• Express Yourself

    • Visual Arts: Fall-Winter 2023

      Visual Arts: Fall-Winter 2023

      “Self Portrait” by Katie McDowell (18), New Orleans Center for Creative Arts  "An Old Man in Military Costume" by Simone Wuttke (18), Dartmouth College (recent Benjamin Franklin High School graduate) "This oil on canvas painting is inspired by Rembrandt's 'An Old...

    • The Stages of Grief

      The Stages of Grief

      I have sat with anger ingrained in my ribs night after night. I know the five stages of grief. Why am I so stuck on anger? Denial was the first one. It hit when I stood in front of my fridge all alone in my house with my knees wobbling, staring at the screen on my...

    • Be Well

    • Yoga: Partner Poses

      Yoga: Partner Poses

      Partner Yoga Poses by Laurie Azzano of Lolo’s Youth StudioYaaaas, finally! Hello, summer! Inhale deadlines. Exhale freedom. If you’re like most, summer represents one big sigh of relief. No more early morning alarm clocks, homework, tests, school drama, or crazy,...

    • Saqqarah’s Brownies

      Saqqarah’s Brownies

      Makes 20-24 brownies (depending on how big you slice them) BAKE TIME: 30 minutesIngredients 6 eggs 1 1/3 cups all-purpose flour 3 cups brown sugar 1 cup white sugar 2 sticks butter 1/2 cup Crisco shortening 1 1/2 cups baking cocoa powder 3/4 teaspoon salt 3 teaspoons...

    • Resources for Your Mental Health

      Resources for Your Mental Health

      If you are struggling with anxiety, depression, suicidal thoughts, or any form of mental distress, reach out to someone right away who can be there for you. Professional help is always an option when your psychological well-being is at risk. There is zero shame in...

    • Teen-Friendly NOLA Clinics Fall-Winter 2023

      Teen-Friendly NOLA Clinics Fall-Winter 2023

      Teen-Friendly NOLA ClinicsClinics that serve adolescents usually focus on the reproductive health needs of adolescents and young adults but may also provide primary care services. The ages served vary depending on the clinic, but they usually include preteens (11 or...

    • Have Fun

    • Mindfulness Guide for Your Zodiac Sign

      Mindfulness Guide for Your Zodiac Sign

      Have you ever wondered how you can apply astrology to your everyday life but don’t know where to start? Astrology can be very complex and sometimes overwhelming to interpret, so I have compiled a quick guide to help you consciously incorporate daily practices to...

    • How to Be an Eco-Dresser

      How to Be an Eco-Dresser

      Did you know clothing isn’t biodegradable?That means it doesn’t decompose once it’s dumped in the trash—it just sits in a landfill and creates nasty greenhouse gases in our environment. “We have to think longer and harder about the clothing we wear, where it came...

    • GLITTER!

      GLITTER!

      New Orleanians love their glitter, and, more than ever, we all deserve a little extra sparkle in our lives. Addie Ellis of the local biodegradable glitter company Glitter Nymph shared with us how to make shimmery oil that is good for your skin and nature. Since you...

    • Must Read Books Fall-Winter 2023

      Must Read Books Fall-Winter 2023

      I Feed Her to the Beast and the Beast is Me by Jamison Shea What it’s about: Laure will do anything to prove a Black girl can be a star in the cutthroat world of Parisian ballet, even make a deal with a primordial power she finds in a pulsating river of blood in the...

    • Volunteer Opportunities for Service Hours

      Volunteer Opportunities for Service Hours

      Are you looking for inspiring ways to volunteer in the local community while fulfilling your school’s service hour requirements? We’ve talked to some great organizations in the area that rely on volunteers to help their wonderful programs run. Learn more about each...

    • Expand Your Mind

    • Unplanned Pregnancy in Louisiana

      Unplanned Pregnancy in Louisiana

      Imagine that you just found out you are pregnant. For some young people, this may be exciting news; for others, it is not. Questions swirl: How can I take care of a baby and finish school? How can I afford to be a parent if I don’t finish school? How will my parents...

