Categories
Ebony Queen Queendom Entertainment

Awakening Ebony

I’ve spent a lot of time staring at blankness. Blank pages in all the journals and notebooks with fancy covers that I’ve accumulated over the years… waiting for the words that align with the ones flying around in my mind to magically appear on the pages. Blank pages on computer screens… waiting for every story that lingers in my creative pockets to find its way out on its own. I’ve held back from so much in life… writing included. This year, I entered a phase of my life where I am refusing to keep holding back. I have to let go of all of my expectations and fears, and just live… Life is passing me by regardless of if I am nestled away comfortably in my shell or outside being the person I’m destined to be.

A lot has happened in the last few years. For the first time since 2013, I live alone. No roommates, no family, no man… just me and baby girl, day in and day out. For years, I carried around a deep anxiety that would sit in the pit of my stomach. It never seemed to go away entirely. If it wasn’t bellowing deep in my belly during a stressful situation, it was lingering behind when I was trying my absolute best to not feel it. I learned to suppress it as best I could, chalking it up to a social anxiety that I would just have to get used to carrying. Shockingly… as I grew into my new home, adding personal touches to make it my own, that pit began to melt away….

I found myself delving into passions that I had once forsaken for double employment, relationships, vices, and unresolved emotions. As I re-explored myself and my passions I was able to pinpoint things about myself that previously I wouldn’t have had the capacity to pay attention to. I was too busy being the listener for the talker, the do-er for the needy, and the friend that always put everyone else’s needs over her own. I lessened my light to make it easier for others to feel loved, heard, and comfortable around me. I never really got that in return… Now that I was living alone though, I could do anything and everything I ever wanted, without the weight of catering to another adult human being. I was discovering myself…

I’ve always know who I am, in a sense. But I never had the freedom to be my truest self without insecurity, judgement, or reservation. I kept myself from being the full extent of who I am deep down. I refrained from saying what I was really thinking. I’ve refused to go to places that I should’ve went. I am not doing that anymore.

In order to release and live, I needed to face myself. Throughout my years, I unknowingly carried traumas I didn’t even recognize. The largest being indoctrination. I believe everyone should have the freedom to express their love for God how they see fit. However, our society has brought us up to believe that everyone’s beliefs except their own are wrong. Without naming the organization (cause I’m just not ready for that yet), I too was the victim of a religion that enveloped me as a youth and warped my perspective of the world. Not to say that it was a bad religion or that it was evil. It just wasn’t what I believed in. I didn’t feel my connection to God through that type of congregation. But growing up in the midst of it, you learn that speaking up against it could get you in trouble you may not be ready for.

How did that indoctrination affect me in my youth? It kept me from self-love and self-pleasure. It shielded me from the real woes of life as a means of protection, which ultimately, just left me lost in the world. I knew the word of God and stories of the Bible, but that’s not the world I was met with. I couldn’t maneuver life healthily because I was taught that you had to remain perfect even though the world was doomed from the start. This crippled my emotions, my dreams, and my connection with the divine. Why was life even worth living if suffering, imminent danger, and death was the only thing guaranteed?

It took a lot of time, self-reassurance, and exploration to finally let go of the heaviness of doom that I carried around for most of my youth. It wasn’t until I had a seizure at 29 that I finally woke up to the fact that life was passing me by and I wasn’t happy. Immediately, I knew that I had to make changes and the first act of my newfound confidence was moving into my own place again (https://youtu.be/pWLY2Flg0wo?si=JRxyHfNnYGLZpDqQ).

I thank my home for giving me the space to breathe, create, wail, adjust, and live freely...

I am still on the journey of Awakening Ebony… and I am finally at a point where I feel I can share my journey with the world. I am finally ready to show the world who I am, without fear of retribution. Asè.

To be continued…

I dedicate this series of personal newsletters “Awakening Ebony” to my daughter, Araya. You are my reason to love and legacy in life. May you find all the tidbits in the world that I left to guide you as useful. Remember that whether in physical or in spirit.. I am forever beside you.

Categories
Ebony Queen Queendom Entertainment

Book Review

“The Black Girl Survives In This One” x Evans & Fennell 

Better late than never!

I know it has been some time since I promised this book review. As I mentioned in my previous post, Rollercoaster October 🎃 , this Fall/Winter was tumultuous with high highs, low lows, and rarely any break in between. I got myself together though !

“The Black Girl Survives In This One” is a riveting collection of eery stories centered around black women. Its pages ooze illustrious details of various topics such as sci-fi, spirituality, and fantasy. Each stories landscape boasts luxurious features that make the read a journey of the mind. Read and listen to the audiobook for a heightened experience.

Every story, despite being written by different authors, permeates the black experience throughout. From familial bonds and interactions, to friendships and their relational quirks… the authors’ of each story in this collection capture the essence of blackness in a way that makes the scary, page turning experience seem all too REAL. I most enjoyed the balancing of friendship within the stories, as most of them sparked inquiry into my own personal defense mechanisms, loyalty of relationships, and imagery limits.

I would recommend this book to anyone who wants to be taken on an adventure with the reassurance that the main character survives in the end. Although that reassurance provides a safe net, the stories are still both intriguing and frightening. It is collection of fearful fantasies, well stringed together, for maximum terror. Maybe, a movie?

Ebony Queen

Categories
Ebony Queen PanAfrican Liberation Coalition Queendom Entertainment

“The Black Girl Survives In This One” x Evans & Fennell 👻🩸🎃

Queendom 👑

with Halloween 🎃 creeping up on us so quickly, our first October #AddedToTheLibrary this month is horror themed 💀👻🩸📖

Bolstering a collection of horror stories highlighting a new generation of black authors, “The Black Girl Survives In This One” x @literarydesiree & @sj_fennell promises folktales, monsters, and so much more with black girls at the center as the heroines and survivors ✨

This book will be the first book of our #BookOfTheMonth /#AddedToTheLibrary segment where we will be writing a reader review.

Subscribe to be the first to read the review later this month ✨

#Book #Books #Halloween #QueendomEntertainment #BookReview #Review #Horror #October