New year’s erotica
Eat me out
When the ball drops
Down
And
Make me cum
Like thunder…
I wanna be your blizzard
For all the 12 months of the year
And every year
Let’s clash
Our bodies and bones
Together in one piece
Fumblin tumblin
Between the sheets
Lip to lip
Lockin
Tits bouncin
Pussy and dick
Cheers
To collide
Like tangled lovers….
With fireworks
And mistletoes
Everywhere
New year’s fuckin
Without champagne
We could be drunk from
Our kisses hung up on our love
I pull you over
To me open my thighs
And let you enter deep
Strokin
Slowly
Full of commotion
The noise
And those romantic moans
In one closet
Or in an office
While the party is goin on…
Or go home
And we could be all naked
And free
And nipple in your mouth
The spoonin
The doggy stylin
I ride you through 2024…🧸🍭💯🔥🫶🏾❣️🥳🎉©️ Kai C. 12-24-23
A Christmas star
She wishes on a Christmas star
In the sky…she closes her pretty eyes
And wishes for a prince Charmin to come by
And holds her tellin her he loves her…
Does that sound cliche? Yup….it does….
People want their dreams come true…
So they believe they could manifest themselves
In one star…that one star you see every year…
A Christmas star….I don’t see it….
I see a star on a tree but not in the sky….
I don’t have faith, I don’t put my soul
Into a whole magical thing…
Though Christmas star is cool… I don’t
Believe in a Christmas star…what about the other
Stars among the clouds?
Jesus was born under a star…and he performed
Miracles….though how did he do that?
I’m not a Christian….I question Christianity…
For a girl who wishes true love on a Christmas star,
She will wait on Christmas Day and he never comes….
Her disappointments fell and soak up the pillow…
Cos the man of her dreams never came….
So much for a Christmas star….
I guess all wishes don’t always come true…
They become doubts and silly dreams…..
She could get a prince Charmin anytime she wants…
She will have to go and get out there….
Find herself a good man who loves her, too…
She could be her own Christmas star….
Why not?
People could be their own Christmas star
And have the ability to do whatever it takes….
Work hard, make effort, don’t give up…
Just believe in possibilities….
People can make miracles with their bare hands…
They go out and turn everythin real…
Cos there’s no such thing as Christmas star…
Not in the sky..
There are constellations in the night azure…
Which one is flashin the most? Which one has the most
Twinkle?
I don’t know…
They’re all glowin and guidin travelers in the dark…
No Christmas star…✨💫🎄©️ Kai C. 12-24-23
Another spiritual institution African Americans hid their Hoodoo practices was in the Sanctified Church started in Memphis, Tennessee. Bishop Charles Harrison Mason and other African American ministers founded the Church of God in Christ in the early twentieth century which has a predominantly African American membership. Bishop Charles Harrison Mason was known among the members of his congregation to heal church members using roots, herbs and anointing oil. Bishop Mason and other Pentecostal pastors were rootworkers and used spiritual tools to remove demons and curses off church members. The removal of evil spirits from church members in African Pentecostal churches involves prayer, playing African gospel music, anointing oils and other Hoodoo tools.
Author Zora Neal Hurston wrote in her book The Sanctified Church, the spiritual beliefs and conjure practices of the Black congregation in Sanctified Churches. African Americans talked about nailing a horse shoe over the door to ward off evil and making conjure balls to remove diseases. British historians traced the origins of the creation of conjure balls in Hoodoo to the West African practice of creating gris-gris charms and the Central African practice of creating minkisi containers.
As European spiritual merchants exploited hoodoo and turned it into just tricks and spells, African Americans moved more of the traditional Hoodoo practices of animal sacrifice, incorporating animal parts in spiritual work, Holy Ghost shouting, the ring shout, and other practices were synchronized with Christianity which took the Hoodoo practiced by African Americans underground. Some Sanctified Churches in African American communities continue to incorporate Hoodoo. African American religious institutions are not just places of worship and spirituality, but are also places to discuss injustices in their communities and how to unite to bring about political and spiritual transformations for African Americans.