Tag Archives: family

Primary Lessons by Sarah Bracey White

primary lessonsSarah loves to learn and as a joyous, clever toddler she is growing up in her Philadelphia Aunt’s home where the future is bright. She can be anything, do anything, her Aunt Susie tells her. When her friend starts kindergarten, she wants to follow, and talks her way into the neighborhood Catholic school – even though she’s only four. She’s advanced to the next grade at the end of the year. Except her mother returns and takes her back to South Carolina. She leaves the only home she’s known. A place where she was encouraged to ask questions, seek out answers, and aspire to become whatever she could dream. Dreams are dust in a place defined not by ability, but the color of your skin.

Primary Lessons is the true story of Sarah Bracey White’s childhood and coming of age. This is a personal story reflecting the struggle and trauma of systemic cultural racism and its cousin classism in mid 20th century America. While the setting of Philadelphia is a small part of the book, this provides a comparative backdrop for all that follows. In those crucial early years of 0 – five, Sarah lives in a nice middle class home in a big city, enjoys the ease of indoor plumbing and is encouraged in her creativity and questioning about the world. In Sumter, South Carolina, she is brought back to a family she’s never known. Despite her single mother’s quite respectable position as school teacher, the family lives in poverty, crowded in a small shack compared to Aunt Susie’s home, without plumbing and an outhouse for a toilet. The once distant mother is now ruling her every movement, older sisters perceive her in the way or a nuisance and she has no friends to play with except her paper dolls. Instead of encouragement, she now hears she isn’t old enough. Instead of school she plays alone. Instead of possibility, her life is defined by what she cannot do because of the color of her skin, aggravated by the perception her mother has about what is proper and respectable all driven by her mother’s own demons fueled by the inequities of Jim Crow south. Where a question once brought learning and discovery, now it can as easily bring a slap for endangering the family or future.

Singular events define Sarah’s life. The story presents well how young children learn to interact with their world based upon those decisions they make when small about how their world works and how to protect themselves from hurt. There is a great deal of hurt in Primary Lessons. The harsh impact racism had and continues to have in this country is ever-present.

There is also a great deal of perseverance. Sarah rebels and chafes against the restrictions of southern society and segregation personified in her mother. She grows up longing to belong, for a real family that would envelop her in the love she remembered from her time with Aunt Susie. She will not give in to fate. She will prevail. In the process, she will learn how close love and hate are in a family, hope often wears the mask of despair for its own survival and that every dream requires sacrifice.

About the author:

Sarah Bracey White was born in Sumter, SC. She is a librarian, teacher and motivational speaker. As a long-time arts consultant to the Town of Greenburgh, she designed and manages a creative writing program for children, edits an annual edition of their short stories and sponsors an annual poetry contest. The author of a collection of poetry, Feelings Brought to Surface, her creative essays are included in the anthologies Children of the Dream; Dreaming in Color, Living in Black and White; Aunties: 35 Writers Celebrate Their Other Mother; Gardening On A Deeper Level and Heartscapes. Her essays have been published in many regional newspapers and on the internetHer memoirPrimary Lessons, was published by CavanKerry Press in September, 2013. She lives with her husband in Westchester County, NY.

Sarah was interviewed for Three by Five in July.

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Write What You Know

Today a rare, non-writing related posting.

Friday was the ceremony marking my retirement after thirty-three years of service in the United States Army. More than three decades and during much of that time, my writing, (ok, it is a writing related posting) was inhibited. We are always told to “write what you know.” If I’d written what I knew, fiction or nonfiction, I risked losing everything in the military for I served under the entire lifespan of the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy.

In retrospect – I wish I had written more and published what I’d written. What is written reflects the culture, good and bad. When social change is needed, it often is explored through literature, theater and song.

So get out there and write. Write what you know, and what you want to know in the future. Vicki Hudson Army Retirement Ceremony

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Napa Valley Writers Conference – Reading

Towards the end of the conference, the participants read. Interestingly, twice the number of poets read than fiction writers. We each had two minutes and the time keepers were brutal with enforcement with quite a few readers out of time mid word. I read a poem written during the conference. All the work written during the conference I focused towards the Other Mommy collection I’m working on which is about my experience, thoughts, and poetic reflection as the non-biological mom in a same gender family. The poem is Nature Nurture, Genetic Code. (Turn up the sound, as it didn’t record well.)

 

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Pulitzer Remix Day Thirty and Final Remix for National Poetry Month

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For the final poem of the Pulitzer Remix project, number 30, I turned to the final page of the book. There, I found the story An Influx of Poets. Fitting, perhaps, as 85 poets took part in the project. The final poem from page 488, entitled Pages of a Book

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

Pulitzer Remix and National Poetry Month is done. What have been your favorite entries?

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Pulitzer Remix Day Twenty-Nine

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Local Legend is the reply when noisy old men strike up a conversation. Found in the story A Reading Problem on Pages 324-325.

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

Only one more day of Pulitzer Remix and National Poetry Month. What have been your favorite entries?

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Pulitzer Remix Day Twenty-Eight

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Today brings a haiku entitled Summit, sourced from pages 318-319 and the story The Liberation.

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

Only a few more days of Pulitzer Remix and National Poetry Month. What have been your favorite entries?

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Pulitzer Remix Day Twenty-Seven

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From pages 306-307 and the story The Liberation the found poem Bereft.

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

Only a few more days of Pulitzer Remix and National Poetry Month. What have been your favorite entries?

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Pulitzer Remix Day Twenty-Six

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Grief aches the soul. From In the Zoo, and pages 298-299 Requiem was found.

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

Only a few more days of Pulitzer Remix and National Poetry Month. What have been your favorite entries?

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Pulitzer Remix Day Twenty-Five

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Two Women contemplate life, found on pages 284-285 from In the Zoo.

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

Only a few more days of Pulitzer Remix and National Poetry Month. What have been your favorite entries?

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Pulitzer Remix Day Twenty-Four

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From pages 276-277 and the short story Bad Characters comes the poem Emboldened.

The presentation of this entry is different from all the others. Funny story – I was on vacation happy with myself that I’d scheduled ahead till the 24th, with enough posts to ensure a new poem each day would publish on the Pulitzer Remix site. Then my spouse reminded me that we returned home on the 23rd, not the 22nd. And that our flight would arrive late and we’d not get home till almost midnight. And with the time difference, tomorrow posts while it is still today here.

And so, I was SOL and behind a day.

And did not bring my computer, being so happy with myself for being ahead a day (I thought).

And this is where I mention I also didn’t being the source text.

Went to buy the e-book. There isn’t one. (I now have a more tolerant attitude towards the Google book project.)

Discovered it was $5 a minute in the hotel business center computer.

The thought of pecking each letter of each word in on my phone was so not appealing.

One day, knowing this story could get you a win in a poetry trivia game….

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

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