CONNECTING WITH YOUTH, CONNECTING WITH MYSELF

George Brown Youth Talk October 2013Connecting With Youth, Connecting With Myself

By Jorge Antonio Vallejos

I’m listening to I Can by NAS, one of my favourite rappers.  It’s the most appropriate song for the post I’m writing; my first official post of my fourth year running this website.

I can’t think of a post I would want to write more.

Close to a month ago I was contacted by Brenda Wastasecoot, an Aboriginal teacher and regular reader of my site, to give a talk to youth she works with at George Brown College.

It would be my first speaking gig of the year.  I love doing talks, readings, and conference presentations.

With FaceBook being one of our main forms of communication these days I found this message in my inbox:

Good morning,

I am looking for speakers for my high school class this term: Sept-Dec. Would you be interested in coming to visit us and speaking about your life and your work? There would be an honorarium of course. So please let me know soon, if you’re interested.  

The class tends to have a lot of boys as they seem to be the ones who have the most struggles in mainstream schools. This is an Alternative high school where the boys are a mix of white and Black  from low-income homes.

Boys with struggles in mainstream school systems?  That was me!

Boys of colour from low-income households? That was me!

Alternative school?  They were the last to accept me after being kicked out of two regular high schools; and they (2 alternative schools) ended kicking me out too!

My answer: I’m honoured!

Before giving talks I like meeting with the people who bring me in to speak.  Due to clashing schedules Brenda and I talked on the phone.  I asked questions and took notes:

– 25 to 30 youth

– WRITTEN OFF by the system

– at RISK

– Talk about RACISM, struggles with IDENTITY, social BARRIERS

I had the info I needed.  Now it was time to prepare for the reading.  There are several things I take into consideration and several things I do before speaking to peoples and giving readings and presentations.  It’s a process; one that I take seriously and that I have broken down in several posts prior to this one:

Preparing For A Poetry Reading

A Poet’s Pointers On Public Reading

Some of these techniques I learned from different books and peoples and from my favourite poet Chrystos who advised “put yourself out there“.

Before getting to the class I told myself that I knew these youth.  Why?  Because I was one of them.  We may not be from the same cultural backgrounds but I knew that they were experiencing similar things thatI had went through.  Of course, Brenda’s description of them was key in me knowing all of this.  And even though high school is in my past I can remember it like it was yesterday.

I reminded myself that this talk was not about me, it was about the youth.

I asked myself, what do I want these youth to take away from my talk?

I prayed to Creator for the talk to go well.

Brenda was waiting for me in the lobby of the school.  We smiled, said our “hello” and grabbed the elevator to the class.  I used the washroom before going in; I wanted to be able to give the youth my undivided attention.  Relieving myself helps with that.  And I do the mirror technique while washing my hands.

Once walking into the class I felt at home.  The youth were loud, happy, somewhat rambunctious, and many were of colour.

“Who’s this guy?” said a student in a loud hostile tone.

His buddies laughed alongside him.

The student who asked the question was me many years ago.  And his buddies were my buddies.  They were the tough ones of the bunch.  If I didn’t get their respect my talk would be done in less than five minutes.

Brenda introduced me and I took over via re-introducing myself and asking everyone to say their name and tell me something positive about themselves, something they like about themselves.  Ice breakers are a good thing.  They calm people down and get the room quiet.  And this ice breaker had the youth remind themselves that there are positives about them, that not all in their lives is negative.

The youth had the option to pass or participate.

Three youth passed.

After the ice breaker I shared a bit of my story: high school dropout, former car thief and drug dealer, two very short stints in jail, love for my mother, no father, friends come and gone, friends in prison, university experiences, claiming myself a writer, the person I was before them that day.

As I spoke I looked around the room.  Faces looked back at me.  Some of the youth were leaning in with their eyes locked on me as I sat on a desk.  Others sat back relaxed (the cool guys) but still lent me their ears and eyes.

The talk was going well.

Their was a mutual respect happening.

Their was an energy that literally circulated the room because Brenda had us sit in a circle: a very Indigenous way of sharing and learning.

