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Trayvon Martin Should Still Be With Us

On the 10th anniversary of Trayvon Martin's death, it's sad to think about everything he could have been.

Trayvon Martin will never get to go to college, find someone he loves, and have his mother and father watch him grow up to be a young man that puts some beauty in a world that desperately needs it.

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

Trayvon will never experience a 26th birthday where he would have a wealth of experiences that would assuredly get him ready for his third decade on Earth. And as I get older, many recent events have had me contend with mortalityโ€“the blessing of seeing another day and the feeling in my stomach when I hear another Black person has died. If itโ€™s not a pandemic, itโ€™s simply sleeping in your bed in your apartment where death can meet you sleeping.

Being Black in America feels like a battle with the clock, and thereโ€™s never enough time to do the things you want to do. Itโ€™s acknowledging a lingering feeling of survivorโ€™s guilt along with an urgency to leave the world in a better place than you left it. Every day, thereโ€™s a reminder you are โ€œbeating the odds.โ€

On the 10th anniversary of his death, my heart breaks thinking about everything that Trayvon didnโ€™t get to experience. Or that Breonna Taylor wonโ€™t become a nurse and dance to Mary J. Bligeโ€™s โ€˜Everythingโ€™ at her wedding as she wanted, and Ahmaud Aubrey isnโ€™t going to become an electrician. Dreams averted when they didnโ€™t have to be.

With Trayvonโ€™s death, a movement started, but I fear that we say that too many times when it comes to Black people and loss of life. Black sons and daughters shouldnโ€™t have to be on murals, posters, and slogans for the world to recognize racism is a problem. When I was younger, my mother sang Denice Williamsโ€™ Black Butterfly to me. These lyrics always stick out in my mind and one of the reasons why I write:

Black Butterfly, sail across the waters

Tell your sons and daughters

what the struggle brings

Iโ€™m no longer a caterpillar, but Iโ€™m still learning how to be a butterfly. Iโ€™m still telling these stories, but my heart feels a little heavier each timeโ€“thinking about all the others who donโ€™t get to fly with me. We should celebrate milestones and not collect obituaries for those we have lost. Ten years later, it still messes with me that Iโ€™m speaking about Trayvon in the past tense. He should still be hereโ€“but with every triumph, smile, and piece of joy Black Americans experience in the face of extreme prejudice and racism, he is.

Straight From The Root

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