Friday, December 26, 2014

PO'HYMNS (CANTICOS CALLEJEROS)





DEDICATED TO, "LA MAESTRA GLORIA"


All I have to offer for now is this poor hymn
And if by chance some should happen to whisper, “poor him”
Let me be thankful that this prayer is for us, not for them



Table of contents
1. TAP CARD BLUES
2. LAVANDERIA
3. MID – NIGHT
4. BUDLONG AVE.
5. SISTER CAROLYNN
6. THE RIMPAU STATION
7. SEVENTH FLOOR
8. AUTODEFENSA (THE LIME)
9. NEVER AGAIN
10. BIRTHDAY PRAYER
11. WITH ALL DUE RESPECT
12. I CAN’T BREATHE
13. PO’ HYMN




TAP CARD BLUES

i hope to God a sheriff don't come in through that door
tap card is blank, another ticket is something i cant afford
imma post in the cut don't wanna get caught slipping
but if two roll through i'm dipping and that's that
i'm hopping off that station in three seconds flat
and word on the street is they wanna raise the fare
thought i seen some coming in and quickly sat
but they were merely heading off to lunch
i hate seeing them when they post up by the bunch
community service is not my thing and they don't cut any slack
when they give you a ticket, damn does it sting
half way there broke but not shook, got me feeling like a crook
i gotta post in the cut and damn near hide
cus this big city train can't afford a courtesy ride
so i'm in that metal serpent with the lord by my side
last time i asked them to let me slide, i got denied
i had no ends, had nothing to do with pride
especially if i'm trying to go to the east
that's when i gotta go through the belly of the beast
when taking those rides i feel very little peace
and it follows me till i've reached my stop
as is common street knowledge, fear sheriffs over cops
but this time around i made it out safe
this time around i walk out feeling successful and brave
this time around my choices were well played
just hope they also come through later on today

LAVANDERIA

The machines like race horses
At the crack of dawn
Mothers make their way
Greetings all around
It’s their day of the week
-Silent.
Strong men carry bags of loads
Enter a vendor selling socks,
Washers and driers
Faint radio, fuzzy t.v.
Brick and mortar rivers
Champurrado and tamales
The modern man with his
Stain filled work clothes
All dressed down
These machines collectively rattle
Click clacking coins
Artificial scent of a spring or summer morning
Soap suds, clean socks, shirts
And the sun slowly appears
A sense of community
Still not stained by, “allure”
Accents spoken from
American South to South America
Bed sheets, blankets
But no better view, big washers
Small washers, loads of all kinds
Big city meditations
Before returning to the daily grind

MID – NIGHT

Ghetto bird humming must mean it’s time to catch some Z’s
At midnight the siren howls plus the neighbors still blow trees
You’d think the hood would be shook to some degree
But this is just another numb night on the block if you were to ask me
The forty ounce is gone yet the buzz still hinders
Another herb filled Swisher lingers between my fingers
My only therapy comes from these old soul singers
Yet the night remains quiet despite all of the violence
Surviving these streets is an art form not a science
Especially when the norm is to live in unrestrained defiance
Just before I snooze I close my eyes and ask the good lord for guidance
Enlighten me so I may walk towards where the light is
Let me be free to speak and never give in to silence
The ghetto bird leaves and only we remain
So accustomed to the sound we forget it brings us pain
And the only thing we gain is the normalcy of this strife
But those are the rules set for us in this questionable life
Rarely knowing what is wrong from what is really right
Reciting this prayer which we offer every single night
Hoping stray bullets don’t kill me or mine
Understanding there is love here, overshadowed by crime
And that it may not end come sunshine
Yet understand we walk daily along this fine line
And whatever happened tonight,
I'll eventually hear through the grapevine
That being said I can comfortably end this rhyme
And prep candles for the next unfortunate impromptu shrine

BUDLONG AVE.

I was a boy from the block Budlong was the spot
Never gang banged but I knew about the crooks and the cops
Saw my first drive by on 27th heard the guns go pop
Right after I seen that person’s body drop
Learned the protocol for when the streets got hot
All I heard was, “Ain’t no Future in Yo Frontin’ “
And, “More Bounce to the( Forty) Ounce”
Adams through King, Vermont to Western
Roaming those streets made me a veteran
Scaring SC students all day all night,
Give them 4 or 5 years and they all take flight
Some of the homeys don’t know wrong from right
And to every last teacher, I won’t burn one name
But good looking out for putting me up on game
All you heard was ghetto birds, sirens, sawed offs and nina's
From Juliet all the way through Catalina
And even knowing death and murder
Never stopped me from eating at Olympian burger
Long before the Expo line, the hood was all mine
What made us all modern was taking quinceanera pictures
At the Expo park rose garden, 20's and 30's
Friends and foes, and if they ask who shot him
Everyone saw but no one knows,
That’s what it was like way back when,
I had no idea the power that came from a pad and a pen
If I had to it over, I'd do it again
To the spirits that never made it out the eighties or nineties
To those that stayed active when the shit was grimy
I respect you legacy, just let a punk stranger try me.

SISTER CAROLYNN

Allow me to recite this prayer/hymn
For an angel in disguise, Sister Carolynn
When I met her last night
I think she was high on heroin
Three bibles on her dashboard
Beautiful soul, older woman,
Waiting for heaven to let her in
In the twilight of her life saying;
Never did I think I’d be guilty of such a sin
She was somewhere around Slauson,
Service had just let out
Preachers’ words weren't enough
Apparently -no doubt
Still she knew methods of accessing her pain
And using it as a tool to set her straight again
Engine running, lights were on, a lighter in hand
I’d just come out the store
In her car she sat feeling the effects of her fresh score
I asked, ma’am are you okay?
Just checking in,
Drooling, dozing yet smiling she said,
“Yes, child, Thank the Lord,
All praises be unto him”