The “Who’s this guy?” energy died and a positive energy of community was born.

Following Brenda’s request for talks on identity I read one of my essays, Embracing My Identity: Reflections on Jorge Gonzalez Camarena’s Painting ‘El Abrazo’ published in the Kenyon Review Winter 2010.

Knowing that many of these youth were poor, of colour, and written off I decided to read an essay, The Bull Pen, about my second time going to jail which was published in Descant 150: Writer In Prison:

Much of my talks incorporate art with politics: poetry and the history of colonization that has lead to many of today’s oppressive realities.  Both these essays combine all this.

After reading I asked the group what they wanted to hear.

The student who said, “Who’s this guy?” said, “I want to hear some poetry.”

I read some of my favourite poems from Not Vanishing by Chrystos:

There Is A Man Without Fingerprints

In The Brothel Called America

Now it was time for them to share.

“I want to hear from you,” I said.

Guess who was the first to speak up and read a poem?  Yes, the, “Who’s this guy?” student.

He searched his phone for the poem, stood up in front of me, and read out loud.  His classmates, teachers, and I gave him a loud applause.  Another student shared.  And another.  Then a young man started to beat box.  And then came an unexpected thing of beauty: collaboration.  The leader of pack hooked up with beatboxer and combined rhyme with sound.  I felt like I was on the block again hearing freestyles and beats.

Brenda looked at me from across the room with amazement.

The loud space I entered an hour earlier was now quiet, respectful, and in sync with each other.

There was a harmony that was physical, emotional, spiritual, and vocal.

Brenda started to wind down the morning by having us go back to how we started: a sharing circle.  Students gave feedback on my talk, readings, and what they got out of it. Many shared a feeling of respect for how much I talked about my mother: “I like how you mention your mom a lot,” said one young mother.  Another young mother said the same. Then one of the boys shared his connection to me via talking in Jamaican patois: “I like how you love your mumma!”  Many of the boys said the same thing.  I realized how much I talk about my mom and how much I love her.

Three more things stuck with me, one which answered my original question: what do I want these youth to take away from my talk?

A young woman said she felt inspired to go after her dreams.

“You can do it,” I said.

“I am!” she said.

A younger version of myself spoke to me in Spanish throughout the talk.  He had long black hair, brown skin, and baggy clothes.  Our eyes locked on each other.  He was quiet and chose his words carefully.  And his comments showed he not only listened but also understood exactly where I had been and what I was talking about.  I felt like I was looking in a mirror: Brown, young, smart, and searching.

Then the student who challenged me the second I entered the room spoke:

I don’t listen to anyone!  But you captured me.  Thanks.

We ended with smiles, handshakes, and picture taking.

Brenda walked up to me with an ear to ear grin and said, “That was amazing! These kids don’t listen to anybody!  Thank you!”

There was a real connection that day.  More than any of my previous talks.  We sat in a circle, listened, shared, laughed, and started an energy that kept going and going.  I saw were I was, they saw where they can go, we saw and made a connection between the two.

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WHAT DO YOU WANT TO SEE ON BLACKCOFFEEPOET.COM?

Wednesday September 18, 2013

Dear Readers,

September 13, 2013 saw the start of the Fourth Year of blackcoffeepoet.com!

Over the last three years I have reviewed many books and interviewed many authors. I’ve also videotaped many writers, done video roundtables, interviews, and workshops for my accompanying YOUTUBE Channel: Black Coffee Poet.

In my third year I started publishing letters, opinion editorials, and my own writing.

All these actions have been well received and supported.  Thank you!

With a new year started, and the constant drive to please you, my much appreciated readers, I ask, what do you want to see on blackcoffeepoet.com?

Please comment under this post with your thoughts and ideas.  If you want to be more private you can email me at blackcoffeepoet@gmail.com with Thought and Idea in the subject line.

Also, I want to encourage you to write Letters (to me, organizations, people alive or in spirit world, governments etc.) and Opinion Editorials.  Read the call, and examples within, for Accepting Letters and Opinion Editorials.

