Excerpt for The Urban Time Bomb by D'Persona , available in its entirety at Smashwords

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The Urban Time Bomb

By D’Persona

Copyright 2011 D’Persona (Donna Parkinson)

This book is available in print from Mad Jock Publishers http://madjockpublishers.com/The-Urban-Time-Bomb and most of the larger online book retailers.

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Cover Design by the author
Cover Photo by Katrina Frazer




Contents

Introduction
The Urban Time Bomb (Part 1)
How Can We Reach These Kids?
And The Piper Plays On
Peace
Simplistic Notion
Another One Drops
As a mother I made choices
Young Gunz
Behind The Man
Damaged Thoughts
Repaired Thoughts
Hug
Gotta Make A Change
Gunz Drawn
Ghetto Nation
Freedom Isn’t Free
Awareness Please
The Eyes Of The Youth
Radical Ramblings
Desperate Need
The Urban Time Bomb (Part 2)
Deadyouths@london.com
15 And Counting.
Spirals
A Message From Beyond
Earth To Earth
A Raging Battle
I Will Not Let You Tear My World Apart
Big Ballin
Ghetto Afterlife Part 1
The Ghetto Won’t Let Go
The Price Of Fame
When I Awake
A Change Is Gonna Come
That’s All I Have
Ghetto Afterlife Part 2
In The Ghetto
The Payback
Drop The Guns And Knives
Hold A Mirror Up To Your Own Face . . .
Blue or Red, Red or Blue?
If You Believe . . .
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Dedications
About The Author


Introduction

The UK is witnessing a significant rise in gang culture and the urban violence is spreading through our inner city streets at alarming rates. Post codes have become ‘red flags’ and our youth are becoming increasingly synonymous with bulls raging in a bid to defend their own territory. Our children, our teenagers (and oftentimes even younger kids) are caught up in an environment that remorselessly breeds societal depravity and decay. Our babies are having babies, drugs are readily available, promiscuity is commonplace, racial prejudice is still a part and parcel of today’s society and peer pressure is running amok in high schools all across the UK. Nothing shocks our children anymore and its getting worse by the day. Smouldering just under the surface of almost every inner city pavement in the UK is an urban time bomb just waiting to explode in our faces.

There is no denying the fact that rising unemployment levels, the lack of positive role models (particularly male role models), limited recreational resources, peer pressure, diminishing family values and the sheer fear of the ‘unknown’ can cause alienation from what we have come to know as mainstream society. And this in turn contributes to today’s youth seeking to find a ‘sympathetic ear’ on the street as some sort of a survival mechanism. Many of our children are turning to the concrete for guidance. The urban time bomb was penned with parents and teenagers in mind with a view to addressing the problem two fold. As parents we need to take responsibility for the social development skills of our offspring, encouraging, educating and cultivating their minds from a young age. This book is a critical and poetic look into today’s youth and as a matter of moral decision it, in places, contains strong language and somewhat graphic descriptions.

I understand that as a parent you may say “I don’t want my kids subjected to bad language, sexual metaphors or explicit imagery”, but lets for a second just face the facts here; today’s kids speak today’s language and live today’s life. They are consumed by the Medias usage of such idiom; contemporary films, modern music and video games often assume the moral low ground so our kids are already surrounded by such things in their day to day routines. Some of our kids don’t even bother to read books anymore as they are not written in ‘turns of phrase’ that they can relate to.

The words ‘Fuck’, ‘shit’, ‘bitches’, ‘ho’s and the likes are regularly used as tools of expression by our children whether we like it or not. Alarmingly enough, In their circles the use of this verbal communication is deemed as socially acceptable as carrying knives, stealing phones and ‘rushing’ kids from other areas. So the seemingly obscene words that you will see scattered across these pages are nothing more than common phraseology and the collective norm that I have used in some cases as a means to contextualise and familiarise the circumstances or events that form the atmosphere within that particular piece of poetry.

Our children don’t believe that as adults we are ‘on a level’ or that we are able to understand their day to day struggle and therefore shy away from ‘opening up’ to us. I have found that if you adopt the kind of dialogue that they can relate to, you will reach a wider audience. I don’t apologise for my using this type of language in this instance if it instigates the child’s imagination, or gives them an affiliation with the text they are reading.

