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Indiana Poetry Book About Growth & Self-Reflection Offers Insight, Hope, Support

by PRC Agency PR
Indiana Poetry Book About Growth & Self-Reflection Offers Insight, Hope, Support

Everyone knows life is hard but sometimes it can feel unforgiving. Indiana poet Aisha Tariqa Abdul Haqq has been there, done that, and has just released a triumphant poem that illustrates the journey.

Aisha Tariqa reminds readers there's power in self-reflection, and that the natural next step when you're emerging from hardship is growth.

Her poem captures themes central to her two books “Four Years in Chrysalis” and “Acres of Shadow.” If you're struggling to work things out in your own life, grappling with the whys, and getting bogged down in feelings of victimhood you'd rather shed or ignore, Aisha Tariqa lets you know you're not alone.

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She reminds you that deep inside is a warrior yearning to break free and create a life of self from all the possibilities before you. You really do have that choice. And when you're feeling defeated, focus on an immediate goal, and then take it one step at a time.

Indiana born and raised, Aisha Tariqa transforms her own struggles as a young Black woman coping with residual grief and a childhood replete with adversity into deeply insightful poetry that illustrates the growth that can come from suffering.

At age 21, Aisha Tariqa was determined to break free from influences that all but suffocated her hopes and ambitions as a young Black girl growing up in Indiana. In her latest poem, you can almost feel Aisha Tariqa giving herself permission to exhale and move forward.

When you read her poem, you're immediately swept into a confluence of emotions that layer the apprehension she battled when leaving her scant childhood home with the promise that a vast world, replete with possibility, awaited.

Aisha Tariqa says that at that time she was entering a new transition. One from familiarity with those around her to the acknowledgment of who she was, what she wanted, and how she would achieve it. She says the experience was like a bird leaving the nest — one in which the parent provided all of the sustenance and guidance, as limited as it was.

Putting this meager nest in the past, she begins to notice the world is vast, nearly never-ending and filled with truly endless possibilities.

Where do you start?

Well, she says, you start with jumping out of the nest and hoping to fly — and therein lies the fear and anxiety. "Can I actually fly?" you ask yourself, "or will I falter and shatter to nothing but apprehension on the ground?"

You won't actually know until you jump — until you jump and force your wings open and position them properly to catch the wind.

Now, you must find your own sustenance, as everyone else has already left the nest — there is no nest to return to. Now, you must look out for the dangers and fend them off on your own. Now, you are exposed to the elements and must acquire lodging on your own, or else succumb to those elements. With little financial stability and limited familial support, this was Aisha Tariqa's reality.

"Can I actually survive? Do I have a choice?" she wonders, and there she was, with absolutely nothing but a head full of ambition and the beginnings of a purpose.

Searching for a handhold that is no longer available or has always been toxic and will do nothing for her, she begins to find her footing in the world.

One must fashion a finish line, she says. A horizon. Something to guide you forward.

And if you falter as you progress toward your goals, yes the finish line may become farther, but it also becomes more solidified, more discernible, and more accessible. Even as you rest as often as you must, you must always keep that finish line in view. And it will — always be there, that is.

No matter how long you rest, that finish line you have set for yourself never wavers.

The worst thing you can fall back on is the temptation to hold onto something pernicious, something that ails more than it aids, something that suffocates more than it provides breath. This is a habit that deserves to be broken — dependency on a past that no longer exists. Stepping out into the vastness of the future and constructing your own world from it — this is the decision you must make and never waver from.

A discovery of self is a discovery of infinite possibilities and that is what awaits. Creating an entire existence with only your mere hands and your aspirations as tools, therein lies your potential.

Hungry for an abundant life built on her own and fueled by inexorable will, Aisha Tariqa draws on self-reflection to realize


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Created on Jun 3rd 2022 10:52. Viewed 176 times.

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