It’s interesting to be the only black woman many of the
people in my community know. Or perhaps the only one a handful feel
comfortable enough to text.
But tokenism isn’t new to me. I’ve often been the only one.
Or I’ve been one of few for most of my life. But this week, this old-familiar role
has taken a turn and churned. I’ve been on the receiving end of many ill-timed
texts from well-meaning white mothers reaching out.
I haven’t yet responded because in each circumstance, these
messages have caught me off guard. And further, what can I say? Perhaps I’ve
left most of these messages unread because I’m not sure the senders will like
my response.
You see, I have little sympathy for your fear. I have no
words to soothe your concerns. And forgive me, but right now I have minimal
interest in wiping away the tears you’ve shed because you just got the
memo that racism is real.
Real racism.
Just because it’s on your radar at the moment, this violence
and overt racism isn’t new. George Floyd isn’t the first, and sadly, he won’t
be the last. But before you cast stones, post, or hit send once more, please first
consider the insidious and very real daily assaults the media and social
outlets will never spotlight.
- Consider your own side comments and averted glances.
- Consider the way you patronize with your assumptions.
- Consider the way you hire, promote, and compensate your employees.
- Consider the way you judge those who look or think differently than you.
- Consider the thousands of thoughts you think before you’ve had time to filter them.
- Consider the ways you have ignored and excluded.
- Consider the company you keep.
- Consider the way your child’s flippant use of the n-word might affect their “friend.”
- Consider how your guest’s drunken remarks might impact the one black girl in the room.
- Consider your biases against my son.
- Consider why neither my husband nor daughter have received your sympathy.
- Consider why such egregious behavior is required for you to consider my feelings.
A text—really?
In my opinion, mudslinging via social media is too easy. So is
texting. And it’s an inappropriate medium for an actual conversation.
Although you may feel better because you’ve expressed your
solidarity via text with your one black acquaintance, your courageous and carefully crafted
message pokes at deep wounds and stirs fury. This may not have been your
intention, but I thought you should know. You’ve also sidestepped a fucking impossible
conversation with the bridge you’ve erected. This conversation you’ve averted bears
the weight, pain, blood, and tears of generations.
Your text message may absolve you of your emotions in the
moment, but tonight it leaves me to shoulder a lifetime of burdens. Honestly, I find
this behavior both thoughtful and careless.
Black like me.
I would never assume the model on a magazine cover encompasses the depth, diversity, and complexity of white people. Yet so many have conflated a collective trauma with the assumption that all black people are
having a universal experience.
You’ve based your perception of me and what I might be
thinking on the sensational stories and stereotypes perpetuated in the media. You’ve incorrectly assumed—because of my skin color—that I’m following, fretting, and fuming as
you are. You assume you know my politics. And you have the audacity to suggest that
one dimension of my person predicates my attention, actions, feelings, beliefs,
and my vote.
But black isn’t monochromatic. And contrary to what you may
have assumed, I don’t represent all black people. I can hardly speak for the individual experiences of an entire race. So please, do us both a favor: unpack this box and let me out.
Yes, my skin is dark. Yes, people constantly make snap
judgments about me because of it. And yes, more than once, I’ve been approached or stopped by suspicious but kind police officers on account of it.
It’s true that I must work twice as hard for less. It's true that my children must tread lightly in ways some of their lighter or darker friends may never experience. And it's true that we've each been on the receiving end of insufferable ignorance and heart-rending comments in our communities, churches, schools, workplaces, with friends, and in our own family.
It’s true that I must work twice as hard for less. It's true that my children must tread lightly in ways some of their lighter or darker friends may never experience. And it's true that we've each been on the receiving end of insufferable ignorance and heart-rending comments in our communities, churches, schools, workplaces, with friends, and in our own family.
But I don’t need your pity. And I certainly don’t need you
to march on my behalf.
A different narrative.
I could be angry. I could be fearful. And maybe I should be. But there’s too much to feel angry about. And there’s too much to fear. Sometimes I feel sad, but I can’t stay there long. Because the anger, violence, sadness, fear, and resentment I’m apparently entitled to don’t
serve me. And if I let them, they would paralyze me. So thank you for your
messages and concern, but respectfully, I will not perpetuate this bullshit. And I won’t be
joining you as you march down this road.
The many lives that have been stolen deserve better. Damn
straight, black lives matter. Every life does. So I choose love.
Yes, there are a handful of terrible people in the world who
do shitty things. But in my experience, these are exceptions, not the rule. Most
of the people I’ve encountered in this lifetime are loving and kind, and they’re
doing their best. Yes, racism sucks and it’s real. But so is love. I choose
love.
Since you’ve asked, I’ll tell you what I’m thinking.
I’ll
tell you that I am a black woman and so much more. I love my life. I love my family. And I encounter awe-inspiring beauty daily. I’m grateful to the mothers who loved before me. I’m grateful for the mothers who stand beside me. I’m
grateful for the path that brought me here and for the compassion, empathy, ethic, and
perspective it has gifted me. And I’m honored to be a black mother in America.
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