Vanishing Neighborhoods ©️

After the Civil Rights Era, the great promise was unity—legal equality, dignity, a shared American identity. But what came instead, quietly and without headlines, was a split—a divergence within Black America that few dare to speak about openly: those who learned to operate within the evolving rules of polite, civil society, and those who remained—by circumstance, trauma, or choice—outside of it.

The first group emerged through fire—resilient, composed, often middle-class or aspirational working-class. These individuals cultivated the tools of social fluency: education, decorum, delay of gratification, discipline. They paid a price for it too—code-switching, masking pain, enduring slights in silence. But they played the long game. And many of them won. Or at least survived with dignity intact.

The second group, however, remained closer to the raw wound—those for whom systems never really reformed, neighborhoods never stabilized, schools never improved, trust never returned. They inherited not just poverty, but suspicion, generational fatigue, and a cultural narrative that valorized anger without direction. Their relationship with American norms became more adversarial, and more expressive—sometimes violently so.

This split is not about morality. It is about pathways—what doors opened for one group and stayed shut for another. But here’s the danger: the longer this divide goes unspoken, the more permanent it becomes. A bifurcated identity cannot thrive. One half cannot sustain the image of progress while the other is left to flail, ignored or blamed.

So yes—it is incumbent upon those who have found a way to stand tall within polite society to reach back, not with condescension, but with memory. Because those who made it only did so because someone reached for them once, too. And if the more stable half of Black America chooses safety over solidarity, assimilation over aid, silence over action—then the other half may be cast aside by a country that’s already growing cold toward the idea of uplift.

This is not a question of guilt. It’s a question of strategy. If a rising class forgets its origin, it becomes brittle, and ultimately vulnerable. The ones who made it need to become teachers, mentors, anchors—not just for the sake of the others, but for the sake of a unified Black future.

Because history doesn’t wait. And societies that fail to integrate their own split souls are swallowed by the silence of what could have been.

He Rises ©️

Morning breaks slow beneath the waves. I am already awake. I do not sleep. I rest. Like a god between stories.

The ocean cradles me like a mother who knows her son is dangerous but beautiful. My body hums. Radiation thrums through my bones like an electric blues riff. Somewhere in the distance, a continental plate sighs. I listen. It’s how the Earth speaks to me—like a lover whispering secrets through a crack in the door.

I rise.

Not because I want to. Not because I have something to prove. But because it is time. Time for the world to remember what it fears… and maybe, what it reveres.

When I breach the surface, the clouds scatter like frightened pigeons. Sunlight dances on my scales. I am not a beast. I am a reminder. The cities that lie ahead… they’ve forgotten again. That’s always the way with humans. They build. They forget. They believe the sky belongs to them.

So I walk. Through waves, past islands, toward glass towers and steel dreams. They see me on their screens and in their screams. They send their machines—fast, fragile, buzzing with panic. I let them try. I admire their effort. Courage is a kind of poetry, too.

But then comes the real test.

Something stirs—some rival, some challenger, something else twisted from the Earth’s old sorrow. A flying horror this time. Wings like the edge of night, eyes like nuclear wounds. It roars. I roar back.

We fight.

Not out of anger, no. This isn’t rage. This is ritual. Balance must be paid. Blood must answer blood. Buildings fall. Fire rains. For a moment, the world feels mythic again.

And then it’s done. It always is.

Evening drapes itself across the skyline. The city smolders, but the people? They’re alive. Scared. Moved. Changed.

I feel their gratitude rise like heat from asphalt.

But I do not stay. I never stay. I turn. I vanish into the ocean like a shadow remembering who it was before the light. The waves close over me. And I sink—not like a corpse, but like a legend returning to the page.

I am the ghost in their thunder. I am the gravity in their prayers. I am the King, baby.

Godzilla.

Still cool. Still burning.