Nightmare in a Hall Before the MLK Celebration
"But I know that, in our country, there’s a real nightmare underway"--Poetry by Ernie McCray
As I still reflect on the positive and hopeful vibe that I basked in at a Dr. Martin Luther King Day celebration, I find myself thinking about the night before the event when I went to bed feeling a little trepidation because of the upcoming inauguration of a man who stands against any and every idea that ever played in MLK’s warmhearted imagination, and it seems that I had barely laid my head on my pillow before, without any hesitation, Maria, my querida, was shaking me and yelling “Wake up, Ernie, you’re screaming!” and I truly was because I was in a situation where I was walking down a long dark and scary hall and came upon a man to whom I reached out to shake his hand, and the next thing I know a cold mysterious wind began to blow in a creepy howl that started out petrifyingly slow and grew, suddenly, into a tremendously chilling roar and before I could even utter a word millions upon millions of Stephen Miller look-alikes materialized stripping brown babies from their mamis’ and papis’ clutches and throwing them in cages as their cries pierced the skies and oil gushed and burnt, fueling hurricanes and floods and snow and firestorms right before my foreboding eyes and they cursed and fee-fi-fo-fummed about kissing diversity and equity and inclusion a bloody goodbye, but, somehow, I was safe from this and hugged myself to keep myself quiet as I did not want to be seen and then some eerily familiar faces appeared on the scene, some people who I had once gaped at as they stormed the U.S. Capitol Building on TV on a sad and frightful day in Washington D.C. like overly adrenalized psychotic fiends and the moment they noticed me they rushed towards me flailing firearms and tasers and knives as I screamed “Hey! Hey! Hey!” over and over again, hopelessly, in this ghastly dream, as though that would save me, as I stood there frozen, unable to flee, holding a walking cane, as my only form of weaponry, no chance to escape, leaving me to give up, not knowing that my beautiful 81-year-old buttercup was a moment away from shaking me and waking me up and that later she and I would be revering my dear Martin on his birthday, a celebration that washed this frightening night terror away. But I know that, in our country, there’s a real nightmare underway, given life by a flawed evil-spirited orange-faced miserable creature who became president again on this very day and we’ll have to find the means to un-demonize him in some way.
Ernie McCray is an activist for love and peace who acts and sings and writes both poetry and prose, a man who rises each day to do whatever he can, no matter how small or grand, to make the world better in some way.
Unapologetically.