Antwanette Howard
Bio
I love to write and have been writing since I was seven. I am looking forward to make it a professional career.
Stories (2/0)
Still Sadness
It hurts to know that I am back at round one. My sorrow swallowed up in one sum. My heart broken into pieces like pennies. I have love, but I don’t plenty. How many people want to help me? I’m guessing not many. It sucks to know that through the process, I was humble and still I fumble. I thought the worst already happened to me. I am starting to think that I will never see best, successful me. I wonder what could I do to get out of my situation. There is no other way, but hard work and dedication. It seems like the harder I try to get out of my funk, the more my issues stunk. The feeling of pain I can’t get over even though I try. Sometimes I just want to lay down and cry. I feel that there is no hope for me or my future. I get further way from my goals every time I reach it. Sometimes I ask God what am I here for. Am I something special? Am I more than worth it? I think so. Some people are okay to work a nine to five, but I want more. I want to be able to go to the sea shore when ever I feel like it. Is that too much to ask? Maybe wanting more than what you need is a sin. I only yearn for these things. I’m not even asking for a diamond ring. Just a piece of the pie from my passion. Is that irrational?
By Antwanette Howard6 years ago in Poets
Living in Dallas, TX (Economics)
I am here to share a story about living and working in Dallas, Texas. People want to move here because they see that there are a lot of money opportunities here, but what they don't see is that it's also hard to find jobs here. Yes it is a lot of money flowing around, but the reality here is...it depends if you get the opportunity or not. Particularly for black people, it's hard here in Dallas. You have some employers here that are "secretly racist." They don't say any racist slurs but they ask you a lot of questions and then they rush you to the next question, not letting you answer much. One thing is for sure: they are not smiling at you because they are not happy to see you. They treat you differently than the other candidates. Here is another problem we face as job candidates: being bilingual. These days, you can't pass up a post that says "bilingual required." It's way too many!! It's hurting a lot of people who don't speak Spanish. You don't hear a lot of this because we have been trained here in Texas to not speak about certain things.
By Antwanette Howard6 years ago in Journal