By Ella Charon
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July 10, 2020
What are you most passionate about? That’s really hard to narrow down… I’m really, really passionate about poetry. I started writing poetry during my freshman year of high school, but it’s something that I kept with me throughout the years. For example, this past semester I took a poetry seminar at Duke and it was amazing! By the end of the semester, we had to submit an anthology - so mine was 15 pages long, and it was so cool to create that and get to compile together all the poems that I’ve written throughout the years. Besides that, I’m also interested in philosophy. Recently, I’ve started picking up on reading different philosophical works. I really like reading Laozi. There’s this book called A World of Ideas, which compiles all of these esteemed thinkers, and I’ve really enjoyed reading that. Since my school year has ended, I’m still trying to keep those brain juices flowing. How have you engaged in creative activism? I have written a couple poetry pieces that basically had an activist undertone to them. For example, I wrote a poem about the power of diversity for a local contest about two years ago. Why did you decide to join Creative Visions/Rock Your Rights/Rock Your World and how has your experience with this internship been so far? A little backstory: I was originally enrolled in Duke Engage, which is a fully funded service project that Duke puts on each summer, which is funded by alum Melinda Gates. I was planning on going to Guatemala to do consulting and entrepreneurship with local communities, but was cancelled due to Covid-19. Instead, I was given the option to pick my own virtual independent project instead - you write a proposal, have to get approval, and then afterwards, you have full creative freedom to do what you want. So I thought, why not do something involved in marketing but is also creative? I’m really interested in business, as you can probably tell from my extracurriculars. So I wanted something that would have a business focus. So I feel like a lot of the work I’m doing now is business related - we focus on copyrighting, marketing, social media, etc. At the same time, I also really like graphic design. I really like making these graphics because I get to refine my skills with Adobe Illustrator. Why do you think the work that you’ve done in this internship has been important? I think creative activism is always important. It’s one thing to create art for yourself - that’s all fine and dandy - but it’s another thing to create it for a larger audience. Art is especially powerful when it has a specific purpose. If art has an activist spark or edge to it, that makes it ten times more appealing and genuinely powerful to the masses. A lot of what we do, curriculum wise, is focused on rights - like the UDHR - I think is super important, especially now. It’s important for every person to have a general idea of what these rights are. I remember when I was in middle school, I had no idea. Just a general education on different subjects is really important in maintaining educational literacy in our generation. Stages of Sinking by Tina Xia The relationship experts online say this ‘no-contact’ rule works. And I say Okay because we’re apart now and nothing will be easier. So I etch out the scribbles of past fights and forget how I would wince each time I saw your name appear on my phone, remembering the hearts you put beside mine. No one remembers the fireflies when it’s bright out. Only in darkness do we look for light. There is so much I want to tell you. How I memorized the fifty states yesterday, how I started liking cherry tomatoes, how Ohio keeps popping up in every news article I read. How I am now living like water, each day seeping into the next. You can feel it but it’s barely there. They say this is part of the process, that I can still love red. But my gut is a faded canvas now, dripping paint with each crossed-out lover. A broken song plays in my bathroom. I hum the melody until the sink overflows.