Thanks for being with me for 3 years.  I look forward to this new, fourth year with you!

Peace, Prayers, Poetry,

Jorge Antonio Vallejos

Black Coffee Poet

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STARTING MY FOURTH YEAR, A NEW JOURNEY

BCP PHOTO at FNHFriday September 13, 2013

Dear Readers,

I’m at my local library now.  The same library I’ve been going to my whole life.  It’s where my reading and writing path started.  Ironically, I’m listening to Journey To The Line by Hans Zimmer.  This is not a letter of endings.  This is a letter of celebration with thoughts mixed in.

Today makes it four years that I started my website.  A fourth year to do new projects, review new books, interview new people, write new reflection pieces, film new VLOGs…

Many people see Friday the 13th as bad luck.  I don’t believe in that.  How can I when it’s my blog anniversary?  This blog has brought me so many joys.

Still, the last few months have been difficult for me.  My last post touched on that.  And my post Experiencing A Lack Of Motivation was me being transparent and vulnerable on paper.  Many people think I’m a machine.  They’ve referred to me as such when asking “How do you it?  I can’t keep up with your posts.  You’re a machine!”

I’m not a machine.

I’m not superhuman.

I’m someone who has a lot of drive and was filling a void.

Things have slowed down a bit.

This website was started because I was rejected by an MFA in Creative Writing program. It was my self made program: read, write, review, re-read, re-write, journal, build a following, make connections, learn and work on my craft.

Things have changed since then.

“Change is the only constant” is an Indigenous teaching I hold on to, sometimes barely.

This year (starting January 2013) I started writing more reflection pieces as that’s what many readers wanted.  The schedule I stuck to prior (review, interview, video) took a backseat.  But readers have now asked “When are you going to review and interview people again?”  Others ask “When is a special week is coming?”  Special as in weeks like Honouring Missing And Murdered Aboriginal Women.

It’s year four and I’m still figuring things out.  Again, I’ve committed to one more year.  I don’t want to let blackcoffeepoet.com go but it’s not easy.  Contrary to what many think, I am not rolling in the dough from this website.  I will be putting up a DONATE button this year.  And I would really like more people to start writing Letters and Opinion Editorials to help give me a rest and some time to work on my own projects: poetry collection, memoir, and short films.

This website started for me to continue to write and to learn more about writing.  I tell people “It’s about me and not about me.”  It’s called blackcoffeepoet.com and it’s run by me but it’s also about community.  You barely saw anything about me the first two and a half years.  Readers would ask “Where are you?  Where is your writing?”  This year I aim to be more balanced.

I really did not know what to do today, what to write, if to write, or what I was going to do, if anything, for the next year.  But, while attending the SPICE community lunch at the Centre For Women and Trans Peoples yesterday an openly self identified queer Latina woman said, “Hey, you’re that blog dude!”  She and an openly self identified Trans man of colour proceeded to tell me about their appreciation for my website.

It was a reminder that I’m reaching the communities I intend to reach: Aboriginal, Of Colour, LGBTQ, Disabled, Sexworker, and Incarcerated.

I’m now listening to Surface Of The Sun by John Murphy.  There’s 40% power left on my laptop.  I have to meet my aunt for lunch in 25 minutes.  And I feel good.

I’m that blog dude.  And I’m doing this thing for one more year.

Thanks for reading.

Peace, Prayers, Poetry,

Jorge Antonio Vallejos

Black Coffee Poet 

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I’VE BEEN BRAINSTORMING AND PLANNING

Wednesday September 4, 2013

Dear Readers,

I ran into two of you in the last week.

Last Friday one of you yelled, “Black Coffee Poet!” from across the street.  You followed by introducing me to your mother via waves and screams.

That felt great!

On Monday one of you ran into me at the coffee shop and said, “You haven’t updated your site since August 9th!”  That felt good and bad.  Good because I know I have loyal readers.  Bad because I have not been active.

I am sorry.

