either checking him out or doing some kind of recognizance on him, which would not mix too well with his “vibe.”  When I was finished, before the stop at 110th Street, I had a portrait.  After I drafted the poem, I quickly copied it, and as he made eye contact with me, passed the sheet of paper to him; something I had never done before.  He looked at me, took it, opened the folds and began to read.  Soon his game face transformed from a bothered brother, to a perplexed wrinkled forehead, to a sun shining Nubian smile. He folded the paper back and reached over to return the poem.  At 125th Street, he moved toward the door, then turned and gave me an impish smile, showing just for that moment the satisfaction of being acknowledged.  I recognized his “vibe,” I “felt” him


[1]Shar-pei – a breed of dog with loose skin which creates folds all over its body.

By Lora René Tucker checkout her interview on HW Radio from January 18, 2011.

About these ads

One Response to ‘Solace On The Subway’ By Lora René Tucker

  1. Pingback: HW Radio Show January 18th, 2 pm |

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s