Thursday, November 10, 2016

Back to the Suburban Grind: Moving in Quick sand

Back to the Suburban Grind: Moving in Quick sand: I've voted for candidates who've not won before.  I have accepted defeat with a few tears and resolve.  I have felt ready to face it...

Moving in Quick sand

I've voted for candidates who've not won before.  I have accepted defeat with a few tears and resolve.  I have felt ready to face it all again four years later because I have believed that even if everyone did not think as I did (and I have never been myopic enough to think they did so) that we, Americans, THAT WE, had agreed upon everyone's right to at least live in their own space in their own peace even if we (or I) longed for us to reach a greater love and understanding of one another.  I'd taken comfort that though I suspected/knew that behind closed doors there was a good deal of racist and sexist banter going on in the White House and cabinet of presidents in which I held little faith, I expected they'd at least try to hide their shameful behavior and policies with rhetoric and not come right out and assault us with hate.  And I wasn't afraid of them.

I can't lie.  I have always anticipated some level of racism from my fellow Americans, white Americans, and am always pleasantly surprised when someone shows me otherwise.  I listen to the stories they choose to tell, choose to share with me and the rest of the world and cull tiny messages, read the pinpoints on their maps to know if deep down or perhaps on the surface, they don't or can't fully respect me and my experience.  Somehow the shame was mine, that I suspected that I should do more, be more or less, convince them by contorting myself, my beliefs, my strong voice, my thick legs, my alarming sexuality, my very blackness, that I should be smaller in the world so that they might be able to live in a world that had me in it.  Even I allowed that the world, that America, did not belong to me and was thankful for every small mercy that showed me differently.

For every friend who told me of their racist auntie, of their schools where no people of color attended, of their churches, towns, teams, and other organizations in which they participated without ever seeing a black person, I winced and then offered some level of comfort to them.  Well, you are here now.  You are part of this diverse community.  That counts.  And sure.  It does.  It does.

When I was a girl, I saw the world through the low-res footage of the Polaroid camera and loved looking at the world in the black and white of my parents' and grandparents' "olden days."  Their pictures fascinated me because everyone looked so young and beautiful but the tales they told of the time, the parts of the tales that had to do with white people, were violent and bleak and terrifying.  The Civil Rights Era was not just part of history, tales made flat and two-dimensional by the textbook, but the stories told by my family, the young, beautiful family of a time that the United States of America was truly black and white and all shadows.  I lived among white people in a nearly completely white community and lived my life every day with a pinch of fear.  I knew that even in the face of good, kind, supportive white people, I'd better be sure that someone of color, someone who "knew" would have my back up front.

I was ashamed of this, ashamed that I distrusted, that I was not letting love in my heart, that I was not turning the other cheek.  I'd always felt that the burden was on me to prove myself open, easy-going, and cool.  I tried to let microaggressions and judgments roll off me, not let the blood rush to my cheeks.  Defused offenses with laughter, assault with excuses, ignorance with forgiveness -- "they know not what they do."

But I still held my breath.  I held my breath because I knew that it was just a matter of time before someone revealed that they weren't as down for my cause as they'd hoped.  Held my breath because I knew I might meet their mother/father/grandmother/auntie/cousin/friend/neighbor who said shit like, "that neighborhood is full of n****s not good black people like you," and I wouldn't know how to respond.  Because I was twelve.  Held my breath because someone would tell me that they didn't understand why all the other black kids were in different classes and not in the advanced classes with me.  Held my breath because someone wanted me to know that they just didn't find black girls attractive or black people attentive or able to swim or couldn't get lice or whatever it was they'd heard.  Held my breath when, though in the top ten percent of my class, lesser students dared tell me that I'd surely get into the college of my choice because of affirmative action and wanted me to agree to as much.  Held my breath because the cute boy told me that he really liked me but that his grandmother would roll over if he came home with a black girl and I felt badly for HIM.  Held my breath because sometimes it was all too much and the short breaths were all I could take in without letting my emotions seep out.

First there are tears and then there is rage!  And I learned that it was the rage, the rage that scared everyone off.  Even your allies couldn't stand for your rage.  Your family, your friends, the people who were trying to love you in their own way, to study you, understand you, who longed for whatever it was that being a black girl meant to them, turned from your rage.  It revealed too much.  Too much of the pain behind your forgiveness, behind your memories, behind your hope.  So you channeled it.  Made the world.  Held it up.  Shone the lights.  Held your breath.  Sucked it in with your head high, eyes focused, became a pillar, face tight with smiles but the heart pumping blood, veins and vessels pounding, eyes blinking, lashes fluttering, cool breaths sucked in and out through your lips.