THE RIMPAU STATION

The Rimpau station was more than that
Along Pico and long before what stands there now
When peak traffic was just before dawn
Hustlers, nannies, students, survivors just the same
It stood along cement pillars where the 30/31 ended
And the 5 and 7 began, a bustling black market
Vendors galore, batteries for the portable radios
Gloves, scarves, umbrellas, tamales, champurrado, atole
Headquarters for those just able to get by
By the time our generation began using that route
The station was already a relic,
Who developed it and why? no one knew
But we made use of the benches
Made sturdy by thick coats of city sponsored paint
Filled with layers of signatures of citywide vandals
One bus to the beach the other to East LA
Street calligraphy in the most awkward angles
And the Rimpau station was a stop on the map
Where the city and beach culture begin to overlap
Many a time bus drivers woke up tired riders
Dead asleep from what began as a simple nap,
Clogged, always congested nothing there plush
That is, till the chatter of the afternoon rush
When teams of well-trained con men,
Count their daily bread, whatever it takes to get ahead
Then the silence of the late night shift
To them two 24 hour bus lines was a god sent gift
And maybe it means nothing to outsiders
Maybe it has to do with my generation
But it is our privilege to have been there
Atole in hand half sleepy at the old Rimpau Station

SEVENTH FLOOR

At night the city skyline resembles lit candles
Burning uneven in my forgotten altar
Prayers seem pointless and only lead me astray
Farther and farther I often want to run away
I manage to make it through the head spinning bustle
Appointments with the ever changing hustle
Constantly confronted by new comers and old
Never once surprised by the stories told
Where winners are the brave and the bold
Those that by days end make a profit with product sold
Through Metro train aisles slanging candies
May the homies make their loot
A big, “I am you, you are me” to those serving the bourgeoisie
Real talk;
The backbone of the city runs through our black market economy
And hell will freeze over before they get it running properly
Barely making ends meet? This here is for you
Those that refuse to greet defeat, we’re going to pull through
On me, bet, watch, we’ll get us a better view
We worked hard, earned it, remember when we were just a few?
But our city constantly evolves, changes, with that no one can argue
And just like that our metropolitan working class again grew
To those being pushed out with little to no equity this is for you too
The sun sets on my thoughts from this seventh floor
From this building looking into downtown,
To those that want but can never seem to afford
We’ve been through worse and know life is going to deliver more
The lights on the skyline begin to come on
The candles again lit,
So many more stories I wouldn’t know where to begin
To those alone that think they’ve lost, we will once again win
To the doctors and nurses healing in the hospitals and in the streets
We heal, each in our own way overcoming obstacles
(Often where fear and pain meet)
To the invisible, forgotten, abandoned and unclaimed
Collectively we define our cities tremendous name
Struggle and pain attached to dreams and perceptions of fame
Outside forces say we only have ourselves to blame
To them I say, we are not even playing the same game
We’re millions and that’s a grip of different mind frames
My life is my pride, not my shame
And all these thoughts within the blink of an eye
Back to my struggle my battle my pain
We are a people with little to lose and everything to gain
When fads end and many abandon ship we will still remain
With the ones that move the city yet will forever lack a name

AUTODEFENSA

Autonomous defense strike opposing forces
That aim to turn land into black market conglomerates
The rich and the poor, My motherlands first 21st century civil war
The story at times may get a bit hellish
But I promise you that at no point will I embellish
Not that anyone dropped dime
But I shit you not this story is focused on the trafficking
Of the Mexican lime
I’m on the side of truth, right and wrong are blurred
But the people were hella fed up when it first occurred
When it all went down, this whole fictional town
Got together and turned the village into one huge compound
Confident in what they did was right
They slowly acquired street sweepers, thumpers and gats
Covering the block day and night ready to face the eventual attack
No more extortion the people fought back
The cash crop was not heroin or pot
And when it came to the bottom line grind
They had to reclaim their native lime
Come up off them lime fields, come up off them trucks
They began fighting back, Local drug lords were shit outta luck
And whatever weapons they left behind the community clucked
Now even the lime is held hostage
Don’t know it that implies my motherland has lost it
Or if the tables have turned, yet they managed to turn a profit
These empowered patriots now possess the power to
Promote their agenda,
How their struggle has made it into your local market
How they refused to surrender.

NEVER AGAIN

You might not get a ballad in the end
A footnote in a story told by family or a friend
Might not even receive polite words by the family reverend
Rather than pretend,
You were you and someone like you,
Well, never again.
Shout out to you, spirit that came and went
I absorbed every last moment we spent
Together forever nothing to repent,
I relive when reality reduces me to tears, best friend
Someone like you, well, never again.
Might not be remembered but by a chosen few
Leave it to me though; I’ll make sure they remember you
There in spirit for all of the new stages I’ll be entering
Even If the next time we meet be my day of reckoning,
Who do you think of when you read these words?
They read along with you, personal memories held on to like a gem
Because to them, someone like you, well,
Never again.

BIRTHDAY PRAYER

Lord, thank you for these trials and tribulations
For my friends and my foes
I have learned that in this life what you say goes
Guard them as you have guarded me and mine
Thank you good lord for my partners in crime
Continue guiding my path as I walk your line
What little I have are blessings from you
Regardless of whatever comes next, Thank You
It is in your will that I shall succeed
This path I continue until my soul is freed
Though at times tempted by vanity and greed
Whatever I work towards is purely out of need
I will put up a fight when I walk in your light
And will show the world the strength of your might
Thank you for this wisdom, thank you for my sight
Thank you for showing me wrong from right
A false prophet might see me and think I’m lost
Yet they speak of you as if you were still in that cross
When they preach they do it for recognition and applause
But I your humble servant will not speak ill of them
With an open heart and open arms I choose to be their friend
Who am I to say they don’t mean well?
I can testify to them that you picked me up every time I fell
But, I wil leave chit chat charlatans to their own personal hell
Thank you for these aches and pains they have made me a strong man
For every test you given me, not once have I ran
I push forward aiming to surpass my goals
Though I know not your almighty master plan
Just let those who think I cannot that quite truthfully, I can.
Amen.