The last couple of months have seen me be nowhere near as prolific and consistent as I have been in the past.  I have not stuck to my schedule of Monday, Wednesday, Friday.  And I have not fulfilled any special projects that I have wanted to.

As described in my post Experiencing A Lack Of Motivation I have been in a down time that I am doing my best to get out of.  I’ve also been brainstorming and planning a lot.

Earlier this summer one of you stopped me on the street to thank me for my work and described me as “amazing”.  My friend was shocked and impressed:

“You got some real fans!” he said.

These three encounters with some of you, my beloved readers (all progressive minded women) is what keeps me going.

Thank you!

I’m in the process of planning things for what will be my 4th year online starting September 13, 2013!

I appreciate your support, time, words, and love.

Peace, Prayers, Positivity,

Jorge Antonio Vallejos

Black Coffee Poet

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VLOG: 7 REASONS WHY I KEEP A JOURNAL

BCP holding his journalThis video blog is a companion to my last post 7 Reasons Why I Keep A Journal.

Keeping a journal is not only integral to my writing it is integral to my life.  Find out why by watching this VLOG and reading the original post.

Recent comments on Face Book about the written post have been:

“This was a very timely post for me – thank you for sharing!”

“Word up brother! I have tried off and on to keep a journal. I have lacked the discipline to keep it going though. However I think it’s time to hunker down and try again.”

Read a journal entry I published about my friend Richard Wong who recently passed on: Remembering Rich, One Of The Good Guys.

Watch, SHARE, Tweet, Comment and start a journal!

SUBSCRIBE to the Black Coffee Poet YOUTUBE Channel: 162 videos:

poems, songs, interviews, VLOGS, readings, roundtables, and workshops.

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7 REASONS WHY I KEEP A JOURNAL

Putting the pen to pad

Putting the pen to pad

7 Reasons Why I Keep A Journal

By Jorge Antonio Vallejos

I’ve been keeping a journal for years.

When I started my journal it was to get into the practice of writing.  I would sit and write whatever came to mind: Free Writing.

I still do that.

But over the years my journaling has grown into different forms of writing.  And I have started journaling for more reasons than being a disciplined writer.  For example, I recently posted one of my journal entries about a friend who past on: Remembering Rich, One Of The Good Guys.  Here are seven reasons why I journal.

1. To write

To be a writer you have to write.

I don’t subscribe to the idea of writing when “inspired” or writing “when I have time”.

Writers write.  And we write often.  Usually everyday.

2. To work things out

Keeping a journal lets me meditate on paper.  Meditate as in explore what is going on in my head.  I often free write and just let my pen go wild.  But lots of my journal entries are thoughts, feelings, ideas, and life experiences being worked out.

Journaling can be a release sometimes.  It’s exhaling on paper.  I get it all out!

3. To do writing exercises

Much of my writing happens in coffee shops.  True to my name, I drink black coffee and write.  And I often describe my surroundings.  I write about conversations happening around me so as to study human dialogue; I describe the sounds, smells, and actions that happen in the two to three hour span that I am at the coffee shop; I look at someone and write what they are wearing, how they are standing or sitting, and how they look.  The list goes on and on.

4. To fertilize a poem

My poem No Les Da Verguenza?, a prose poem about my mother and my aunt and their experiences as women of colour in the hotel and restaurant industry (cleaner and waitress), started as thoughts in my journal.  I journaled about their experiences (the ones they shared with me over the years), and figured out what I wanted to put in the poem.

After showing a fellow poet the poem in progress he said, “Something is missing.”

I went back to my journal to figure out the missing part of the poem.  The third paragraph of the now published poem (OUR TIMES Magazine April 2009) came straight out of that journal session.

5. To plan an article

Three years ago I wrote a controversial article, Are Aboriginal Women and Women of Colour Bench Warmers?, critiquing popular activist groups in Toronto who were tokenizing Indigenous peoples, and using Indigenous women as backup speakers when men could not make it.

Horrible!  Fucked up!  Colonial!

In this case it was one of my longtime mentors Lee Maracle.