Simmering, a slow boil and each assault or insult, each death called us from against the wall and whispered, "you'd better let it out or it'll blow."  Heat flushed our ears and our cheeks and we were at first embarrassed, humiliated, scared, and then the rage.  The rage came and poured like lava melting the glossy papered image of what we were expected to be into something harder to identify.  Our beautiful black friends staring past us, the invitation standing to join but no more asking or pleading.  Get on or get off.  And we wanted everyone on board.  We all did. WE did--the blacks, non-whites, immigrant, Muslim, LGBTQ, disabled, the intersected of all these groups--we want you on board.  Without you, your racist/sexist/bigoted/homophobic/cruel/apathetic mother/father/auntie/uncle/friend/cousin/neighbor will never hear another side to their fear-mongering, hateful rhetoric or their privileged denials and apathy.  They have already chosen not to believe me, not to believe us.  While I "may not be like the others,"  I still can't shake my otherness.  You must go in for me.

Listening at the foot of my grandmother in her front sitting room to the tales of a defiant great-granddad and seeing him in his black and white, youthful glory, seeing the uncles in their overalls who stood across the street from the little soda shop/cafeteria that was segregated while their nephews and sons attempted a sit in in white, short-sleeved button downs, and slacks.  Pouring over photos of our parents in large Afros and sideburns, wide collars, and short skirts.  Seeing our photos become clean and Kodakchromed and colored as our friendship barrettes and hoop earrings, lightening bolted enamel pins and designer jeans came into fashion.  Seeing the events of our nation unfold in real time in moving pictures in social media.  We are here.  You must go for us.

When I was a girl I was afraid of stray dogs because I didn't believe they'd listen to my command to stop.  I was afraid of quicksand because it looked like regular ground until you were deep in it and then it just might be too late.  I was afraid of someone disrespecting or challenging my family because I believed they'd already been through enough and didn't want to see them wounded or have them face me having been.  And I was terrified of someone calling me "nigger," "blackie," "brown sugar" in mixed company not only because it would burn my heart and rise up in my cheeks and my ears and force my tears, but because I was afraid to know just who would and would not stand for me.  

Those Kodak pictures from that time show me in my youth already navigating the world's mines and expecting that I might blow up first.  That little girl had hope but low expectations for others for whom supporting and loving her might be a burden, might even put them in harm's way.  That little girl learned to accept defeats that were altogether unfair, more than likely biased, and influenced by a society that valued her less than all the white children that surrounded her.  It is with shock but not complete surprise that a raging, narcissistic, racist, sexist, bigoted, misogynistic blowhard has been elected president.  It is the culmination of all my fears.  It is the ground made quick sand.  It is a stray dog jumping up and putting its paws on my shoulders looking like he might bite my face.  It is embarrassing the legacy of my hard-working, well-educated, dedicated, God-fearing, loving family and all the sacrifices they made to get me to my basic rights.  It is being called "nigger" or watching my friends cursed and assaulted because they are gay or Muslim or Hindi or Sikh (because please don't know the difference) or in a mixed relationship or disabled or a woman, strong or meek, or poor or uneducated or not quite what America had in mind when they narrowed their definition of "American."

When Al Gore and John Kerry conceded I felt deflated.  I'd had faith in their abilities to lead, to govern, to be fair and inclusive.  I felt that even if they could not ever meet or even understand the needs of my community and the communities of those I love, but I thought they might try.  I thought they wanted to understand, that they wanted to unify.  I was afraid of the machine that Ronald Reagan and the Bushes drove over communities I loved.  But what I feel now is terror.  Absolute fear.  I stare at my old class pictures, run my fingers over the old faces of friends, classmates, people who have said how much they love me, care for me, enjoyed our friendships who have voted against my very right to live as they'd like to live.  We are sinking.  That quicksand catches you and takes down slowly.  What happens is that we suffocate and drown and don't even know we've gone down.  And we all go down.


(c) Copyright 2016.  Repatriated Mama:  Back to the Suburban Grind.