WITH ALL DUE RESPECT

Does GOD have a religion? if so is it a safe bet?
If so, how can a heathen like me get put on the set?
The way I’m living I fear my last breath
Seeking spirituality before I face my eventual death
So much stress, all I want is a spot to rest – In peace
At least then the drama will disperse
So I seek salvation through this blasphemous verse
Can’t picture life getting any worse but then it does
Who I am now is not necessarily who I once was
Who I once was, wasn't really me
Was merely working on who I’d eventually be
The only remnant is forever handling all drama like a G
Just hope the Good Lord treats me with a little bit of empathy
Not empty and hollow, I live hoping to be a better man tomorrow
I've read the good book and its rules I do follow
Contrary to popular belief, I DO believe
Though I probably should pray a little more
Real talk I have my doubts and ask myself, “what for?”
What’s the use? What if I refuse? Am I done for?
I’m searching for spirituality by taking the detour
But before I’m out, I’m verbalizing my doubts
Making moves and still searching for answers in the clouds
Roaming God’s great earth making the rounds
Sounds silly, I know, but I need to get this off my chest
Before I go, one last thing, I too am one of God’s creatures
And therefore will never silence the way my soul sings
Even if my words sting, in this world there are worse sins
In another life I may have been a preacher
Lord knows I gave headaches to every last one of my teachers
But it was all for the sake of being a truth seeker
Theologically digging deep, you reap what you sow
So before I sleep, before I go, let the world know
I’m just aiming to get put on the set
And truth be told, I mean that –
(with all due respect.)

I CAN’T BREATHE

We tend to fight among one another
As men of color the system taught us to hate our fellow brother
Yet the beast is the biggest reason for our murders
And they wonder why we walk these streets with burners
When we unite the world shutters
When red and blue stop becoming colors
We become names not just numbers
This can’t be how we’ll forever receive our eternal slumber
Makes little difference whether you’re a bookworm or a gunner
We pray that we make it to see this coming summer
Knowing we might not and it’s not even a bummer
Brought up with Police etiquette
Because it’s quite evident that to them our lives are irrelevant
And all of the pleas to the President are a waste of breathe
Down the street is the constant fear of facing our untimely death
To not know if you’ll make it past this morning
Or if by nightfall our families will be hitting the streets mourning
Innocent blood on the streets pouring
Us against them, knowing it will happen again and again
And if I stand my ground and defend
That’s where I just may have to make my final stand
Imagine me saying, “I’m tired of it, it stops today”
being killed, and in the laws eyes my death be more than okay
“I’m minding my business please leave me alone”
Imagine me wanting to get out and just head home
But these who are to defend me have a heart of stone
And even if everyone sees just how wrong it is
And even if I didn’t get to give my wife and kids a final kiss
No threatening gestures, not even a fist,
I die just cus I’m a person of color and pissed
Imagine my last words being, “I can’t breathe”
And if taken to trial, who would the judge believe?
Would there be justice or would my loves have to grieve
A victim, a number, a statistic is all in life I’ll achieve
Something that white affluence will never grasp
Or even conceive and that's just another day in the life
No justice, no peace just strife

PO’ HYMN

From the same pulpit where many souls led service and sang hymns
In the part of town where day and night, they still slang them things
And where some learned to convert thoughts into poems
In the place where no one ever really confesses all of their sins
That’s where this here prayer begins
I compose po’ hymns for when nights get no better come morning
For those that know real life gives no advanced warning
The losers, the junkies, pimps, pushers, hustlers, and whores
Dear Lord, I hope someone in there is really, truly is praying for us
Redemption or clarity to us one and the same
But know that lost souls in our city still praises your name
For those who are tired, defeated from what daily drama brings
To you and your kin is for whom I compose this po’ hymn
For those that work hard just to make ends meet
To those who fall but can’t afford to give into defeat
To the backbone of the city that commutes through these streets
To that person on the bus stop headed to the E.R.
Some might never greet you, but the city knows who you are
To the ones that might be considered the lowest of the low
The wretched of the earth,
For those who’ve yet to grasp the gravity of their own true worth
For those on Government assistance who one day won’t need the system,
To you is who I dedicate this here po’ hymn
Not for scholars, teachers, students or faculty just for the hood
For those that gotta do what they gotta do so the table has food
For the drop outs, knuckle heads, homeys and the fam
Were it not for them I wouldn’t be where I am
For people of color who accidentally get hounded by “the man”
The ones that don’t deserve it yet take it like champs
Whether they know it or not they get my seal of approval stamp
You know how it feels to be done dirty and still have to say thanks
To the humble, humiliated, hungry and has been
To those that quietly wept as grown men
I especially dedicate this po’ hymn for them,
Watch over us, give us guidance and give us sight
We fight till the end, whether the end is dim or bright
Glorious, mundane, uneventful or even grim
Rich in spirit, no tithes
All I have to offer for now is this poor hymn
And if by chance some should happen to whisper, “poor him”
Let me be thankful that this prayer is for us, not for them

Friday, December 5, 2014

I CAN'T BREATHE

We tend to fight among one another
As men of color the system taught us to hate our fellow brother
Yet the beast is the biggest reason for our murders
And they wonder why we walk these streets with burners
When we unite the world shutters
When red and blue stop becoming colors
We become names not just numbers
This can’t be how we’ll forever receive our eternal slumber
Makes little difference whether you’re a bookworm or a gunner
We pray that we make it to see this coming summer
Knowing we might not and it’s not even a bummer
Brought up with Police etiquette
Because it’s quite evident that to them our lives are irrelevant
And all of the pleas to the President are a waste of breathe
Down the street is the constant fear of facing our untimely death
To not know if you’ll make it past this morning
Or if by nightfall our families will be hitting the streets mourning
Innocent blood on the streets pouring
Us against them, knowing it will happen again and again
And if I stand my ground and defend
That’s where I just may have to make my final stand
Imagine me saying, “I’m tired of it, it stops today”
being killed, and in the laws eyes my death be more than okay
“I’m minding my business please leave me alone”
Imagine me wanting to get out and just head home
But these who are to defend me have a heart of stone
And even if everyone sees just how wrong it is
And even if I didn’t get to give my wife and kids a final kiss
No threatening gestures, not even a fist,
I die just cus I’m a person of color and pissed
Imagine my last words being, “I can’t breathe”
And if taken to trial, who would the judge believe?
Would there be justice or would my loves have to grieve
A victim, a number, a statistic is all in life I’ll achieve
Something that white affluence will never grasp
Or even conceive and that's just another day in the life
No justice, no peace just strife.

