Fragment Poem
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Description This poem celebrates the prowess of a young athlete, likely a soccer player, who excels both artistically and athletically on the field. The player’s skillful moves are likened to poetry in motion, causing a storm of excitement whenever they score a goal. Despite their youth, they carry their team to victory at both club
If you heard the audio version of I”m A Pro by Nick Brewer featuring Shakka here’s he his a live acoustic version along side with Shakka.

When I came across this video by Trackstarz artist and radio host Sean David Grant called “Dear Racist” I was gripped. In this video, Sean spills out some serious and powerful spoken words starting with his thought connecting with his audience, then after he went on to the subject matter of facing racism on a

I came across this video from chaseGod.tv on YouTube about Malcolm X and his belief towards Christianity.Joseph Solomon talking in the video explains in full detail the misconception that Malcolm X thought and preached to his followers which he adopted and learnt from the religion of Nation Of Islam while he was in prison back in 1946.Click on
Fragment Poem
Other Blogs
Inspired By :

Description This poem celebrates the prowess of a young athlete, likely a soccer player, who excels both artistically and athletically on the field. The player’s skillful moves are likened to poetry in motion, causing a storm of excitement whenever they score a goal. Despite their youth, they carry their team to victory at both club
If you heard the audio version of I”m A Pro by Nick Brewer featuring Shakka here’s he his a live acoustic version along side with Shakka.

When I came across this video by Trackstarz artist and radio host Sean David Grant called “Dear Racist” I was gripped. In this video, Sean spills out some serious and powerful spoken words starting with his thought connecting with his audience, then after he went on to the subject matter of facing racism on a

I came across this video from chaseGod.tv on YouTube about Malcolm X and his belief towards Christianity.Joseph Solomon talking in the video explains in full detail the misconception that Malcolm X thought and preached to his followers which he adopted and learnt from the religion of Nation Of Islam while he was in prison back in 1946.Click on
The Quiet Triumph of the authentic youth In certain corners of the world, virtue is punished before it is ever rewarded. To be young, sharp-minded, and clean-handed is to invite contempt. The clever boy who reads instead of robbing, the girl who dreams in metaphors instead of carrying a blade—these are branded as inauthentic, as outsiders to “real” life. Purity becomes a stain; a blank criminal record, a mark of shame. In the economy of the streets, innocence has no currency. Only spilled blood buys respect. This inversion of values is not new. Societies have always had their rites of passage, their sacrificial altars. What changes is the idol on the altar. Where once we demanded the young prove themselves through courage, discipline, or creation, some subcultures now demand proof through destruction—preferably of someone else, but of the self if necessary. To refuse that offering is to be cast out as “uncool,” as someone who has not truly lived.Yet the poem reminds us of a colder truth: the grave is the great equalizer, and it does not negotiate. The villainous youth who chased the dragon of reputation often find it first—six feet deep before the story has properly begun. Their names become cautionary tales whispered by the next generation, fairy tales with real corpses. Meanwhile, the ones who were mocked for keeping their hands clean, for defining life through “the void and darkest weather” without adding to the darkness—they endure. Quietly. Uncelebrated. Alive.There is a deep philosophical irony here. The path that promises immediate belonging, adrenaline, and mythic status leads most reliably to oblivion. The path that offers only the cold shoulder in the present grants the only thing that ultimately matters: a future. Authenticity, it turns out, is not measured by how loudly the crowd cheers in your twenties, but by whether you are still breathing in your thirties to tell a different story.The authentic youth prevail not because destiny favors them, not because some cosmic justice intervenes, but because they refuse to trade the infinite possibilities of a long life for the fleeting applause of a culture already burning itself out. In the end, the ones who seemed most alive were only hurrying toward death. The ones dismissed as mediocre inherited the only victory that cannot be taken away: tomorrow.
Fragment Poem
Other Blogs
Inspired By :

Description This poem celebrates the prowess of a young athlete, likely a soccer player, who excels both artistically and athletically on the field. The player’s skillful moves are likened to poetry in motion, causing a storm of excitement whenever they score a goal. Despite their youth, they carry their team to victory at both club
If you heard the audio version of I”m A Pro by Nick Brewer featuring Shakka here’s he his a live acoustic version along side with Shakka.

When I came across this video by Trackstarz artist and radio host Sean David Grant called “Dear Racist” I was gripped. In this video, Sean spills out some serious and powerful spoken words starting with his thought connecting with his audience, then after he went on to the subject matter of facing racism on a

I came across this video from chaseGod.tv on YouTube about Malcolm X and his belief towards Christianity.Joseph Solomon talking in the video explains in full detail the misconception that Malcolm X thought and preached to his followers which he adopted and learnt from the religion of Nation Of Islam while he was in prison back in 1946.Click on

Description This poem celebrates the prowess of a young athlete, likely a soccer player, who excels both artistically and athletically on the field. The player’s skillful moves are likened to poetry in motion, causing a storm of excitement whenever they score a goal. Despite their youth, they carry their team to victory at both club
If you heard the audio version of I”m A Pro by Nick Brewer featuring Shakka here’s he his a live acoustic version along side with Shakka.

When I came across this video by Trackstarz artist and radio host Sean David Grant called “Dear Racist” I was gripped. In this video, Sean spills out some serious and powerful spoken words starting with his thought connecting with his audience, then after he went on to the subject matter of facing racism on a

I came across this video from chaseGod.tv on YouTube about Malcolm X and his belief towards Christianity.Joseph Solomon talking in the video explains in full detail the misconception that Malcolm X thought and preached to his followers which he adopted and learnt from the religion of Nation Of Islam while he was in prison back in 1946.Click on

Description This poem celebrates the prowess of a young athlete, likely a soccer player, who excels both artistically and athletically on the field. The player’s skillful moves are likened to poetry in motion, causing a storm of excitement whenever they score a goal. Despite their youth, they carry their team to victory at both club
If you heard the audio version of I”m A Pro by Nick Brewer featuring Shakka here’s he his a live acoustic version along side with Shakka.

When I came across this video by Trackstarz artist and radio host Sean David Grant called “Dear Racist” I was gripped. In this video, Sean spills out some serious and powerful spoken words starting with his thought connecting with his audience, then after he went on to the subject matter of facing racism on a

I came across this video from chaseGod.tv on YouTube about Malcolm X and his belief towards Christianity.Joseph Solomon talking in the video explains in full detail the misconception that Malcolm X thought and preached to his followers which he adopted and learnt from the religion of Nation Of Islam while he was in prison back in 1946.Click on