This book is about ‘urban behaviour’, ‘peer pressure’ ‘gang culture’ and the kinds of societal temptations that our youth face everyday and if my choice of words gives our children a real ‘connection’ to the piece it is more likely to persuade him or her to take a deeper look into the types of things that we are trying to tackle. My aim is to encourage our youth to take a more candid look at the urban lifestyle that they may have already adopted or be on the periphery of and to try to deter those children lucky enough to have not yet been touched by the long arm of the street.

Economic downturns, social acceptance, Gang culture, restrictive government policy and sheer ignorance have created and fostered conditions that strangle and suffocate their generation. Clearly change is in the air, is this not the right time to take up arms against this downward spiral? I personally feel that it is overdue and time to realise that violence is not ordinarily rooted in the human mind but more so firmly planted there by the structure of our society. I believe that it’s high time that we held a mirror up to our own faces; we need to re-think, re-imagine and re-construct the social order, to convert silence into words and words into actions.

The alternative means that our collective failure will create new social realities too ugly to even begin to comprehend for our children’s children . . . That urban time bomb is ticking. . . . Are you ready for the explosion?


Back to Table of Contents




The Urban Time Bomb (Part 1)

My heart bleeds,
For the community seeds,
That we lose on da regs,
As the streets ‘dregs’,
Are ‘purified’,
In the seek and divide,
Mentality we allow,
Somehow,
Some way,
Whether today,
Or tomorrow,
A mothers sorrow,
Must be eradicated,
Our hearts have been weighted,
For too long,
Too many strong,
Minded youths have travelled the wrong path,
And in the aftermath,
Of numerous teenage deaths,
It’s no time for regrets,
Its time for alteration,
The deterioration,
Of our youth must stop,
Its time to swap,
Violence for knowledge,
Real knowledge,
To promote self worth and respect,
We must dissect,
Their minds with understanding and consideration,
I don’t want to attend another burial or cremation,
Where half of the congregation,
Are not yet twenty,
There are plenty,
Of seeds who have gone,
That could have shone,
If given the right guidance and light,
Our kids these days are bright,
And they just need their minds cultivated,
And Educated,
In terms of unity,
Shown how to take pride in their community,
Urged to rise and be counted,
Cos all of the kids before them, could have amounted,
To so much more than a name plaque on a grave,
But instead they died a slave,
To their situation,
Can’t you see that the kind of violent propagation,
They meet day to day,
Has a strong correlation to the way,
In which they carry themselves on road,
And this urban time bomb is set to explode,
So we might as well ignite it,
Since no-one is willing to fight it,
Yeah detonate, obliterate, the youth,
Cos the truth,
Is we don’t do enough,
I know times are tough,
And resources restricted,
But the tribulation inflicted,
On communities must be our responsibility,
The government won’t take culpability,
So we must penetrate the youth with conscious vibrations,
Inner city public relations,
In an attempt to bring about change,
We need to stick together and try to re-arrange,
The balance on the street,
For too long the same beat has been on repeat,
And its time to complete,
The mission our forefathers set out to do,
The community’s survival is up to me and you,
Tick tock the urban bomb is primed,
And the ghetto bells have already chimed,
So where do you stand?
Are you willing to lend a helping hand?

Back to Table of Contents




How Can We Reach These Kids?

How can we reach these kids if not with guidance?
The only way is to promote basis not subsidence,
Teaching self respect and regard for a fellow man,
Is something to incorporate in your parenting plan,
Have we failed our kids struggling to just live?
Have we given them less than we should give?
We go through the motions day by day; surviving,
Trying to put food on the table, fiscally striving,
To make ends meet; providing for families needs,
But have we neglected to sow the right seeds?
Our kids need constructive contact and direction,
Support and aid; understanding and protection,
Help with the transition into young adults,
Parents are responsible for the desired results,
The limited opportunities strangle their ambition,
And so, they use their situation as ammunition,
Maintaining that there is no point; it’s all a waste,
Then throwing their educations away in haste,
And that’s when the street digs its heels in deep,
And In the blink of an eye read ‘em’ & weep,
As our kids are drawn to a ring of recognition,
And the concrete is the key to cerebral ignition,
The missing link; rousing minds to be inspired,
They’ve achieved the ID they’ve always desired,
There you have it; youths on road just living to die,
Learning how to ‘sidestep’ and how to expertly lie,
The peer pressure is beyond grasp once enrolled,
Every step they make is analysed and controlled,
And then the street teaches them to duck and dive,
Convincing them it’s the only way to stay alive,
Slowly but surely we’ll loose a part of their soul,
They go blindly into their new found role,
They progress onto the next chapter in their life,
And their actions are stimulated by the gun and the knife.

