• March 10th, 2025

    Day of the Week 🗓️: Monday 

    Weather 🌡️:  Balmy 66 Degrees

    Moon Phase 🌙 : Waxing Gibbous

    Holiday 🎇: National Mario Day

    On This Day 🗺️:  In 1945, the deadliest air raid in WW2 is set upon Tokyo, killing mostly civilians. 

    Mood Ring Reveal🌈: Hopeful


    Anti-ideology moves fast and vast across the country in the wake of the 2nd Trump era. With more and more becoming disillusioned with left-leaning politics, many are associating free thinking, free speech, and freedom itself with right-leaning politics. The oppressed have now become the oppressors.

    Defending Woman From Gender Ideology Extremism And Restoring Biological Truth To The Federal Government.

    What does the above title do for you? Does it invoke a sense of victory for woman rights? Would you think that the truth is finally being upheld? Could it make you think, “Republicans are protecting the rights of women more than the Democrats ever could.” Carefully placed calls-to-action can generate emotional responses to non-problems. Results ensue. The terms ideology and dogma have become interchangeable. Feminism falls into leftist ideology, and there is no room for individualism. Treating ideology as a religion by the Right while simultaneously becoming the defenders of the modern day “heretics”. I’m pretty sure the president sees himself as the Lord standing up to the Pharisees, at the cost of intellectualism, individualism, humanism, and everything in between.

    When woman denounce feminism, it’s one (or both) of these reasons:

    1. To appeal to men. Think, “I’m not like other girls.”
    2. The view of feminism they have is that of the 4th wave, which was given great exposure by social media.

    The 4th wave of feminism is not perfect by any means, matter fact I criticize it greatly for being sanitized, branded and aesthetically pleasing to those who could care less about the fight and only want a safety net for negligent behavior. When you ask a common woman what is their understanding of feminism, most likely they will refer to popular 4th wave sentiments (girl boss, future is female, my body my choice slogans) or name a popular figure like Susan B. Anthony. You might find a lady who knows their way around a little bell hooks here or there, but if you were to name subjects like Womanism and the contributions of Zora Neale Hurston, **cricket sounds** .

    Maybe because I am a black woman through and through, and maybe because I am a feminist tried and true, the amount of black woman denouncing feminism is disappointing. Feminism was created by white women for white women is a misstatement of facts. Circling back to those good ole words of ideology and individualism, the rushed conclusion into thinking that one set of beliefs fits all undermines the foundations set by the enduring standards brought forth by Ms.Hurston, or Toni Morrison, or bell hooks (I named all writers sorry I’m biased). The goal is that all woman deserve equal standards. Yet, we are going beyond backwards by not allowing ourselves to formulate what a goal signifies to the soul. At one point, I had two thought that feminism wasn’t for me because of all the antithesis content I consumed, but when I put my mind out there in order to let my eyes see for themselves, I learned that all women need feminism. Black women need it the most, for our own safety, survival, and wholeness.


    Written on March 10th, 2025

    And God Created Woman

    -ˋˏ ༻𖤓༺ ˎˊ-

    . . .

  • Public Service Annoucement: Artists Change The World !


    Outside of this blog, I have been writing just fine, excellent actually. Incorporating more reading into my writing process has opened my mind to strive for more, to be more. Currently I am halfway through Toni Morrison’s ‘Paradise’. One thing I can say about her is that she knows how to synthesize language with imagery in order to get the maximum potential out of a narrative. The Seneca chapter in the book was much longer than the previous three. In one night, I had completed Ruby, Mavis, and Grace. With Seneca, it took me four nights. Truthfully, it was a hard read to follow, and gave me an even harder pill to swallow. In order to be a good writer, I must be a good reader, and in order to be a good reader, I must fully comprehend what I am reading. This past Wednesday at work, I found myself overhearing a tutor teach his little attendees who Mya Angelou was; poet, author, woman. Its March after all. What was poignant to me was his lesson about reading comprehension:

    In order to answer questions correctly, you must fully understand what they are asking.

    The tutor sent his students home with an assignment, asking them to record their conversations with their parents about books they have read. Sitting at the front desk, I to, was a student that night. Rereading portions of the chapter again and again with the question that Morrison has asked me, and other readers to answer: In your own words, what do you think?

    Fast forward to the low hours of Friday morning, the news of Akira Toriyama’s death rocked the world not seen since Michael Jackson’s passing. My X ( formally known as Twitter) feed was akin to a memorial wall of thousands upon thousands of adoration, grief-stricken posts from fans, critics and onlookers alike. Even if you didn’t read or watch Dragonball, you knew who Goku was. You knew what a Kamehameha was, you knew what a Super Saiyan was. I too, am a Dragonball fan. The Kai dub on Nicktoons was my “in” to the franchise and other anime. Viewing the scene of Future Trunks debut on screen and obliterate Frieza and his father King Cold in five minutes singed itself to my brain cells. Surprisingly, my father as well:

    Is that the Super Saiyan who hurt you my son?”

    He says it occasionally to this day and probably forever.

    There is something ethereal about Toriyama’s legacy. Only once gifted to very few individuals over lifetimes. A man’s vison for a comedy manga now spans a 40 plus year legacy of generational acclaim. Funnily enough, he didn’t expect, or better yet, worry about making it big. He just wanted to make a few people laugh. Toriyama’s question to us was; Did I succeed? Yes Mr. Toriyama, you did. You made us laugh, cry, dream, and awaken. Thank you! I am saddened, as well as many others probably are, to know that he was still working on projects, like Dragonball Daima and Sandlands. 68 is young. We may never be able to see his full vision, but he did carry it with him into the heavens. That is the knowledge we as fans must hold on to, for goodwill.

    Akira Toriyama, Toni Morrison, Mya Angelou, and Michael Jackson were all artists. Drawings, books, words, poems, songs, and performances alike shared a common goal. A quote from one of my favorite books, ‘What Do You Do With An Idea?’ by Kobi Yamada sums it up perfectly:

    “You change the world.”

    Please, check that book out from your local library. You will not regret it.

    To all the artists out there, me included. Put your ideas in the atmosphere, answer questions to the fullest, always go for greatness, and remember the only failure is when you give up.

    Rip Akira Toriyama

    Rip Toni Morrison,

    Rip Mya Angelou

    Rip Michael Jackson


    Sunshine signing off. Until we meet again!

    . . .