Wednesday, October 17, 2012

The Second City: A Response

 This is a guest post by my brilliant boyfriend, AntonioAfter reading my poem he was inspired to write one in agreement but from his own perspective. I hope you enjoy! Maybe we will write a book together about these issues one day...
More than a second city/ it's a second life
One the average American wouldn't imagine. Am I right?/A new rendition of sin city call it shitty city/where your mind frame is me and my circle plus no one else/blame society since it so calls knows the truth/since nowadays it's become the new parents of the youth/oh not true?/I don't sag my pants/no baby mama drama/have a job/career/I don't bang on the corner/don't call women out of name/not scared when I mess up to take the blame/never want handouts always looking to venture out of my lane/just sayin.... Oh and by the way I'm a African American/speaking for those in the second city/yea we survived but it wasn't pretty/don't forget where you come from and become all sidity/always keep it real and be cool/cus we know those dont understand don't have the balls to walk through our shit in our shoes.... (Literally)
This is for any and all people/I'm just one of many reppin the second city

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Second City

The following is some of my unpolished thoughts on the racial and class divisions in Chicago.  While it may be a grand tourist attraction to some, many of the youth in the inner city have a feeling of being trapped without the ability to escape from the poverty that seems inevitable. This poem is just some of my rambling but I think it speaks to the need for more people to be aware of the invisible chains that society places on these youth and their inability to break free.


A tale of two cities except there's just one 
City streets tell a story but only to some
One child marvels at the lights around him
while others get chills as the nights surround them

People come and people go each day, each year
Unaware of the prison walls that lock some in fear
Freedom, not an unfamiliar sight or fable told
But for those in the second city its something uncontrolled

No visible chains, no locks keep these citizens bound
yet their escape a distant dream to never be found
The same city that imparts hope and opportunity
for the forgotten it provides a desperate, hopeless unity

Citizens of the first city preach to these children to leave
To make something of themselves and just believe
but each sermon leaves these youth still enchained at their feet
With commands to run the race, but do not cheat

If cheating means merely hoping for the day
when the invisible chains will finally appear and fall away
Then cheating is the only way that this neglected city 
will see their dead-end wandering as more than just shitty

But, hear this, we won't stop until it is shown
that through a little invisibility and magic of our own
we can strike down the structures and chains that bind
and leave the tale of two cities far away, far behind.
 
Only then will the black son of God no longer face Abel's fate 
and maybe then the heart of the unaware Cain will choose to relate
Only then will a child's prison of great lakes: despair and self-pity
turn this second city of beauty into my city, his city, our city.
 
 

~Mackensey, 2012

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Diversity of Strengths

There are different kinds of spiritual gifts, but the same Spirit is the source of them all. There are different kinds of service, but we serve the same Lord. God works in different ways, but it is the same God who does the work in all of us.” 1 Corinthians 12:4-6

Difference is something that we often run away from in life.  Most of us are drawn to similarities, find comfort in seeing where two ideas have common ground or love to discover mutual interests or friends when just meeting a new person.  Difference may be uncomfortable for many of us but it is the very thing that Paul claims builds the community of God.  The excerpt above from Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians speaks to this idea that God uses differences in each of us to create a unique, spiritual unity between believers.  Our first Amate House In-Service this year explored this idea and what it means to be a faith community filled with thirty-three distinctively different individuals.

The StrengthsFinder, which was the topic of our Fall In-Service day, helps to highlight these differences (and similarities) between individuals as they relate to certain strengths.  Each Amate House volunteer was asked to take the StrengthFinder assessment, which asked us a myriad of questions about ourselves and our personalities, and in the end received a list and explanation of our top five strengths.  While exploring our own strengths was enjoyable, our In-Service allowed us to see how our strengths and the strengths of our housemates complement each other and build our unique community.

While my top strengths included empathy, harmony and connectedness, I was able to discuss and sit next to my housemates that have the strengths of communication, intellection, or responsibility.  The diversity in strengths and thinking patterns within the Amate community, and even my own house community, gave me a renewed insight into the importance of individuals using their strengths to work together in service.  We all have tendencies and ways of thinking and behaving that are unique to our own temperaments and backgrounds but only when we work and serve together are we able to fully complement each other and create a cohesive whole.  Affirming the strengths that I see in myself and in others allowed me to become more aware of where I fit into the community and how I can use my special strengths to benefit and challenge the individuals around me.

Throughout the day I was continually reminded of the continuation of Paul’s letter in chapter 12 of 1 Corinthians in which he uses the metaphor of the human body to describe the community of believers.  Paul writes “you are the body of Christ, and each on of you is a part of it” and “God has placed the parts in the body, every one of them, just as he wanted them to be” (1 Corinthians 12: 18,27).  Just as the body has many parts that perform many functions, Paul reminds us that in a community each member has a different role to fill, which is not more or less important than the person next to him or her.  God’s work is accomplished when each part of the body or community performs its function with determination and passion.  This idea can help us better understand a cohesive community where we are able to willingly accept our roles, no matter what it may be, because we see them each as equally important and necessary in working together for God’s greater purpose.

If all the roles and strengths of the community were the same, then nothing would be accomplished or changed.  Therefore, just as God has created us with such diversity, we must embrace this difference in community, even when it is frustrating and confusing, so that we can work together to challenge and compliment each other. Discussing my strengths during our In-Service helped me realize that whether I’m the toe or the heart, which perform drastically different functions for the body, I have a central role to play in creating and sustaining the body of Christ in and through my community.