Back to Table of Contents




And The Piper Plays On

And the piper plays on,
Piping his sad song,
A disseminating rhythmic beat,
Born of the cold dark street,
Claiming its victory once more,
Closing another door,
In societies face,
Another youth lost without a trace,
The piper calls for the youths to follow,
And by tomorrow,
A young flame will be extinguished for good,
Lost to the violence in the hood,
And the insanity reigns,
Hostility runs through the veins,
Of the concrete,
And up into their feet,
Coursing through their bodies to their brains,
Leaving stark blood stains,
Inside deaths white chalk lines,
And the loss defines,
Our community’s story,
As some misguided child finds glory,
In postcode retaliation,
And the whole nation,
Watches as the decay takes control,
Growing stronger in the death toll,
While young hearts stop beating,
Completing,
This vicious circle of urban life,
The gun and the knife,
Demanding recognition,
Their sole mission,
To seek and destroy,
Any young and confused boy,
Who’s searching for a reason to be?
And that child’s destiny,
Is caught up in the pipers tune,
Captured and immune,
To the danger,
He would rather take the word of a stranger,
Than trust the devil that he knows,
And the piper will now compose,
A tune tailor made with precision thought,
And the assault,
On another ripe mind has begun,
As the piper plays his tune to your own son. . . .

Back to Table of Contents




Peace

Prepare to
Excel and
Accelerate
Community
Endeavours

Back to Table of Contents




Simplistic Notion

I’ve longed for some clarity or some insight,
To see the end of the tunnel encircled in light,
A way forward; a new course,
Some sort of community taskforce,
I’ve dreamed of a way that we could live in peace,
To see poverty, confrontation and conflict cease,
I’ve yearned for an end to power and greed,
To see the unity that we so desperately need,
Return to our generation before it’s too late,
To eradicate the fear and strangle the hate,
I’ve prayed for the ghetto kids our leaders ignore,
To see their tables finally blessed with more,
For a change to take them out of the hood,
For the path of our youth to finally come good,
I’ve screamed at the irony of our lack of devotion,
When all of this is such a simplistic notion.

Back to Table of Contents




Another One Drops

Another one drops,
Queuing at the death toll one stop shop,
A young buck dies giving his postcode props,
En route to nothing but a coffin pit stop,
Leaving no clue for the keystone cops,
Who will eventually start the investigation,
By beginning the paperwork at the station,
And opening a line of conversation,
With a community that has no explanation,
The Youngers have no information,
They aint seen nor heard no affirmation,
And that’s how the social mitigation,
Will Continue and sustain,
Allowing the violence to reign,
With nobody willing to make a stand,
No upper hand,
Reaching out to our youths in desperation,
To ease this collective constipation,
And as we coast as a community,
The opportunity,
Arises for another to make his graduation,
At the university of urban violence insemination,
He sits and waits in preparation,
For his final indoctrination,
His chance to make it big on the endz,
To represent for the circle of friends,
That have welcomed him, where others rejected,
Leaving his mind infected,
And unprotected,
From the propaganda and hype,
Another stereotype,
Another number,
That society has put asunder,
To drown in the forgotten cess pit,
Now ready to submit,
To his fate,
Fuelled with hate,
For the shoulda,
Coulda,
Woulda,
Mentality that has steeped him in disapproval,
Hiding from the eyes that would prefer his removal,
From their sight,
Rather than to fight,
To keep him focused on his education,
And so his concentration,
Has turned to a circle with which he can connect,
A fraternity where he can earn the respect,
He craves,
And as his mind enslaves,
His heart,
Every part,
Of him beams with pride,
He has found an ear, in which he can finally confide,
Someone is actually listening, paying attention,
And his apprehension,
Is outweighed with relief,
That someone somewhere actually has belief,
In his ability,
And the futility,
Of it all falls on the deaf ears of the commune,
Who assume,
That this boy is just another bad breed,
The useless seed,
Of a broken home,
Another unfortunate soul prone,
To a life on the street,
And in a heartbeat,
They turn their back on his plight,
And on a cold and dreary night,
Another one drops,
And I ask can someone tell me where the buck stops. . . .


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