    • Lucy Scholz

      Lucy Scholz

      Lucy Scholz is my “shero” because she ran 300 miles from Los Angeles, California, to Las Vegas, Nevada, as part of The Speed Project. That’s roughly like running to Houston, Texas, or Seaside, Florida, from New Orleans! Not only did she win the 2023 competition and...

    • When I Grow Up: Careers in Skilled Trades

      When I Grow Up: Careers in Skilled Trades

      Careers in Skilled Trades With the cost of college continuing to rise, skilled trade careers are a great alternative pathway to stable, well-paying work and upward social mobility. Many trade workers provide essential services and help build and maintain important...

  • About Us
  • Read Geaux Girl!
“I am not a racist. I am against every form of racism and segregation, every form of discrimination. I believe in human beings, and that all human beings should be respected as such, regardless of their color.” — Malcolm X

Since I was younger, I have been studying Malcolm X. He was a big part of the civil rights movement to me. Not many people know how wise Malcolm X really was. While Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech was playing, I was too busy reading Malcom X’s book. I watched the movie about him and saw his assassination. Being killed in front of your kids is a terrifying thought, but before it happened, he smirked.

As I got older, I realized his smirk before he got killed was not weird, not at all. Malcolm had gone on the record many times saying he would be killed. To me, I take his smirk as “I knew this would happen, I accept it.” Which is really like Nat Turner, who stepped outside the boundaries to lead a slave rebellion in 1831 knowing he would be killed. What I really like about Malcolm is that his love for what he was doing outweighed any fear of dying.

I cannot stress this enough and I know I am not the only one who is tired of repeating it: Black Lives Matter point blank PERIOD. I cannot even scroll down on Instagram or Twitter without hearing someone cry, or someone getting angry at the fact that it has been over 500 years and we are still fighting and tired. I am worried for my friends, my brothers, my family, and all Black kings and queens. We cannot be violent because an eye for an eye and the world goes blind. We cannot be peaceful because they would not understand or even listen to what we have to say. So, what are we supposed to do?

All we need is a little bit of brightness in our lives because everything is already crashing down on us with Covid-19 and being away from family members. I am not saying that all Caucasians are bad because I have made many white friends who would really stick up for me and stand up for me in the process. They understand how angry and tired I and my people are, and they support me and check up on me every day. I have met a whole lot of nice people in Louisiana, North Carolina, and Arkansas. Some of them I still talk to today. But I have also met a whole bunch of people who were not nice.

I remember when I was hanging with one of my friends (well, past friend) and her father was coming back from the bathroom and walked over to her and said, “You are still talking to that Black girl?” I was offended as I realized he did not know my name. My friend did not say anything to her father, but her mom tried telling him to sit down and eat. But, of course, he did not listen. He came towards me using stereotypes, saying that I was a threat to his family. But he said something specifically that my anxiety loves to bring up whenever she wants to: “You are going to be hanging from one of these trees around here.” That was the last straw for me… I wanted to say something back, but my friend’s brother defended me. You know, the typical “I have a crush on my sister’s best friend, and I am going to help her” type of defending. My friend and I have not talked since that incident. Her brother, well, he was kicked out of the house for that. I hope he is okay.

People want to know what I have been thinking, but the thing is that I do not know what I am thinking. I just want all of this to stop. When I was a child, my parents gave me information so I could learn to read, learn to be an athlete, learn to play an instrument. I had to be smarter not just to be better but to stay alive. As a teenager, even after that incident at my former friend’s house, I have been trying to figure out how to present myself as non-threatening. As I tear up writing about this, I realize it should not be like this. If a group of people is saying “Please stop killing us,” you should agree. This has been a problem since we were brought here.

Unarmed people getting murdered in the street, being shot 41 times in the back just trying to get in their door, being taken away from their family and beaten and thrown into the river for alleged harassment, being killed for having a fake weapon, and finally, being murdered by police inside your home while sleeping in your bed, where you are supposed to be safe. We have never had things easy for us. The goal for us has always been to survive amongst people who might not want us to survive.

 

There’s blood in the streets, no justice, no peace. No racist beliefs, no rest ‘til we’re free.

Dalesia Murphy is a 16-year-old junior at Sophie B. Wright Charter School who aspires to be a musician, activist, and author.