Sunday, May 11, 2014

STREET MATH (A short story in three scenes)


Damn, got these twenty eight grams now what to do?
I know homie from down the block with the distribution crew
And they're all low key never on the avenue
Alright bet, that's fourteen to keep in mind, stacking revenue
Time for street math, break down the other half
Fourteen more to go, that's four eights at three point five,
Time to make the call for the next batch to arrive
Show the low level street kids just to survive
Because it's hard work just staying alive
So many angles and so many scams
Smart young hustler gets a quarter and let them go
At fifteen a gram,
Now he's well on his way to being a man
With that profit he reverses the path
Well aware that with flipping they'll feel his wrath
At last, a way out the hood as he should
But is he helping or damaging his own neighborhood?
He pays his own rent so I can't tell him shit
I take his money and give him his own fourteen to flip
Consistent custies is what makes him legit
And when it comes down to it, he doesn't know the identity
Of the connect from who he get
Now I got a bag full of shake with which we'll make
Into some bomb top shelf concentrate
And before I know it a knock on the door
I'll be god damn if it ain’t my connect with 28 more…

“You let the last batch go pretty damn quick
As a reward here's eight O's for you to flip”
He tells me,
"The secret is to make the payment methods strict
And have associates with acquaintances that love busting licks"
But these clients have needs, what’s more they have cash
Last thing they want is to jeopardize their personal stash
(But know that some suckers will snitch in a dash)
Cover your tracks for when you get caught up
Use street rules you were taught when you were brought up
Eight O's to flip is some real serious shit
But not enough for a lawyer should any charges stick
But if this cycle is successful we'll break bread
Move up, get ahead, cop a fat grip
If the lords by our side the mission will be slick
Two O's here, two O's there, four left
This hustle is more honest than home invasions and theft
Now I’m rocking Sperry's, Herschel nap sack and a Michael Kors ticker
Honest pay check is cool but cold hard cash is quicker
And demanding these large payments makes my skin thicker
Thinking back to when big shit to me was pushing a Quarter O
Here I am now pushing this half a P, hustling hard
Fully supported by the streets anonymity
I respect the game and I know my role
Stress eased by imported drink and a fat wax laced bowl
Another knock on the door
I’ll be god damn if it ain't my connect
This time he's bringing me a motherfucking whole

P is for prosperity pride and persistence
Four hundred and fifty five give or take a few grams
For those kinds of numbers I need to have assistance
Sixteen O's in a clear Reynolds turkey oven bag
And in it the beginning of all the dreams we ever had
For this kind of cheddar I’ll go all in,
No sin, all I see are my family’s finances getting better
But I’m smarter than the average, I’m more clever
Been at it too long, for me to get caught up – never,
P is for Prison
Punked and permanently playing the game
Putting in work towards who I want to portray
But P is also for plot line, if the getaway comes clean
Would I lay my life on the line?
I mean, is what occurring here really a crime?
Plenty out there out to get theirs
(Why shouldn't I get mine?) - Fuck it
Break down the bag, scale it make it half
Once poor now the protagonist
Hold two accountable, a quota, clientele
Most importantly never write down the math
And always have a backup plan, launder, live, laugh
If we all keep our mouths closed
No one will know what happens to those O's
Just respect the deadline, have it by tonight
Now the story can end, I can afford to hide,
You see, P is also for plain site

Monday, May 5, 2014

"Sometimes it's like having the whole world on your shoulders..."

Sometimes it's like having the whole world on your shoulders
And before you know it, the world switches from pebbles to boulders
Within the blink of an eye one is caught up in the
Strife that is our daily life,
Wiser isn’t always hand in hand with getting older
The realization that life and my patience are only getting shorter
The world will only get colder
Struggles that reiterate, many servants - few owners
And I must wander through this well-orchestrated
Mundane quandary of an existence, cutting few (if no) corners
Conscious of the eventual consequence that’s coming my way
Should I choose to linger, play my role and stay
Wide awake and coming to my own conclusion as to why
Certain aspects in my mind have me feeling in such disarray
But this is part of my every day ”in” and “around” greater LA living
If not careful it can crush you and leave you disillusioned
The only way out is to find and execute a concrete solution
For this concrete jungle has a way making you feel humbled
Enough to crumble some dead in their tracks of supposed evolution
These tryfling streets offer no comfort no restitution
Only those that strive to stay alive survive
But even still some become casualties and die
And it’s one of those I don’t want to become
A sucker stuck in the slums, a random victim of a red-rum
A beggar living from crumb to crumb
The thought alone leaves me numb
In the larger scale I know my sorrows seem small
And I should probably be thankful I have any at all
Because without that
tomorrows victory wouldn't taste half as sweet
Always on my toes always on my feet
Mustn't forget;
The path I follow has an elite, rhythmic beat

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

#NationalPoetryMonth #Music

Inaugurated by the Academy of American Poets in 1996, National Poetry Month is now held every April, when schools, publishers, libraries, booksellers, and poets throughout the United States band together to celebrate poetry and its vital place in American culture. Thousands of organizations participate through readings, festivals, book displays, workshops, and other events
- (http://www.poets.org/page.php/prmID/41)

#NationalPoetryMonth #Music

To a disturbed soul like mine, music is family
Through thick and thin always down to ride with me
Essential rhythm, critical spiritual therapy
Time and time again sounds forever there for me
From failure to focused
Great exercises in critical analytical memory
I continue steadily marching forward
Subconsciously steering away from stale written word,
Still, seduced into an intricately isolated periphery
Persuaded by the cities pulse
Can it be that this be my permanent reality?
Can’t forget: whatever I do, I do intentionally
I make my future, nothing is ever meant to be
Music saved my life in dark nights
When I’d think, “this is it for me”
Music put pride and purpose into my person
Infinitely indebted

