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How to be Black in America
  Keep your hands on the wheel
  and your eyes ahead.
  Don't move unless it's
  by the hand of God
  or the man with the gold shield
  on his chest;
  these days,
  it's hard to tell the difference.
  This is your survival guide:
  rules to follow
  if you want to stay alive
  and hide yourself from
  the concrete jungle’s deadliest predator.
This is how my father taught me to survive.
  My first history lesson was a knife
  scrawled on his back,
  a valley of wraiths
  where I saw my
  ascendants in chains -
  but they sang.
  Singing with voices that filled
  the cavern with hope
  and fueled our hearts to
  keep beating
  on the bars of the rib cage
  like so many hummingbirds,
  hungry for freedom.
  So though my tongue
  may seem timid,
  my Daddy taught me something about pride.
  He said keep your head raised
  full towards the sky
  and bathe in summer days;
  let the sun soak deep
  into the canyons of your skin
  and then find yourself in the darkness
  Today
  there is a boy with
  a rusted voice,
  fevered enough to
  melt the ancestral chains
  and set him free
  to live in his father's dreams
  Somewhere on a front porch
  in a car garage
  above a glass of whiskey
  over the cold table in the prison visiting room,
  there is a man
  whose memories live
  in the sunken graveyards of his eyes.
  He shows his son a history of scars
  and sobs like his tears
  can water the future.

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I tried to recreate the discussion African American parents have with their children about police brutality and how they're expected to behave when interacting with police so that they have the best chance of leaving the situation alive