I miss breathing
inside Detroit
coffee shops,
warm and Black-owned,
unworried
’bout cops
being called
on us,
for our being
is not a crime.
*
I miss Detroit Sip
on McNichols:
affirming words
topping tables
like cloth,
beverages named
after neighborhoods
like sons and daughters.
I miss sharing silence there,
making pages
and verses
with writers
all because we decided
to show up.
*
I miss Narrow Way
on Livernois,
the unmatched dignity
of feeling seen
and wanted
as soon as I entered.
“Issa Whole Vibe”
aesthetics
poppin’
from the booths
to the bathrooms.
*
I miss Detroit Vintage
on 8 Mile and Birwood,
a hideaway nook
of books,
decor,
dialogue
delicate.
Black women
pouring love
into mugs
on the weekends
only,
serving paninis
on plates prepared
like gifts:
presentation
is everything.
*
I miss drinking
hot cocoa
and boiling tea
with the last few dollars
I had for the month,
thrilled
to be reckless
and give
my tongue away
to the burn
of impatience.
*
I miss
people watching,
poetry listening,
ear hustling,
catching up,
getting wise,
maybe not doing
a dang ol’ thing.
I miss
those days,
like winter days
when I want to be alone
and surrounded,
simultaneously.
Something
so simple
as sitting
at a table
for one
and
breathing
inside a Black
Detroit
caffeinated home
has been stolen
by necessity.
*
Healing,
come soon,
so we can gather
and grow,
be and keep
our homes
away from home
alive
with uncovered breath,
grateful.

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