After getting privileged information from a reliable source I journaled about whether I should write the article or not.  “Or not” got thrown out the window!  I wrote all my points down in my journal, and I wrote about why I should write the article and how it could hopefully get the movement to stop its racist and sexist practices.

It was later published, and poorly edited, by Canadian Dimensions Magazine.

6. To record life experiences for possible memoir essays

Life has many special moments.  And I don’t want to forget them.  So, pen hits pad.

After getting an impromptu cooking lesson from Lee Maracle in the kitchen of First Nations House University of Toronto I ran to the seminar room to record what happened.

With coffee at my side I remembered and wrote about the teaching.  I described the setting, the ingredients, the laughter, the words, the entire experience.

My intention was to have this memory with me for life.  A few months later I found a call for submissions to an anthology called Crave It: Writers and Artists Do Food by Red Claw Press.  I hit up a tea shop (Yes, I also drink tea!) with my journal, read and re-read my entry about Lee teaching me how to make bannock and wrote The Bannock Teaching.

It was later accepted for publication!

7. To challenge myself and to record my falls and my growth

Life has its up and downs.  I record it all: the good, the bad, the ugly.  Like every human I am all three at various points throughout my life.  My journal helps me be true to myself; to acknowledge my strengths and weaknesses; and to grow as a person and writer.

Get a journal.  Sit.  Write.  And do it all over again.  Writers write.

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REMEMBERING RICH, ONE OF THE GOOD GUYS

Richard WongRemembering Rich, One of the Good Guys

(Journal Entry: Saturday July 27, 2013, 5:43 pm)

By Jorge Antonio Vallejos

At 4pm today I found out that Sifu Richard Wong died. He smashed into a tree while riding an ATV.  He was on the job.

Rich was 42 years old.

I can remember his laugh now.  I can’t describe it but I can hear it.

Weird.

All that has been coming out of my mouth for the last hour and a half is “good guy”: while eating, staring blankly at my computer screen, sitting at the edge of my bed, talking with my mother and brother, and now while putting pen to paper.  I say those two words over and over.

Rich was one of the good guys.

I don’t think many people can say a bad thing about Rich.  He wasn’t perfect.  But that’s ’cause no one is.

Rich had a good heart.

I remember showing Rich the OPIRG office and First Nations House in 2004.  I gave him a private tour.  He was impressed.  We talked Indigenous solidarity movements and colonialism for the rest of the night.

Rich was a lefty at heart.  He had good politics and he cared about people.  He’s one of them guys that would give you a ride.  A real ride.  Because in Toronto a “ride” means a lift to the subway.  Rich would drive you home.  He was a stand up guy.  Honourable.  Loyal. Forgiving.  A man of character.  They don’t make men like him much.

Rich didn’t subscribe to one form of spirituality.   He invited me several times to visit Bhuddist monks who told him his future, and to see a Mohawk Elder in Guelph.  I never went.  I’ve got my own spirituality and he respected that.

One of the good guys.

Rich was a small man with a big heart.  He was 5 foot 2.  His heart and will stood out.

Huge heart.

Huge will.

Rich was a trained warrior.  He knew how to survive any weather condition and fight in any battle.  When he committed to something he did well.  And everything he was involved in saw 100% effort: Kung Fu, work, and his personal relationships.

If only everyone could be like him.

If I were to say anything at Rich’s funeral it would be: “There aren’t many men like Rich. He was a good person, a good friend, and a good example of how to live your life.”

I remember a quote at Kyle Scanlon’s (Toronto Trans activist) memorial last year: “He cared more about the cause than recognition for his work.”  It was a big thing to have said about someone.  And I think it applies to Rich too.

Rich was a forgiving person.  He put aside history and hung with Japanese people even though his family disapproved; Nan King and its horrors are still deep wounds for many Chinese people.  When betrayed by a Kung Fu brother and sister he put his feelings aside and continued training alongside them.  “Kung Fu” was his simple answer when we talked about the difficult time.  He understood the spiritual side of the art as well as of the mental and physical.  Kung Fu was a way of life for Rich and it was more important than personal conflicts.

