Comeover

By Joseph Mark Dorsey II

Poetry, Arlington County Detention Facility/Heard/OAR writing contest, October 2023 

I remember the first day I saw you

You caught my eye

You always sat at my table

That’s when I knew you were mine.

You is hot like fire

I love the way you whine

And I love what’s mine, yeah.

Is you coming over

Coming over here?

I am sitting here waiting

Waiting for you to appear.

I close my eyes

For a couple of seconds

There you are over there.

Where you are standing

I need you to come over.

I need you to come over

So we can drink, smoke hookah,

Go out and chill.

I need you to come over.

I need you to come over

So we can do it all over again,

I need you to come over.

I need you to come over

So we can drink, smoke hookah,

Go out and chill.

I need you to come over.

I need you to come over

So we can do it all over again.

My eyes are shut tight

I see your face again

It was just the second time

You always running through my head.

I am missing you days and night.

I am not gonna fuss and fight.

Holding your pillow nice and close.

As I am holding you tight.

Is you coming over?

Coming over here?

I need you right here.

Right here next to me

So we can live our lives so happily.

If you only knew

That it’s only you and me.

I need you to come over.

I need you to come over

So we can drink, smoke hookah,

Go out and chill.

I need you to come over.

I need you to come over

So we can do it all over again.

Is you coming over?

When you coming over here?

I am sitting here waiting.

Waiting for you to appear,

I close my eyes for a couple of seconds.

I open wide.

There you are over there.

Where you are standing

You say you coming over.

When did you say you coming over here?

I need you right here

Right here next to me.

If you only knew

We living our lives to eternity.

I need you to come over.

I need you to come over

So we can drink, smoke hookah, go out and chill.

I need you to come over.

I need you to come over

So we can do it all over again.

I need you to come over.

I need you to come over

So we can drink, smoke hookah,

Go out and chill.

I need you to come over.

I need you to come over

So we can do it all over again.

 

Bye-Bye Love Boat (P.C.P.)

by Charles R. Hall

Poetry, Arlington County Detention Facility/Heard/OAR writing contest, October 2023

Baby, without you I wasn’t nothing.  I couldn’t focus or think without you.  I love you when you was around me and you was unstoppable.

Baby, when I heard your nicknames; Love Boat, Sacks, goop, wet, I get so happy I smile.  I get very excited.  I know I need you just as much as you want me to need you.

Baby, you don’t know how you give me strength and make me feel like the Hulk.  When me and you fooling around, damn, we so tight.  Baby, you make me lunch out when you in my system.

Baby Damn!  As time goes along, I realized me and you shouldn’t be an item.  Or, if so, it’s time to dump you and let you go.

I outgrew us.  I no longer want to see you again or be a part of your madness so bye bye P.C.P.!

We Overcame!

by Angel McNatt

Third Place winner, Nonfiction, Arlington County Detention Facility/Heard/OAR writing contest, October 2023

(handwritten story follows typed story)

Twenty-two years later I remember it like it was yesterday.  I was in the shower at the university and the skies were gray.  My friend drove from across town, barged in crying hysterically to ask if I was okay.  The questions in my eyes and the confusion in my disposition must have given it away.  We’ve been hit, the school is being evacuated as a precautionary measure as it continues to escalate.  My heart immediately sank.  My feelings began to overwhelm me, my mind was unable to process what was being said.  The feeling was just so surreal, an outer body experience of sorts.  It was like I was drunk in my thoughts, but sober in my spirit.  My heart could process what my mind couldn’t.  The loss was unimaginable, the grief was unbearable.  I’d never lost anyone close before, but, as the damage, the loss and the carnage unfolded, it wasn’t hard to empathize; to feel like that was my brother, my mother, my sister, my father that I had lost.  I thought to myself it couldn’t be, is it possible to be exposed to yet another catastrophe that I would see!

Twenty years later evidently lightning can strike twice.  If I was a betting woman, I definitely would have rolled the dice.  Unfortunately, snake eyes would have been staring back at me as cold as ice.  I remember the day that I caught it.  It was late November in Texas, and no one knew what it was.  I almost never got sick, but I fell violently sick with high fever, body aches and chills.  The diagnosis was some type of flu.  Four months later revealed the real truth.  The Covid Virus!  So much loss, more than some will ever live to see in a lifetime.  There is no blueprint, there was no cure.  Being healthy enough to wait it out, strong enough to recover was the antidote.  We started to band together as a nation.  When the towers fell—we fell.  When the plane hit the ground in Pennsylvania, we all fought.  When the Pentagon shook, we all shook!  When Covid took my grandmother’s life, it was everyone’s grandmother that went into the hospital alone and died on New Years Eve.  Who would make the banana pudding, who would bring the family together?

We overcame it, we persevered and although everyone physically didn’t make it, all of our spirits made it.  We survived!  The untold stories will continue to live on.  New memories will continue to be made and life will continue to reinvent itself.  The one thing that never changes, we did and will OVERCOME!