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

11 POEMS (Circa 2012-2013)


11 Poems
By: Daniel Morales Leon
Eleven Poems
(Circa 2012-2013)


Written between 2012 and 2013 in Los Angeles, CA


Table of Contents

1. Only Time Will Tell (Intro)
2. The Story Pops Off
3. Cal-Fresh (In Line)
4. Street Knowledge
5. Failure to Disperse
6. Mobilized Morphemes
7. HerStory
8. This One Time
9. Wussup OG (Cal Fresh Pt. 2)
10. My Weapon
11. Daily Bustle (Outro)

1. Only Time Will Tell (Intro)

I know very well
I'm stranded even possibly abandoned
Somewhere between heaven and hell
Often I imagine I'm
Caught up in the matrix of a magical spell
I say to myself,
"Only time will tell whether I fail or excel"
As for this time I'm given,
I'm making my way out this mental cell
Breaking out of my prison, listen,
I'm out to give life to my unorthodox visions
With or without a commission
No more of that, "good God fearing Christian"
I'm taking up arms and connecting divisions
One life to lose, I've chosen to listen
Heart and soul breathing, gaining perspective
Losing control, going all in
I've accepted the mission
Now the goal is to execute with absolute precision
Knowledge of self makes me brazen
Spirit grant me the patience
What I do is for the bettering of all my relations
Now that I'm a truth chasing wordsmith
Going out with two guns blazing
I find myself constantly facing
Challenges that aim to make me complacent
Never the less, I make my way confidently
Up to the attic from out the basement
Knowing fully well, it's kill or be killed
And as for my life in this world,
-There can be no replacement

2. The Story Pops Off

The story pops off 5:00p.m. Columbus Day 81’
Moms begets her only seed, a stubborn male son
In her eyes this seed is the chosen one
Loving eyes do little to alleviate the reality
Tragically the seed sees little of the motherland
And instead they travel to a foreign land
They meet up with the rest of the fam
In this environment little boy becomes grown man
Class clown that grasps concept of
Constructing creative sentences
Surrounded by visual senselessness
And in his words and phrases one can see
The phases that a boy battles to become full grown
The child is blind to coming from a father less home
Momma does her best to keep seed in line but
She’s constantly stressed
Seed sees few things in his life are fine and
Financially he’s constantly fucked
She focuses on frantically praying for her son
He lacking self-discipline becomes educational dissident
She still sees her boy as her heaven sent salvation
And slowly the seed begins to use pen, pad and imagination
She patiently waits to shed a happy tear
And greet the potential collegiate with a “congratulations!”
But that day never arrives and by the grace of the good lord
He somehow manages to survive stay alive to see twenty one
But will he make it to see twenty five?
The year is 06’ and now seed rolls with dangerous clicks
And only the streets provide his daily deviant fix
Midnight February Friday the 13th, the gat goes bang
Seed laid out on a bloody pool as gunshots rang
Everyone a potential victim or so goes the street rule
Regardless of the reason seed done fell victim
And takes a hit, moms runs out only to see
Her son bleeding out on the concrete
Armed robbery gone wrong, seed may potentially lose an arm
Streets did him dirty did him harm
How she wishes they would have stayed in their little farm
Shell shocked and she still believing he to be her reason for living
Is borderline grieving at County U.S.C.
Moms ever the warrior wonders why Creator would wound
Her one and only, slowly seed recovers
And she feels the pain of a million black and brown mothers
The seed still stubborn and slightly shaken
Begins to wonder if he is forsaken for he has yet to see
The fruits of his current labor, working hard and never asking for favors
Flawed but now with foresight the seed wanders the street
Wondering if he’ll give moms what she deserves
Now knowing fully well that life will constantly throw them curves
In the end he hopes to find a method to ease her rattled nerves
Mother and son as it was and will be,
I know the intimate details of this story
Because the seed I’m referring to is…

3. Cal-Fresh

It's still free rides on the metro still headed to DPSS
Still in line, smelling tobacco, funk and stress
Hustling the system to pop collars and look fresh
Sitting in the lobby getting put up on game by the cities best
Clocking gov't dollars so i don't have to look a mess
Gotta look after mine just in case God don't bless
Can't afford to rhyme for free, gotta hustle and do me
You see, can't always provide my girl hotmeals off that EBT
Upward mobility duke, that's how it is, that's what it be
Defying the hard facts by dreaming of stacks,
Forever and a day bumping 2Mex's newest tracks
Cus even if I aint got a dollar to my name
I'll be underground fresh, heavy into the game
You ain't about this life, this life aint for the weak of heart
The life I live is custom built it aint no ala carte
Few finish this race though there’s millions at the start
Many make it out the starting line but crumble in the end
But me, I'm real a.f. no need to half step or pretend
No need for you to act like you comprehend
The message that I send is not to ask for repentance of sins
See I'm a sinner just like you, I do what I have to
To survive, I just know that I'm grinding on the hustle
I'm not trying to muscle in on anyone’s territory
I'm out for a payday, no fame, no glory
I'm moving on up to good brew, but i'll still sip a forty
And I’m not even sorry if you don't get this story
I'm simply stepping up to my potential
Far from coincidental, these moves are on point
So if you feel me home skillet spark up another joint
In this journey only the hungry eat
Like rhyming and kicking knowledge to the beat
I'm a beast on the street, if your eyes aren’t open
The streets will put you to sleep
So through some real talk I feed you words that are deep
And if you can't grasp the depth in that prepare to face death
That’s just a street fact, now let me get back to this line
My numbers almost up and I’m a county office superstar
Which means if you ever need it,
I'll put you up on free tokens, Medi Cal and even that G.R.
Reparations with interest though some might not agree
But you know what? I dont really care for them gee
I do me and got stacks of fresh gro-ce-ries
I don’t do that "whoa is me" mess
I'm too busy living life Cal Fresh
So I wish you the best and of course,
May God bless.

