Yalie Saweda Kamara
for my mother, Agatha Kamara

I.        If you see me praying in the living room, never sit in front of me. You are
not God.

II.      When we go to a restaurant and I don't know any foods on the menu,
never order me a meal that is spelled with silent letters. I came to eat, not
to explore.

III.     You didn't make food. No. God, did. You cooked food. Watch your English.
Watch your faith.

IV.      Your Krio is offensive. When you speak, you sound like Shabba Ranks. Your
accent is funny, but keep practicing. It is the only way we will be able to
gossip in peace while at the supermarket.

V.       Try to learn the language of your lover and his family. They could be
smiling to your face and getting ready to trade you for 6 goats and 3 mules
during your first trip to their homeland.

VI.      If anyone stares at you for too long (more than 5 seconds), start speaking
an imaginary language while maintaining eye contact. They will be the first
to look away.

VII.    Consider the consequence of purchasing human hair wigs, second hand
clothing, and used furniture. Maybe you will feel beautiful, and also save
money, but you never know whose bad luck or misfortune will be sitting
on your head, body, or in the home in which you sleep. Buy what you can
truly afford.

VIII.   Your father's Muslim, so you are too (1989-1993).
I am Christian, so you are too (1993-2012).
I am Catholic now, but you keep praying (2012-present).

IX.      You laugh at me now. Like I laughed at my mother. Like she laughed at
hers. Like your daughters will laugh at you. And I will live long enough to
forgive your folly.

X.       Just make sure to pray.

Amen.
from the book BESAYDOO / Milkweed Editions
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This is a poem sourced from some of the teachings of my mother, a Sierra Leonean Creole woman who probably doesn't realize how closely I have been listening to her. While my mother is right 98% of the time, I never tell her. I think that this is why the lessons (rich, true, urgent, and at times, cheeky) persist. This poem is an ode to our loved ones who serve as compasses, to diaspora, to record keeping as a form of reflection and act of love.

Yalie Saweda Kamara on "Mother's Rules"
An Architecture Showing the City of Austin
Austin Poet's Effort to Have a Poet Laureate

"Texas has appointed a laureate yearly since 2003. The current Texas poet laureate is Amanda Johnston, of Round Rock. Most of the state's major cities have their own, with one exception—Austin. KB Brookins, an Austin poet, launched a petition to bring the issue to Austin's City Council. They said that not having a poet laureate is 'a missed opportunity.' 'This person promotes literacy throughout the city, specifically via the art of poetry,' Brookins said."

via KXAN
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Cover of Well Then There Now
What Sparks Poetry:
Juliana Spahr on "Gentle Now Don't Add to Heartache"


"Humans do not show up until the eighth section of sixteen. The chant is enumerative, but not merely enumerative. In the list of flora and fauna that the Kumulipo includes, humans come after birds, bats, and fish and before octopus, coral, and eel. I know of almost no examples of a poem with such an ecosystem, such a hope, such a possibility, such a reminder. And if I had to start to try to figure out what poetry is in this moment of ecological crisis, I might start there."
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