Advertisment
HomeArts & EntertainmentMurmurations: Five Haikus for the Equinox

Murmurations: Five Haikus for the Equinox

By Mwende Katawiwa

A note from adrienne maree brown: Mwende Katwiwa, based in New Orleans and Kenya, makes clothing from gathered textiles, and poems that open the heart. Mwende works with young people to pull their poetry forward.

self-portrait as the ocean or Fofie’s wisdom

study the tides of
the ocean shored by your skin
each ripple each wave

know not all water
is meant to quench dry throats or
to be waded through

know not everything
that is left in the waters
is an offering 

reminders for my (impatient) selves

don’t force what won’t come
what is for you is either
coming or waiting

closed mouths (and full ones) don’t get fed

ask for what you need
ready yourself to receive
as well as release

a lesson learned from June

i been wrong…and still
wrong ain’t never been my name
pronounce me correct

pronounce me (w)hol(l)y
won’t answer to all i’m called
act accordingly

train your timid tongues
sound out all my syllables
i been a mouthful

you are your own

because you were both
the cost and the one who paid
a terrible price

Mwende Katwiwa, who performs as FreeQuency, is a storyteller, organizer, host, workshop leader, chaos collagist, youth worker, and performance artist. FreeQuency is a gender-renegade Kenyan immigrant who is masculine-off-center, femme-adjacent, an “AunTea” and/or a prettyboi. FreeQuency’s anti-disciplinary work interrogates and occupies the in-between while exploring the nuances and stark contradictions of existence under racialized capitalism.

You may also be interested in

Read the latest edition

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

More by this author

Why We Must Stop a Polluting Facility Right in the Heart of Hartford

By Alycia Jenkins, Sierra Club Connecticut I have lived in Hartford for over 10 years, fighting for a more sustainable city. Since 2022, the Capitol...

Why Libraries Are Still A Lifeline For Black K-12 Students

By Quintessa Williams, Word In Black As Black history and identity are erased from classrooms, libraries remain one of the last public spaces where Black...

“Together We Roared: Alongside Tiger For His Epic Twelve-Year, Thirteen-Majors Run” By Steve Williams and Evin Priest

By Terri Schlichenmeyer, Northend Agent’s Three hundred thirty-six little pockmarks. Placed atop a thick sliver of wood, the ball they’re on presents a challenge. Whack that...