You Beautiful Bastard ©️

I hate Bozeman.

I hate it like you hate the street corner you bled on, like you hate the room where she said she never loved you, like you hate the silence that followed. I hate it because Bozeman holds the ghost of who I was when I broke—utterly, completely, and publicly. You don’t forget pain like that. You don’t forgive a skyline that watched you fall apart.

I remember heartbreak so vivid it twisted the seasons. Betrayal so sharp it slit the hours in half. I was younger, dumber, and I believed in people too much. And in Bozeman, those people let me bleed. I hate the way the wind still smells like her hair in winter, and how the mountains seem to echo my worst mistakes. I hate the way every café and alleyway is haunted with flashbacks I didn’t invite.

But.

Even in the rubble, I found something sacred.

Each disaster became a badge. Every failure, a kind of scarred-over victory. When people saw a man falling apart, I was really being carved out into something newer. I learned to laugh again—darkly, crookedly—but genuinely. I learned what it means to survive, not in the poetic sense, but in the “get up and keep breathing even when you don’t want to” sense.

And Bozeman—damn Bozeman—gave me back my brother. Somewhere in the mess, through smoke and frost and silence, we found each other again. Maybe we were both ruined, maybe we were both trying to pretend we weren’t. But something about that city pulled us into the same room at the same time and said, Talk. And we did.

So yeah, I hate Bozeman. But hate is too simple a word.

It’s a wound that grew teeth. It’s pain that taught me how to rebuild. It’s a love letter I’d never write, but I keep tucked in my coat pocket anyway.

Bozeman didn’t kill me. It crowned me.

End of the Fire ©️

I have marched across bridges soaked in blood and lined with silence.

I have preached from pulpits and prison cells alike.

And now, I rise—not with triumph, but with finality.

Because there comes a day, not when justice is merely demanded—but when illusion must be torn from the soul like a mask burned into the skin.

And so I say to you today, with the clarity of a bell struck in the dark: racism, as we know it, has become a ghost with no substance—fed only by fear, memory, and men who profit from the wound.

We once named racism for what it was: a system. A chain. A weapon. A machine built to break the backs of the sons and daughters of Africa. But that system, that machine, it has been fought. It has been bled. And though it is not wholly gone, it is no longer the architect of your soul.

No—racism is no longer a structure. It is a story some still choose to tell.

And it is here, in this hour, that I must say the hardest thing of all.

If you see your skin first,

If you see your struggle as permanent,

If you carry oppression as identity,

If you walk like Pharaoh’s chains are still rattling on your ankles long after the gates have been opened-Then you are not fighting racism.

You are keeping it alive.

Yes, the past was cruel. Yes, the road was long. But we did not bleed just so our children could inherit a new kind of bondage—one wrapped in the language of endless grievance and eternal victimhood.

You are not oppressed—you are powerful.

You are not hunted—you are here.

You are not what was done to you.

You are what rises in spite of it.

Some say they fight racism, but I say: they fight the ghost of it, because they fear the weight of being free.

It is easier to remain in struggle than to rise in strength.

It is easier to name an enemy than to face the mirror.

It is easier to blame a system than to build a future.

But I will not lie to you.

I will not keep you soft.

We are not marching anymore—we are ascending.

And heaven does not open for those who bring their chains with them.

So let the last word on racism be this:

We have overcome not because the world has changed—but because we have.

We are no longer shadows on the wall. We are the fire itself.

And if any man, Black or white, rich or poor, dares to keep racism alive in their mind when the law no longer holds it, when the chains have long rusted away,

then it is not racism that holds them back.

It is fear of who they must become without it.

Let it burn. Let it die. Let it go.

The dream was never meant to be a crutch.

It was a ladder.

And now that ladder reaches the stars.