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	<title>The Excelano Project Official Blog &#187; Joshua Bennett</title>
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	<link>http://www.excelanoproject.com</link>
	<description>Official blog of UPenn&#039;s spoken word poetry collective, The Excelano Project</description>
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		<title>For her.</title>
		<link>http://www.excelanoproject.com/2009/for-her/</link>
		<comments>http://www.excelanoproject.com/2009/for-her/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Sep 2009 22:14:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joshua Bennett</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Print]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I
forgot
that falling
could feel like flight.
Barely remembered
How sorely my hands missed
the joy of juggling stars
until I kissed all your rough spots
in rapid succession. You taste like
moon. A slice of sky God let me borrow. 
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="color: #ffffff;">I<br />
forgot<br />
that falling<br />
could feel like flight.<br />
Barely remembered<br />
How sorely my hands missed<br />
the joy of juggling stars<br />
until I kissed all your rough spots<br />
in rapid succession. You taste like<br />
moon. A slice of sky God let me borrow. </span></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>4</slash:comments>
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		<title>Carbon Copy</title>
		<link>http://www.excelanoproject.com/2009/carbon-copy/</link>
		<comments>http://www.excelanoproject.com/2009/carbon-copy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 May 2009 18:39:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joshua Bennett</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Print]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[He may never know
that there are fireflies
growing inside him.
Wings threatening to sprout from his spine
if he would merely reach toward the heavens
my father
is no hero.
He&#8217;s a postal worker.
A Vietnam vet
with a Jim Crow education
six children
and enough regrets to fill a casket with
sometimes sleeps with his eyes open
as if he&#8217;s looking for 3 AM redemption
from whatever [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="color: #ff0000;">He may never know<br />
that there are fireflies<br />
growing inside him.<br />
Wings threatening to sprout from his spine<br />
if he would merely reach toward the heavens<br />
my father<br />
is no hero.<br />
He&#8217;s a postal worker.<br />
A Vietnam vet<br />
with a Jim Crow education<br />
six children<br />
and enough regrets to fill a casket with<br />
sometimes sleeps with his eyes open<br />
as if he&#8217;s looking for 3 AM redemption<br />
from whatever insomniac angels<br />
may be still watching over his body<br />
and with all his flaws<br />
I still love him<br />
with every bit<br />
of the jigsaw puzzle heart<br />
that pumps life through this thin frame<br />
the exact same blood<br />
that runs through my daddy&#8217;s veins<br />
because no matter<br />
how many miles I put between us<br />
the undeniable truth remains<br />
that I&#8217;m a carbon copy of my father<br />
exactly 5 foot 10<br />
170 pounds with not a muscle in sight<br />
love to pretend<br />
that we&#8217;re really good at basketball<br />
and have this amazing ability<br />
to emotionally damage<br />
the people we care about most.<br />
Take my mother for instance<br />
the woman who gave me life<br />
and the person my dad<br />
and I owe the biggest apology to<br />
for our unwillingness to be vulnerable.<br />
Mom, I&#8217;m sorry<br />
for being so ungrateful.<br />
for not being satisfied<br />
with the fact that most times<br />
it was only you in the audience at performances<br />
and watching me on the sidelines<br />
But if growing up as a Black man in America<br />
has taught me anything<br />
it&#8217;s that there is nothing more dangerous<br />
than telling another man<br />
you care about him<br />
so at this moment<br />
right now<br />
I&#8217;m choosing to murder the<br />
monster that hides inside me<br />
the one that keeps me from crying when I need to<br />
and telling my little brother I love you<br />
Dad<br />
no matter what this world may say<br />
you are an inspiration<br />
a poetic painter on par with Pollock<br />
turned being a mailman<br />
into a metaphor<br />
because for as long as I can remember<br />
for 10 hours a day<br />
every single week<br />
he would sling a 100-pound sack of mail<br />
over his shoulders<br />
carry the hopes and dreams<br />
of the masses<br />
on his back<br />
like a 60 year-old Atlas with<br />
an Alabama accent<br />
and though he may not know it<br />
there&#8217;s not much difference<br />
between the work he does every night<br />
and the way I write poems<br />
see my hands turn into carrier pigeons<br />
when I pick up a pen<br />
allowing my words to rocket through<br />
the air like I was on a first name basis with the wind<br />
and so as i long its cool with my dad<br />
I&#8217;ll continue to believe that<br />
the lights I write to every night<br />
are coming from within him<br />
the fireflies on his insides<br />
the sunbeams that gleam<br />
from his gut<br />
as a constant reminder<br />
that my father will never die<br />
even when we forget to act like family<br />
and he doesn&#8217;t have the insight<br />
to see<br />
that I&#8217;m the only 19-year old<br />
I know who still wants to grow up<br />
to be just like his Dad<br />
that I&#8217;m fully aware<br />
that no one else could possibly bear<br />
the weight of my Earth-sized<br />
insecurities the way that he can<br />
and even when no one else gets him<br />
his second- youngest son understands<br />
that life ain&#8217;t easy<br />
when you come from war<br />
with a purple heart fastened to your chest<br />
and a shattered one behind the seams<br />
when you come home from war<br />
and post office realities<br />
are spawned as<br />
the bastard children of your<br />
law school dreams<br />
I know what you sacrificed for me<br />
and I promise<br />
that i&#8217;ll use this God-given gift<br />
to repay you one day<br />
but for right now<br />
Let go.<br />
no one&#8217;s watching<br />
it&#8217;s o.k. to be broken sometimes<br />
let the lightning bugs loose<br />
so I can illuminate the path for my children<br />
and provide them with undeniable proof<br />
that they are the descendants of a man<br />
who held the stars in his stomach<br />
could crumble a mountain with his smile<br />
and spoke truth to his son<br />
as if the entire world<br />
were watching.</span></p>
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