Isle of A REBEL
Writing works of Jaiden Jeremy James (short stories & extracts)
Tuesday, 13 May 2025
Friday, 11 October 2024
Tuesday, 23 July 2024
Jeremy Anusionwu
Monday, 5 February 2024
Monday, 30 October 2023
Monday, 2 October 2023
Hello there
Haven't you tested it yet?
Thursday, 14 September 2023
Thursday, 27 July 2023
Good day📢
Fantastic problem solving solution
Tuesday, 11 July 2023
Monday, 3 July 2023
Wednesday, 31 May 2023
Monday, 8 May 2023
Wednesday, 19 April 2023
Thursday, 13 April 2023
Wednesday, 5 April 2023
Monday, 20 March 2023
Tuesday, 7 March 2023
Monday, 28 June 2021
Some thing you have to see at the earliest opportunity
Jeremy Anusionwu
Kindly yours,Jeremy Anusionwu💵
Saturday, 24 October 2020
Pathways
I learned to live through her, being from a broken home and an overworked mother was never fun but all that noise from my family wasn’t felt when I was in my foster home. I learned to read, I learned to write, I learned to be and it’s via her love and kindness that I became me. I lived in Weston- Super - Mare, a small seaside town in Somerset and it’s there as the only black person I felt like everyone else as I was and am like everyone else. I wasn’t really othered, I just was.
And then London the energy I was given changed dramatically, I was 8 and I had to live with my mother and brothers. Brothers who thought I was too soft, forced their ideals on me, basketball, hip-hop all the things that made them happy made me unhappy. Then the school kids who laughed at my somerset accent, my big lips, tall frame, then in secondary school it moved to bullying, robbing me, calling me a faggot. Then onto workplaces the fashion industry that’s full of people willing to step over you in order to get ahead, that was super racist when I was designing and editing a few years back, then onto dating, men who just don’t seem to see me, understand me, care in full about me. I seem to end up with entitled individuals who feel they are the world and that’s it and that’s all, please me and leave. I decided to leave London after being burned out and bored of the energy it took from me without truly giving back, so many seemed so miserable, so hungry that I couldn’t feed into what it fed me.
I then worked & lived in-between London & Dublin, for me Dublin was something but I couldn’t really feel it or understand, just as I was getting used to the energy it had to offer I jumped on a flight and was back again. I can say that what I saw and felt was connections, people who respected their families and friends and built strong bonds. When I was there I dated and met some really cool creative people and the time there I’ll remember and always honor.
And then Berlin, three years now and it’s been a ride. The city gave me my creativity back, it gives more than it takes and I have love for it but am I in love with it? I’ve made great friends, I hang with a diverse group of individuals that have helped diversify my thoughts. My issue is the city is filled with creatives who say and never really do, broken people who use temporary solutions to try and fix their feelings. I applaud all those who seek help and I understand the struggle it is to exist, but what triggers me about Berlin is it’s a lot of broken people coming together to fall apart, using highness as a form of healing. Drugs, brokenness and all the other things like staying up for four days, and not really working are applauded. The city has taught me that not everyone wants to be successful and failure or failing can become a life that’s celebrated. I’m not shaming anyone as I’ve taken much needed time out to be a mess, when i lost my job, lost my nanny and the guy I was seeing left me and again when I became freelance. Yet now I feel more myself than ever and I’m trying to nourish myself and trying to be around positive energy and creativity. Yet I honestly feel that Berlin brings me down. It could be a temporary feeling but it’s a feeling with weighted thoughts.
Now Athens, I don’t live here but I’ve stayed here for a while, I’ve been three times and came back after being here last month and just falling for the feeling it gives. Last month we divided the trip and went Mykonos, a mistake but a lesson.
Mykonos reminded me of this static stillness/ sameness played out across washboard abs and a mindset that seems to idolize an outdated ideal of masculinity in a large portion of the gay men holidaying there, it reaffirmed my position as a queer body and mind that believes in softer states with an open emotional connection to myself and others. The surface lacks true purpose to me, I believe in value that’s internal which means you can spread that without self doubt or hate being an anchor.
