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Krissy Mosley Ministries

  • Random Acts Of Me: (no judgment please)

    December 2nd, 2019

    One: I thought I had jumped, into my novel but maybe my novel has sullied my good name -writer. Ha! I say it with a smile. My novel laughs back at me, slaps me around 3:am in the morning. Tells my mother jokes -there was this girl who thought she should write, and then she realized I was her mother, what’s more real the dream or me…

    Two: As I thought I would study, learn all the I could about the great spirit- the great God/ but maybe I have learned nothing.

    Three: My most fearful thought, is that the world would catch me with my pants down. The belief beyond it, (my darkness out shines my light sometimes ) that truly, it is has happen.

    I was in college going through the worst of times, and so my skin tried to get up and walk out on me. Ugh! I darted out class, ran to the nearest bathroom. Pulled down my pants, not going into a stall. My bad! I had to scratch my legs.

    And as I was in deep relief of all the stress that college brings. Two girls walked in. Caught off guard I hurried, falling all over that restroom in pieces. Picking up what was left. I washed my hands/dashed out, in tears and laughter, boy o’boy it had to be me (flopping around trying to pull my pants up)

    and now you know what a klutz I am…

    your kindness sister Krissy P.S. hey at least I’m honest, I’m not that girl anymore! shh for readers only & those with eczema suffers understand

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  • Book-Therapy:

    November 30th, 2019
    woman reading book
    Photo by Renato Abati on Pexels.com

    Sometimes I’m just a girl, walking into a book store. Swimming in the minds of other writers- ah that’s life! We’re all a little crazy or maybe it’s just me, I can never find the exit-sign in those places. So I stay until almost closing, get a sense -long body lines come out of nowhere, and then there’s another book that catches my eye – I sniff first, tucking in the lastest cut-timber, ah Lanston Huges, The Negro Mother “Children I come back today, to tell you of the long dark way, that I had to climb, that I had to know”…

    I move on: Oscar Wilde hitting me the face, The Ballad Reading Gaol “That fellows got to swing” I skip along the lines, chewing -sweetness and everything in between.

    “Some love too little

    Some love too long

    Some do the deed with many tears

    And some without a sigh:

    For each man kills the thing he loves; yet each man does not die.”

    I look up for a minute, rub the cover of the book, gently place it back on the shelf. I wonder about book owners, are they like me? Do they melt? Do their eyes sparkle in delight of books? I know there are many parts of owning books. Selling books, books on display, one day I might know these operations but for now, it is my own personal luxury.

    P.S. I always spend $50.00 plus in bookstores, I say its worth it.

    signing off Kindness sis. Krissy

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  • Teaching Kindness

    November 22nd, 2019
    Photo by Judita Tamošiūnaitė on Pexels.com

    She was a sacred, gifted-hands of sorts 

    smuggling her own kindness, into unwanted things 
    she herself understood, a crippled kind of loneliness

    understood gigantic forced place-mats by the door, 
     wheelchair-accessible ramps

    the back door, off the side rails

    disabled stalls in corner sized restrooms


    she holds doors for the walking,
     they say- excuse me, nod a bit of thank you

    with no legs of her own…

    studies have shown 91 % of all teens believe kindness is dead – rather died long-ago 
    she lives to teach them kindness without legs, 

    of her own. 
    kindness sis Krissy

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  • Poets’ Sanctuary:

    November 21st, 2019

    I wanna live with all the other poets in the world and declare that our darkness has always been meeting together. I found them outside my home, sitting idly on my front porch. 

    Congregating, marinating, picking the pink “flesh off the bone.” Between city halls and the Ghetto.

    I’ve watched them, roll up their sleeves and get involved in the Opium crisis. I’ve watched them, build suburban bombs and tare down high rises. I’ve watched them load the homeless-dead in Coroner’s van behind Popeye’s Chicken. I’ve watch them hold meetings -something about, the bodies that don’t belong to them. How they needed to criminalized abortion. I’ve watched them transform darkness into sheep’s clothing.

    lead a prayer at a Prayer meeting,

    start a war to tare the whole church down.

    all because that church, would be better serviced as a parking lot. 


    I’ve become an informant in the darkness, where it sleeps over street lights and battery-operated cars. I’ve watched lovers, dead in the middle of an argument, stop traffic, jump out their brand new Escalade, growl, and rattle against the city’s pavement.

    Splashing their darkness like hot glue guns, pressing into the blues, ain’t that like the blues, once it starts there’s no stopping.    

    Next door to the church on 21 street, there are no street lights, but a sour-somber, song, lingering making its way down onto where I lived,

    by then, I had stepped outside, in my neon green bathrobe and declare not on my block, not on my watch, not on my stretch out towers of love where we share our burdens.

    there is enough love to cover the darkness, there’s enough love to carry the weight of darkness – hold back the darkness from spilling onto innocent blood, there’s enough fish nets, bamboo traps, to hold it back for a little while longer

    but I’m asking for a little more help,

    so I declare, I wanna live with all the poets of world…

    kindness sis. Krissy

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  • Wordless…

    November 20th, 2019

    free images pixabay.com

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