From Bully to President

I used to ditch school often in the seventh grade. I was truant from many of my classes–not because I didn’t want to learn, but because I was afraid. I would show up to school and then hide: in the bathroom stall or some hidden corner of the schoolyard, hoping not to be noticed. When the truant officer finally contacted my mother, there was hell to pay. But the real punishment wasn’t at home–it was at school, where Sharon, the school bully, made my life a daily nightmare.

Fear stayed close, like a shadow I couldn’t shake. I’d lock myself in a bathroom stall, praying I wouldn’t run into her. I’d stay there fifteen, twenty minutes after the bell rang, waiting for the coast to clear. Then I’d slip out quietly and head for the school gates. Sometimes I got lucky–maybe she was gone, or busy tormenting someone else–but eventually, our paths would cross.

I never understood what I had done to deserve her cruelty. She took my lunch money, emptied my book bag, yanked my long braids, and sometimes even spit on me. She called me names so ugly I still remember how they stung. She even insulted my mother–a woman she had never met. Sharon always had a group of kids with her. I don’t believe they truly liked her; they followed her out of fear. Some would laugh nervously at her jokes, hoping she wouldn’t turn on them next. Her power came from our fear. We gave it to her without meaning to.

Later in life, I realized Sharon was a coward. Her strength didn’t come from within–it came from her enablers. I ran into her in high school after she had dropped out. She didn’t say a word. She wouldn’t even look me in the eye. By then, I had found my voice–and I was ready.

I hadn’t thought about Sharon in years–until I saw Donald Trump rise to power. Watching him insult,

humiliate, and mock anyone who disagreed with him brought all those buried memories flooding back. The helplessness. The shame. The way his followers laughed and clapped as he belittled others. It was Sharon all over again, only now the stage was national, and the stakes far higher.

Trump insulted women, targeted immigrants, mocked the disabled, and used Twitter as a weapon. His cruelty wasn’t confined to back hallways or cafeteria tables–his bullying was broadcast across the world. And just like Sharon, he fed off fear. He ruled with intimidation, not integrity. With ego, not empathy.

Many of the people who voted for him now feel regret but stay silent. They fear the backlash. They fear being targeted next. Trump has taught them that dissent will be punished. He doesn’t lead with unity or vision. He leads with vengeance. And still, he gains strength from those who follow him anyway.

Now he threatens our very democracy. What frightens me most is that I believe he truly thinks he’s the only one who can fix America. He flirts openly with authoritarianism–undermining institutions, dismissing the Constitution, and acting as though laws don’t apply to him. He spreads lies with conviction, as if truth itself is an inconvenience.

Isn’t this the behavior of someone who wishes to be a dictator?

We must not remain silent. Because when bullies are left unchecked, they don’t disappear–they grow louder, more dangerous, and more powerful. Whether in a schoolyard or a seat of government, bullying must be called what it is: a weapon of fear. And we, the people, must remember–we hold the power to say no.

Trump’s World

Listen up – don’t dare tell me to shut up or claim my words lack insight. Truth when spoken is worth more than gold. It’s light that shines showing us what’s wrong or right in this world.

There’s a devil in the midst, whispering lies, ignoring the cries of a nation in fear.  An evil host, desecrating our space. Leaving behind bitterness, sorrow, tears. Some of you gave him a toast, yes raised a glass to him, drank to his fraud and played his game of insanity.

SHAME ON YOU!  For playing along, for feeding his fire, then running from the flames. Some of you no more than cattle blind to the battle allowed him to tame you.

The constitution gives us hope. A joke to him wages a sin against humanity. A document to rewrite however he sees fit. You won’t win. The sacred words that built this country now under siege in real time, not myth but fact.

He slides into madness – vision askew. Breaking bonds with nations abroad. What does he see? Power and pride. What do you see? A tyrant. A fraud. The sacred flame that united us as one is burning fast. The question is how long must his madness last?

His eyes – shut to our nation’s needs. Take heed. Listen to his plan as he spins out of control holding this country hostage to his demands. Don’t silence truth. Don’t quiet dissent. Don’t let him cage the voice of hope. Life isn’t a joke to sweep under a rug by this man who is criminal and portrays a thug.

He wears a mask riddled with holes. Empty of a soul. His strength is from pain. Feeds on discord growing  in the dark. Sinful laughter that creeps from him as we shoulder the strain.

Watch closely…..the road he paves. We carry the weight. He plays the game.  Some stand idle, blind to his moves. Human pieces , pawns of shame. He calls this great but greatness it’s not.  Not when built on hatred and rooted in fear.

We contemplate peace yet we dread the next day. Shaky. Unclear our fears. 

Citizen, immigrant, documented or not. We all feel it. The pull. The twist. The sting. The hist of a snake.  What’s the angle, the plan as he strangles the American dream.

Don’t dare me to shut up- this truth is mine and must be told.

Roe Vs  Wade – a right reversed. A woman’s voice now silent.  Can love be love if judged by law? Who decides what’s right or wrong – whose passion is allowed to speak?

Mass deportation echoes loud. History repeats. In painful hues. From Project Wetback to braceros. Immigrants served and were used.  Then tossed away. Tools gone dull. Shipped though citizens true. Not forward – no. We move in reverse. And the pain it’s carried by me as by you too.

Families torn, mothers, fathers, children wave though bus window glass. Citizens by birth…….punished by blood. Compassion now a thing of the past.

We are many- many faces , many voices. Many names, documented, undocumented. Human beings not pawns in a game.

Doctors, laborers, teachers, and more. Artist, actors and yes even thieves. We are gay, straight, trans. Proud mothers, fathers. Each heart believes. Black, Brown, White, Yellow, red – every hue the eye can see. We climb. We strive. We sacrifice. Chasing the American Dream.

We came some by force and some by choice but we all want a piece of Liberty and not misery.

And still we hope and still we rise for we are one struggling to survive this calamity.

We are humanity with a voice of free will to make our own choice.