There’s an Indigenous teaching that says, “Good thoughts.  Good words.  Good actions.”

That was Rich.

He was one of the good guys.

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VLOG: SUBSCRIBE TO BLACK COFFEE POET

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SUBSCRIBE TO THE BLACK COFFEE POET BLOG AND YOUTUBE CHANNEL!!!

Wednesday July 24, 2013

Dear Readers,

Do you know that you can subscribe to blackcoffeepoet.com for FREE?  Do you know that I have a YOUTUBE Channel that is a companion to blackcoffeepoet.com?

You can subscribe to my blog by clicking on the Sign me up! button located on the right hand side of the screen (just scroll down a bit).  Click here to subscribe to my YOUTUBE channel for FREE!

By subscribing  you will get notice of every new blog entry and video that I publish.  My blog has almost 3 years worth of material: reviews, interviews, letters and opinion editorials, my personal writings; and there are 161 videos, and counting, for you to view on my YOUTUBE channel:

Poetry

Song

Interviews

VLOGs

Readings

Roundtables

Workshops 

Writing advice…

Ninety-nine percent of blog posts are written by me.  All videos are shot by me.  Writings and videos stick to my vision which is to highlight and give exposure to  peoples, writers, and issues left out of mainstream media and the publishing world: Aboriginal, Disabled, Of Colour, LGBTQ, Mixed Race, Sex Worker…

Please support my work and the work of the artists from communities mentioned above!

SUBSCRIBE, SHARE, Tweet, view and enjoy the Black Coffee Poet YOUTUBE Channel.

Remember, you can also subscribe to blackcoffeepoet.com for FREE; see the right hand side of the screen for the button that says Sign me up!

Peace, Prayers, Positivity,

Jorge Antonio Vallejos

Black Coffee Poet

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ACCEPTING OPINION EDITORIALS AND LETTERS TO BCP

Monday July 22, 2013

Dear Readers,

Every couple of months I post a callout for opinion editorials and letters.  Read the callout below and take the opportunity to express yourself and get published:

Do you have something to say about activism, academia, blackcoffeepoet.com, current events, literature, life, or politics?  Is there something on your mind that mainstream media is not covering?  Have you written something that has not found a home?

Write a Letter to Black Coffee Poet or an Opinion Editorial!

I welcome writing on:

Aboriginal Peoples and Politics

Book Culture

Decolonization

Disability Politics

Education

Feminism(s): Indigenous, Of Colour, Trans, 3rd Wave…

International and Local Politics

LGBTQ Life

Literature

Race

Sex Work

Spirituality

Trans Peoples and Rights

and so much more…

There is no need to pitch a Letter or Op-Ed as they are not articles.  Keep in mind: 1. not all Letters and Op-Eds submitted will be published; 2. Letters and Op-Eds are their own genres of writing to be written with care, respect, and thoughtfulness like any other genre.

If you are new to blackcoffeepoet.com take some time to read the publication and find out what it’s about before submitting.  Here at three resources for that: ABOUT and Black Coffee Poet and Popular Posts.

See some recently published letters:

Let Us Be Human: A Trans Woman Calls On Her Sisters To Act In Support of Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women by Cindy Bourgeois

Embracing Diversity by Rusty Kjarvik

See some recently published Opinion Editorials:

Laughter and Orgasm: Is Mainstream Science Catching Up To Indigenous Wisdom by Zainab Amadahy

Anti Violence Against Indigenous Women and Resurgence by Christine Luza

Submit to blackcoffeepoet@gmail.com with Letter to BCP or Opinion Editorial in the subject line.

Submissions must include full name, phone number, and address of sender.  Home addresses and phone numbers will not be published.  I reserve the right to edit letters and opinion editorials.  Letters run from 150 to 30o words.  Opinion Editorials run from 700 to 800 words.  Due to the volume of submissions I can not acknowledge or publish every submission.

Thank you for your consideration, time, and support.

Peace, Positivity, Prayers,

Jorge Antonio Vallejos

Black Coffee Poet

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