4. Street Knowledge

Like L.A. has mad traffic, smog, palm trees and bomb trees
My uncle died repping a gang in South Central
He always told me never get on your knees and please those
That see you as the source of the disease or blame you for this disaster
I didn’t understand then that what he meant was I was the seed
From then on I went on and began to see that I would need
More than my momma’s prayers to keep me safe
Student of street knowledge
Expo Park, Mid City and K Town became my permanent college
I carried with me the craft of clean conversation
Walked through back alleys in deep concentration
Nurtured by the rays of this L.A. sun and graffiti related motivation
Eventually everyone pays the price for living life staying posted
Life rarely allows us to have too much fun
Roughed is the ride as the majority unwillingly live life on the run
Running to and from safe space to crazy place back to a safe space
Some come and go leaving absolutely no trace of having set foot
In this, the land where everyone is quick to embrace
The nine to five rat race and all the reverend can do to save grace
Is recite phrases meant to put us in our place
But are instead muted by the nightly blah ka! blah ka!
And I’m forced to keep trucha from eses, bloods, crips and placas
Ducking daily insanity and quite frankly no fronting
No faking the funk I’m fucking fed up
I refuse to allow this life to view me as a chump
I’m not having any of that madness
My infinite status is that of liberating undecipherable patterns
My elders put me up on game with what really matters
And with that I can relate to those at the bottom
When most see a problem I see a solution
No more getting stuck, we’re all collectively moving on up
No more disillusions, no more alluding to pacifying this lyrical activism
My vision is for these words to help you break out your own personal prison
In taking my uncles advice I aim to complete my life mission
Defeat the judicial system that has judged me since day one
I’m standing my ground and refusing to run
And if you don’t believe I suggest you test son
When life hits me hard I’ve been known to press on
Thoughts so precise it’s pointless to have a vest on
But I’m invested in my uncle’s advice and through that he lives on
And lives strong and with that it’s like he never said so long
And though I know very well I can’t correct all my wrongs
I’m determined to scare one time with just this one rhyme
I’ll leave you with this one last thought this last line;
Tell me, in all honesty would you’d rather shine or live blind?
Do you want to move ahead or stay behind?
Regardless of your answer know you can catch me on the grind
Up on game and with an open mind

5. Failure to Disperse

For my brothers and sisters in the struggle,
For Tio Chucho that died crossing the border a few years ago.


Whose streets? our streets!
Whose streets? our streets!
Whose struggle, our struggle!
A raised fist, a smile, a tear
Anger, frustration, deep meditation
"This is now an unlawful assembly,
Failure to disperse will lead to arrest.."
Whose streets? our streets!
Whose streets, our streets!
A prayer, another tear, a deep thought
Undocumented and unafraid
Do your fucking job, you state sponsored terrorist
AND if you're brown, don't you dare tell me in my ear
That you "get" this struggle,
Don't you dare suggest "other" avenues
Don't you dare tell me that, you're just doing "your job"
And most of all do not insult our intelligence
By telling us that you're the good guys
Arrest me you piece of shit. do your fucking job
Take my finger prints, read me my rights,
But remember my face, forget my name
But remember my face, i am the face of change
We do what we must, you just do what your told
Earn your paycheck, use your handcuffs
Do what you do best, we will hold down every front
Intimidate us, scare us, it's nothing new to us
Fist remains in the air, lungs scream, more tears
But we are not afraid, we are not alone
We are here, some of us queer, but we will no longer
Hide and live in fear, we see you coming
But we won't budge, failure to disperse?
Well mr. officer, we're not leaving anytime soon
You don't have enough handcuffs and zip ties to hold us all back
All you have is a paycheck but no heart
We are ALL heart, who do you think will win?
We understand all too clearly the rights
That have been read to us, which is why we won’t budge
Which is why a tear forms,
Which is why we don't even care to acknowledge your existence
Which is why we yell at the top of our lungs,
Whose streets? our streets!
Whose streets? our streets!
Whose struggle? our struggle!
You feel our heart beat, it beats with the strength of millions
Synchronized to beat as one, and when the crowd has dispersed
And when you grab a beer after work and high five each other
And say to one another, "did you see the look on those wetbacks?"
When your bigotry becomes full on racism, remember those faces
Because even behind bars you can hear our four point manifesto
Picking up momentum and playing in your head
On repeat with no stop button...

1. we are the people
2. A little bit louder
3. we want justice
4. Our people

1. we are the people
2. A little bit louder
3. We want justice
4. Our people

1. we are the people
2. A little bit louder
3. We want justice

1. we are the people
2. A little bit louder
3. We want justice
4. Our people

6. Mobilized Morphemes

Words on paper whose wealth weighs heavily
On me secretly plot to overthrow my motivation
The implication being that I’m going nowhere fast
And that all I know is procrastination
Yet my words come with a fury few can resist
And my words come with the fury of a raised fist
My few choice words hold value far beyond any
Assimilated structure of sentences sent out to sedate
Me, so that being said allow me to embed a sequence
Of counter attack conversations conveying solidarity
Into your dome denouncing the dastardly deeds
That demand my defeat
I refuse to lose, linguistically speaking my verbal attacks
Stem from mobilized morphemes and simple syntax
My thoughts hold permanent value in the hood
Like nick nacks and dime sacks
How then can I feel as though these words are free
You see, I’m not with that my words will travel
Down trails that would derail most others
No glamour in capturing the gutter
But this is my life and I will have no other
There’s order and structure to these stanzas, like soldiers
Set to lay their lives for the bettering of our seeds
Defending the front lines forward thinking
Fighting for a just cause,
From the heart not just for applause
For what can be not for what was