But back to Athens for me it really did make me feel like I was someone seen and heard. It made me feel like I was living a half life prior. I was suddenly attractive and got attention to men I was attracted to, I went on dates and was taken out. Games were kept at a minimal, texts flowed and replies weren’t one word. Of course staying in Athens I’m also aware due to the economic situation that my money goes further, so for once I don’t have to worry about eating out or ordering a cab, the small worries that fill a day otherwise.
Thursday, 13 August 2020
White people smiling

Since George Floyd’s death I’ve wandered from place to place feeling black but seeing whites, colorless shades played out on faces put before me, real life people, perfumed by an air of no cares, not many fucks and hardly many worries. There’s another layer to the world in which they dwell in, they aren’t on the same level as me they don’t think about race or sexuality those things are just there, instinctive and natural they can argue about things like capitalism and who it serves, they’re free to talk about lighter issues or deeper issues as they’ve got no anchors in place. No constant surface level distraction that detracts from their being.
These are people That you think as they are seen everywhere in the places I inhabit, that everything would be nothing without them. But no matter what it’s not true and I know my value and I know my worth even if there’s the calculated systematic cruelty of being born different and the levels in which that effects me.
The erasure of my people’s space in this world has been a timely one and is a heavy blow to handle. I will never forget going to the Vatican and not seeing one image of anyone that reflected my likeness, for a global religion that annoyed and angered me and confirmed the death of my very limited faith there and then.
The issue is my conscious and refusal to be trapped by my struggle, I’m fighting to be freer, to think louder and exist in spaces that are left consciously aware and enlightened. I can’t be forceful with how I awaken and arouse others, I can be honest and try and play to their empathetic self, if that doesn’t work I often wonder if they’re delusional or simply that they don’t care. Even if people showed up and showed out to the recent BLM protests that doesn’t mean all truly care.
The Thing that hurt the most about the George Floyd situation is the fact that there was a knowledge accepted from all corners that my life was a lesser life and what I had been forcing myself to deny for so long was accepted by so many. It made me angry. Anger mixed with sadness with just the reality of the situation that in truth I feel that I’m being denied a life that I want and wish to live primarily due to the fact I am a person of color, that the community that my sexuality belongs to sees me as less than them, the industry in which my career is placed has erected gates and obstacles for people like me.
To live and not see a self in the many scenes often played out is a level of erasure, screens, magazines, institutions, where were we and in turn where was I, who was I in relation to these spaces if I’m not represented, I’m not accepted, if I’m not accepted I’m denied a right to be. Culture for so long has revolved around whiteness perpetuating that whiteness is universal, neutral, palatable...
When talking about inclusion Beyoncé’s ‘black is king’, made me emotional, I’m not even a Beyoncé fan but I see the power in seeing myself in scenes, a joyous celebration of self, selves we’ve been denied, underrepresented selves.
Disney didn’t see black people for so long, as Disney like most media empires kept us locked out, but of course would gleefully take from us. This is evident in the difference in Lion King’s, in the 2019 version vs 1994, 94 exploited us while 19 celebrated us and offered us a seat at the table. I mean no disrespect to Elton John but why shouldn’t Africans or individuals of African descent sing, write and cherish their continent? In the 19 version they at least connected with Beyoncé + Childish Gambino, with a soundtrack filled with black talent, so many visuals uplifting and celebrating Africa, the multifaceted depths of blackness, bountiful beauty.
With this in mind isn’t whiteness blandness? a level of bland that’s common and complacent, it’s not rule breaking or genre shaking, it sits perfectly in a system crafted for those who are the majority and if you’re not the majority then you assimilate and assume a form that fits, a politeness that’s palatable so they can say ‘I have black neighbors’ ‘ I know a Muslim and they don’t carry on like most ’ ‘Jed & John are a gay married couple they seem so normal’
But I’m not here to make people feel at ease if my presence disturbs them! As their comfort zones mean I remain uncomfortable, meaning we remain steps behind them. As they March on.
There’s so much power in visibility, to be noted and feel noticed and included in conversations not just on a local level but a global one. I don’t want to say I’m activist but I’m active in wanting and working towards creating change not just for my race but for people I hardly see and to give purpose and action to. This includes what I identify as a black, non-binary queer but also for those who aren’t able bodied, for those who are trans and for those that the world has silenced in its exclusion.