Care Free Black Girl
If ever I could speak to you
I’d tell you to just be you
If ever I wrote a letter to my younger self
She’d know self-love & self-respect
If ever I could tell my younger self
About her nappy hair
I’d tell her to embrace it
And to swing it high and proud in the air
I’d tell her that her sassy attitude
Wasn’t an attempt at her being rude
I’d tell her to put her hands on her hips
As many times as she needed
Just in case she need to remind these misters
That they’d better hurry up and get them some business
I’d make sure she understood
That nothing is wrong with her full facial features
And that plenty would try if they could
To emulate the details of such a beautiful creature
I’d tell her to stand up for her people
And to always fight for freedom
I’d tell her to try not to hide
Her boisterous laugh and proud smile
Someone somewhere appreciates it
And someone somewhere yearns to hear it
I’d tell her that it is okay to play
And that the structure of her world
Will only be a product of her vivid imagination
She’d know that to love is to enjoy freedom
And that no one is allowed to strip her of that right
And that loving a black man is also freedom
Even if his skin is as dark as night
But since I cannot travel in time
To tell my younger self what I missed
I won’t forget to tell my future child
That her soul is sun kissed
So, Little Black Baby, learn to be free
Learn that your roots run deeper than the seas
Little Black Baby, love who you are
Love that the strands on your head outnumber the stars
Little Black Girl, start learning early if you can
Learning to be care free, in a world that forces you to be bland.
-Sarabi