7. HerStory

She was and is a drop in the bucket,
Her story told time and time again,
Now, as I take you down a path that few ponder
Allow the pen to bleed through the paper
She was packing the last of her few belongings
Somewhere beyond yonder, she silently
Ponders with a heavy heart
“Its been many years now since
Fam and me done been torn apart”
From somewhere South of Mexico,
But to them it is all the same
Travelers with no identity, nationality
Or so much as a first name,
Hitchhiked in Guatemala, bussed it in Chiapas
Eventually stole a ride on the roof of a freight train
Evading not just la migra, but
Kidnappers, drug smugglers, thieves’ killers and placas
We’ll never come close to understanding her pain
As she traveled north to see her husband and sons once again,
Through the arduous journey she kept thinking
“Lord please protect and allow no one to hurt me”
Sirens sound off and everyone runs
Out come the badges, dogs and the guns
All of this due to lack of documentation and access to funds
She runs and she runs and she somehow manages to get away
When she catches her breath she kneels and she prays
“Good Lord thank you for letting me live to see another day”
Closer and closer, the journey gets shorter
She can see and damn near taste that God forsaken border
Pops rejoices as he tells kids, “Mom is almost home”
Merely children when they last saw her, now they’re full grown
Eager to show mom that they can stand on their own
They stood the test of time and now the time has come
Off pops goes to greet, hold and finally laugh with his beloved better half
He has the cash safely stored and ready to redeem
It all happened so fast that is seemed like a dream
Can’t wait to wrap his arms around boo and finally say face to face
“How I’ve missed you” the pollero tells him, “Wait for the phone call
I’ll tell you where we’re making the exchange”
Husband begins to think, “ey yo - something feels God awful strange”
He waits for the phone call to finally come in
Pollero says, “ Disculpa plebe, damn, where do I begin?”
He tells the story and at the end says to him, “I’m really very sorry”
Somewhere in the desert, it was dehydration
But really it was from not having proper documentation
In a tearful sorrow, husband wonders what he’ll tell his kids tomorrow
“Good lord tell me, why you chose me?
Could you not find it in your heart
To show my family a little bit of sympathy?”
In anguish torment and pain
He identifies a woman’s body, Jane Doe no name
Pops enters the house filled with tears and grief,
Telling his seeds;
“I spent the money for mom on a one way plane ticket,
Wooden casket and funeral wreath”

8. This One Time

I know this one swine
A onetime that I’ll never forget
From this one time when
We got pulled over for no good reason
I’mma make this fictitious tale real son
Can’t be in Westwood bald at night in a nice car
He mean mugged us and made his move
Dude was on one with something on his mind
That he had to prove,
Fucking aint right but that night we were on his block
Lights came on and we were told to stop
Being stared at by student faces that all seemed white
Sat our asses on the curve
The nerve of this power trippin punk
Trick ass foo didn’t even ask if he could pop the trunk
This officer of the peace this law breaking chump
Was just doing his job,
Didn’t even mention anything about probable cause
No rights read and instead there we sat
Watching him take our stashed sack
Who’s the teacher who’s the clown
Us being pulled over? Or the fact that
The swine searching us was brown?
I know this one swine
A onetime that I’ll never forget
From this one time when I told a cop,
Watch one day as you go about your business
You’ll bear will witness
The power of hood accountability
How in certain communities observing
You is our responsibility, looked at me
Already wanting to check I.D.
I said I’m simply implying that
You being an agent of the law
Gives us the right to oversee
What you do, that shouldn’t be something new
But that foo wasn’t having it
He was no longer just being entertained
So I had to ask straight up if I was being detained
He said I wasn’t so I peddled away
Next thing I know I see the car search light
Pointed in my direction
You mean to tell me I can’t even ride
my bike in peace at night without raising suspicion?
The situation seemed silly yet was serious as can be
Get off the bike! And I’m like, “Yo… seriously?”
Next thing I know my face is on the floor
Asking if I have a rap sheet, and me asking
Why I have to be chest down on the concrete
Back then no one was around to make sure
Protocol and procedures were taken
But for that swine that I remember from that one time
I say, Cop Watch the neighborhood observes
Especially at night and we reserve the right
To make sure there’s community oversight
Because there will always be a swine
That reminds me of a onetime that I met this one time
That constantly loves to purposely step out of line
On the beat acting all like, “The World Is Mine”
No, that’s not how it’s going to go
When you step out of line we’ll be there
To let you know, you’re under the scrutiny of the people
Not afraid to expose your hidden evils
So watch cop don’t trip if you get caught slipping by
Your neighborhood cop watch
More than a camera it’s an effective tool
New school method of accountability
To measure your capability to serve and protect
So step off, do your job and show some respect
They’re just there to make sure you’re crooked ass
Comes correct

9. Wussup OG (Cal -Fresh pt. 2)

Wussup OG, what it do, what it be?
I see you still in line for them county services
stemming from that EBT
Its hotter than a mug and aint even eight
I cant wait to get in there and talk to my damn worker
I been in line for too long, this routine’s every six months
We all talk shit, don’t nobody front,
But imma damn sure work her
Treating us like the bare minimum is all we want
The way these folks treat me makes me wanna quit
But I cant do that cuss that just means
I gotta start right back, so fuck it where do I sit?
What’s our exercise today?
Ol’ lady looking at us like we’ve never had a resume
Just as important as checking our spelling
Is acknowledging that half of the folks in here
Are convicted felons
But that don’t mean we don’t got nothing in our melons
Say OG, you seen the way they treated ol’ boy
They hated on him just cuss the teacher was annoyed
Her supervisor be tripping like it was prison protocol
Rent a cop ass security strapped up and feeling real tall
I heard the airport is forever hiring and that hustles legit
The kinda job you done never ever wanna quit
I got a connect that can hook it up with the umm, license to be strapped
Get you a security job, cus its not like you’re really gonna get capped
Because my boy, its either that, the robbery or flipping that crack
I been” in” homey and to tell you the truth I don’t wanna go back
After awhile this shit begins to visibly take a toll
Damn AND this Lady hasn’t even taken roll?
While one is sleepy and begins to have doubts
The one right next to him says fuck this and quietly dashes out
Man this lady sure does know how to break us down
Acting like most of us haven’t been around
Ma’am, I disagree with all do respect
But practice tells us some of your theory just aint correct
Cus real talk, ma’am you don’t see what I see
Godamn it, whens this shit over, I really need to burn some trees
AND I gotta make sure I don’t bump into any enemies
They make it seem like were living lavish off that GR
I want a job homie, what? You don’t think im trying to go far?
Please! Oh here comes this rentacop again coming to talk shit
Turn your phone off homey before he throws a fit
They got a rookie on the rounds that thinks it’s the pen
And I swear im talking shit if he acts up again
By the way, whens that clothing allowance coming in?
I don’t know my boy, but as soon as it does
We’re all getting into some sin!

