Like Chocolate Do

From "The Secret Life of Words" by Arkay Evans

Arkay Evans
He runs a race,
with his chocolate face,
Where people value chocolate most,
when chocolate stays
in chocolate's place,
Where to take a peaceful stand alone
is insubordination,
And commerades fall to incarceration as he questions each day he survived the first strike,
Tasting the toxic waste of bias
Till even thoughts begin to stink,
and his brain starts to think
that it feels like home to suffer and burn,
A hater in waiting for the season to turn,
And the creature he becomes disgusts you, frightens you,
One man's failure is another man's friend,
And then you wince with false innocence saying,
"How could he come to such an end?"

But sometimes a brotha can overcome ya,
It arouses you like chocolate do,
And irritates those with a sense of entitlement,
Lighting the blind spots that guarantee the have-nots
get a good shot at living and dying of poverty and violence,
Till chocolate gives up,
Says it feels like home to be locked up,
To be punished for the autumn of this adaptation,
For striking back in wild frustration at the miseducation he was first disposed,
Stabbing himself with the first tool given,
Stoned and owned by mushroom conditions,
Needing more faith, and a little less wishing
Cuz some say that's how chocolate rolls

Published by Arkay Evans

Arkay (RK) Evans is the author of The God In Me (2011), Urban Youthology (2011), The Secret Life of Words (2010), Christians Under Construction (2008) and over 600 poetic and short story works. She has serve...  View profile

1 Comments

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  • STL7/20/2009

    Very powerful piece. Sounds a lot like the plight of many in St. Louis.

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