Hi ma,
I am holding on for you
Hi ma,
I am holding on for you
I will heal, regenerate, restart and reload. Recently diagnosed with Bipolar II Disorder Manic Depression, my number-one-above-any-and-everything-won’t-jeopardize-for-anyone-(and-I-mean-that)-top priority is self-proclaimed, self-manifested, self-actualized and self-maintained JOY. And my JOY is only brewed at home. No Starbucks, Caribou Coffee, or Seattle’s Best will have the recipe to brew my JOY and my recipe will not be for sale (although it will be enjoyed by all, free of charge). Coca-Cola will have nothing against my secret ingredient, but they will most certainly try. Although many will attempt, none will succeed at negotiating any mergers, and the only entity holding, buying, selling, and trading stocks will be: muah.
After years of living for everyone except myself, I finally reached my breaking point. Uncontrollable and heavy-laden sobs and sobs of tears was the only stamina I could manifest for expression, interaction and communication. I reached the bottom of the barrel and it was dangerously bleak. My emotions were relentlessly gnawing away at my internal strength and my thoughts were on a mission to terminate my existence. I persisted in an abusive relationship in exchange for something, anything that could detract and distract attention away from my own haunted infestations. Nearly two months after my exhausting and depleting three-year relationship ended, I could no longer hide from the ghosts in my mind. Confronting the demons that invaded and seized my mind, body, spirit, and most of all, my emotions was to date the most painful and heart-wrenching trauma I hope and pray to never re-visit again.
Emerging (victoriously!) from such a state, however, was also the most sublime transcendence I have ever achieved! To see!, think! and feel!, to clearly perceive the essence of my being, to seize control, to have control, and to cherish control over my hyper-sensitized, emotional reflexes created within me a born-again human being. Being in all its glory! Reborn, I choose JOY.
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Shon Thompson to me 12/3/10
Feeling trapped in a fearful world is the magic of life. Everybody feels it. The sense of wonder about how others perceive you is the other side of, how do you see your self. The amazing thing about who you are is that you’ll never know what effect that you have on the universe that you you create. Example, You spend hours writing something that ultimately does not satisfy you, then some one else calls it beautiful. Another, spending too much time in the mirror to put together an image that will be attractive only to be called a whore and admired by degenerates. The truth is, nobody can see themselves, no one has any idea what they look, or sound like. I’ll play something that I hate, just a thing that popped into my head, and then think, well fuck…that was terrible, and then my percussionist will say “wow, what was that, do it again 1,2,3,4…” The way he heard it was from a different world. Everything in life is like that. Your self image does not matter, at all, as long as you continue to grow. The labels that people assign are the only way that they have to try and find out who they (others) really are. They will never know until they give up on labeling. I love Charles Mingus too, Epitaph is my favorite but truly, Charles never even heard it because he wrote it. Miles hated playing with Charles, that knocks me out. If I cook you a plate of food it will taste different to me than for you because I know every ingredient that went into it, and you don’t. Consequently, I don’t enjoy my own food, but everybody else loves it. I cannot surprise myself, only others. Daddy wanted to name Booney, Yusef Lateef, but my mother wouldn’t let him. I leaned how to play Donna Lee years ago, but I can’t play it anymore. I’m not sure about how your renaming yourself has helped you. I don’t think it matters what you do, as long if it helps. I wouldn’t enjoy having a name that made me keep my chops up on a particular piece of work, but I would have to do it, that’s just me. “Oh, Donna Lee…huh?..well Donna Lee, go on ahead and bust it out.” Donna, we are all slaves to our emotions. The reason why a lot of people let it get the best of them is because of the great persona of “cool.” Cool, and style, even flash are important to people who want to be accepted. The bus to work was held up for almost a minute because the guy couldn’t board, his pants were sagging so much that he had complications making the steps. But he was fashionably cool. I was only late to work. About love, your description is the best I’ve heard. It hurts and heals, but it always changes you. When I play my music, nothing else matters for about two days. When I play again, I’m better at it.

I fell in love well before I knew what love was. While its almost impossible to know before experiencing it, a little advice would have helped. My home was a sheltered one. The idea of discussing love probably would have implied the necessity to discuss sex. Therefore, love in itself wasn’t mentioned. What was mentioned, however, was marriage. Constantly. The only thing I knew about love was the importance of being married before anything else–sex, kids, drama–came along. And while I haven’t necessarily followed that instruction in that particular order, I did find love.
In my first ADW class, I proclaimed it to my fellow Spelman sustahs. “Let’s go around the room and all say who we are and something about ourselves that nobody knows,” is how Dr. Wright chose to begin our semester. “Hi, my name is Donna Thompson and I’m from Atlanta. I’m a transfer student from the Manhattan School of Music, and I just recently fell in love.” The class lit up with a resounding “Awww!” as my comment intrigued the young souls around me who all seemed to want a piece of my enlightenment. I immediately received follow-up questions from a few classmates whose eyes grew a little bit wider than everyone else’s. “How long ago did you fall in love?” “Have you been in love before?” “Is s/he your girl/boyfriend?” Just the word and everything positive that it implies lifted the room into another realm.
I, too, was intrigued, curious and excited. Only Dr. Wright, in all her wisdom, withheld from the unanimous sentiment that filled the room.
Now three years later, I’m still holding on.