10. My Weapon

My weapon is the written word
I live partake observe and have the nerve
To recollect, my duty is to protect
And put the past into perspective
Not to get too spiritual but what I do
Is for the next seven generations
And all my relatives, the brilliance
Lies in truth told through these tales
That break barriers, taking you from the
Hood to the barrio, bold, mind baffling,
Seductive sentences secretive stories
That come to life and talk
Streets you might not otherwise walk
Not just the wealth but the warriors,
The woundead, tales of those
That up and fled, words that border
On the brink of a vital cycle
Meant for regulated survival
Common stories that hit like the bible
My weapon withstands withdrawals
They’ve been everywhere
Yet still get a stare, words that dare
Defy the norm, and Good Lord
Can these words weather any storm!
For you see these words can take any form
And are therefore formulated to function
In any environmental format
From the most detailed to the most essential
My word is my weapon because
My thoughts are multidimensional
Meditative, always intentional
Interracial, inter-generational
Integral fragments that help
Formulate and articulate
The often overlooked focus
We forget that the focal point is nonfiction
And in a half fake way I’ll let you feel, for real
I’m here to fill pages up with elaborate experiences
Engage the reader, take them to the root
To get a reaction
No poet laureate but literature is my livelihood
The likelihood of acknowledgment is low
But if this be the bottom from here I grow
I can’t describe each and every social problem
Can’t solve them, but for integrities sake
It would be a disservice not to involve them
The pattern was created in an organic manner
Attention to detail because every last detail matters.

11. Daily Bustle

Walk, step, run, dip-
where they going all day?
Concrete trees new buildings abandoned buildings
The lady on her daily mandado, the dudes doing their thing
The lady cashes in her lottery ticket
OG already bought 2 bags of ice and copped two 24 packs
Colt45 and Olde E, on the phone with the party
Talking bout,” what ol' girl want? the girl, ol girl
What did she... listen man, I said what did she want?”
(She wanted cheap wine)
Walk, cross the street the kids get outta school
There goes our future, I once was one of'em,
They'll be alright, Hope
There goes the guy that slangs raspados
Posted waiting under the shade by the school
His clients trickle out,
Out the van the lady slangs shampoos, hair gel and soaps
These are south central hustles this is south central hope
Pay your phone, choose a corner
Liquor, mini market, computer repair
Dispensary, maquiladora, tienda, swap meet
Wino, quiet economies, factories
Clogged arteries, recreational center, library
The homies posted on the block,
Don't cross out my hood and I won't cross out yours
Mexican bars, second hand store
Video rental, floreria, botanica
Auto repair, recycle center
The kid walks with his girlfriend
The gangster demands respect
Racial tension, black love brown pride,
El mecanico, la Doña, beauty salon
Closed Christian churches
Coordinated subculture
Movers, shakers, second generations
2 Pom Poms for a dollar, Murray’s Pomade
Moco de Gorila
Louisiana, Churches, Panda express
Working classy fashion, fashion forward
Future entrepreneurs
108, 105, 81, 55, 53, 102, 204, 40, 45
Taco trucks, hand the homie my change
Caribbean cuisines, bomb Belizean
Don’t even worry about the air we're breathing
Daily bustle, plenty of lives with direction and meaning
Did I mention the nurse on the bus,
The one dude that's down and out but not defeated
The hood homie that understands the "respect" head nod
Gossip, money always manages to make the rounds
Daily dialogue, the dealings of the block
Wilding out while working on our wrongs
And then a guy on a bike hands you a card
Taxi on one side lawyer on the other
Business as usual at the barber shop
Streets filled with blunt fill
Beautification not far behind
Survival is essential and so is the grind
Fewer and fewer remain blind
Eyes open
It takes a village, together
We mend the broken
This is where we landed
May not have been intentionally chosen
But we remain and in telling our story
We can’t help but explain the joy
And damn near feel the pain
Everyone running errands
The righteous and those in the wrong
This graffiti gives buildings life
Every locale becomes an episode
Three for five phone cards to call the motherland
Spanish music, soul music, rap
And as is customary, cop
Quietly making the rounds
Never can tell what goes on around here
Steel reserve for their shaky nerves
And never forget you reserve the right to remain silent
Woes explained if given enough time to vent
Loose cigarettes, plenty of Jesus
In case you should need to repent
Hurry up before we miss our bus
Oh missed it, there it went,
Long story short,
This is for the most part,
How our time is spent,
South Central.

Monday, January 6, 2014

Daniel Morales Leon - Liberate The Mind (Spoken Word)


ABOUT THE MURAL:
This Mural is located on East 12th Street as it approaches 16th Avenue in Rancho San Antonio. (Oakland)

"Decolonize is a universal message to all people of the earth to reconnect to their ancestry, the earth, to their traditional medicines and knowledge, and to a global consciousness that we are all related. Everyone on the planet has indigenous roots to somewhere," said artist Lavie Raven - one of the ten contributors to the large scale mural that is 200 feet wide and 30 feet high and took two and half days of concentrated work to complete. The other artists are CRP  (Community Rejuvenation Project) regulars Mike 360, Release, Beats 737, Desi, Rate, Abacus, Pancho, Yesenia Molina, and Dora Chavarria.

The "Decolonize" mural is also is a critical commentary on the Occupy movement since CRP members say that the "indigenous community and communities of color" have witnessed exclusion from the Occupy movement. CRP states that the mural serves as  "a reminder that indigenous communities of color already inhabited native lands before colonizers, settlers and tourists arrived."

You can spot it riding BART a few moments before it goes underground heading into Downtown Oakland.
(More info: http://crpbayarea.org/)

POET INFO:
Facebook: www.facebook.com/daniel.morales.leon
Twitter: https://twitter.com/elgrasshopper
Instagram: http://instagram.com/ghop213
Site: http://smuggledcultura.blogspot.com/
Email: Grasshopper213@gmail.com