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    Waiting on The World to Change


    When I was in the fourth grade my mom took me out of the school I was going to in my neighborhood and put me in a school about forty-five minutes across town. She said I came home one day bragging about the 100% I had gotten on a test and when she looked it over, she realized it was full of errors. She kept it up for a few weeks and realized it wasn't a mistake... the teachers weren't grading my papers properly. So, she put me in one of the top private schools in a wealthy neighborhood where I was one of three brown faces in the whole school (the other two were twins).
    I was nervous because up until that point I had gone to predominately black schools but my mom put me at ease assuring me that I always made friends quickly and everyone liked me. She even reminded me that my best friend from summer camp, Sarah, was white... and we weren't all that different. Sarah even got me a black Ken doll for my birthday - which in the eighties, was impossible to find. And - as a concluding reassurance my mom sang me a song. It went:

    Make new friends
    But keep the old ones
    One is Silver and The Other's Gold.

    So, with my stylish new hairdo and cute new uniform I started my new school.
    And she was right...
    ... at first.
    I made fast friends with two girls in the class, Leslie and Chrissy. I remember my first slumber party at Chrissy's house. We danced to Material Girls by Madonna and painted each other's nails. I loveddd Madonna but in my neighborhood, it was all about hip hop and my brother's wouldn't have me blasting a Madonna record. But hey - I taught them the running man, I taught them about my curls and cornrows and it was great. I stayed me - but became a better me, because I didn't have to just be one side of me - I could listen to my Madonna and my Salt N Pepper.
    Anyway, Leslie's mom used to pick a number of us kids up from school in the afternoon. She would take most of the kids home but because I didn't live in the area, she would take me back to her house and my mom would come get me after work. It was a great set up because Leslie and I were great friends. One afternoon, I was running to get in her mom's van and I squeezed into the last set in the front row. I must have pushed passed another one of my classmates, Gaby, on her way to the van because when she got in the car she was maadddd. She wanted the seat and I took it.
    Not one to be intimidated I said, "What's your problem?"
    "You're in my seat." She snorted.
    "It doesn't have your name on it." I responded.
    She stared at me for a minute. Keep in my mind - back then, "not having your name on it" was a pretty awesome comeback.
    I could see her struggling to say something.
    If I close my eyes, I can still see her face as she struggled to say something.
    And then she said...
    "BLACK."
    She spat it - like it was a dirty word. Like I needed to be reminded that I was different, less than, a transplant into her world.
    I was quiet. No one ever said that to me before. No one ever told me I was black and made me feel bad about it.

    A few months later, I had a crush on a boy named Glen, who was also my classmate. I wrote him a note.
    "Do you like me? Yes or No."
    He called me a Nigger.
    I never cried so hard in my life.
    I will always remember my kind music teacher who stood with me in the cubby closet until I stopped crying.
    Funny thing was, I found out years later that Glen was biracial.
    I bounced back but I was guarded. For awhile, I was scared to feel too accepted, sing my Madonna songs too loudly, for fear that everyone was just waiting... waiting for me to cross that invisible line and be reminded.

    For the most part, I can look back on my days at that school fondly. I still keep in touch with many of my friends and afterwards, I continued to go to schools were I was in the vast minority and that was okay... I knew who I was... but I was guarded still - just a little.

    I am an adult now and I move in many circles. I love everything that defines me and being a women of color is just the icing on the cake for me. I feel like so many things define me that I will never fill anyone's stereotype. I want Isaiah to feel the same way. I am 6'1, my husband is 6'4... Isaiah will be a tall, beautiful black man. For many - he will be scary, built for athletics... etc. I want him to always know that I love him completely - he can be whoever he wants and I will love him - he can be a clog dancing gay man and that's okay - I just expect him to be Isaiah.

    Last week, I read about John Mayer's statements in Playboy and it brought me back.. If you haven't heard about it and don't feel like reading it - aside from some insane things about his ex girlfriends, he said that the fact that he has a large black audience gives him an "hood pass" or a "nigger pass." He also compared his penis to a white supremacist because he doesn't date black women. Sadly, I have always loved John Mayer's music. The first time I heard Your Body Is A Wonderland, I was in college and I heard him sing it acoustic on The Late Show. I thought... wowowow. I felt all tingly and I wanted to be in love. Apparently, I wasn't actually relating to the music when I bought his album... I was handing him a Nigger Pass.

    I remembered that little girl again.
    The one shocked in the carpool van.
    Crying in the cubby closet.
    I was just reminded that no matter how dynamic of a human being I am, no matter how complex and multi-faceted... for some people, my skin color will be all they see. Believe it or not, I forgot for a second - so caught it in my own class-ism... elitism... my belief that somewhere along the line, I crossed the line and no one cared anymore.
    Hey - Barack Obama is President.
    I thought everyone saw me.
    It made me sad last week... because it hasn't changed and although I can handle it, I am painfully aware that I will have to feel the reality all over again through my children's eyes and I am pretty sure that will hurt worse.
    _____
    *Picture above is of the sun setting somewhere on I-95 (my second home).

    11 comments:

    Melonieisaprincess said...

    You said it perfectly...as a black woman listening to John Mayer, I wasn't appreciating his talent. I was simply handing him a "nigger pass". Very eloquent.

    I spent the last two of my high school years in a predominantly white town and worked at a restaurant where I was one of two waitresses of color. Everybody was cool but I never noticed it until I was joking around with one waitress and she told me, "You're just a little black girl."

    I was so taken aback...but it was a reality check for my ass!

    The harvest is plentiful. Sigh.

    Love your blog!

    {JeLisa} @ Blogging Ever After said...

    Wow. This took me back to my own experiences as THE minority {the one Black girl on this team, in this school, at this job, etc.}, and brought up the nagging, background fear I have that those who accept me might have the word "nigger" hanging out somewhere in the back of their mind when they look at me, because that's what's happened to me before.

    This was so, so powerful!

    Tiara Faith said...

    Thanks so much, ladies. :-)

    Mom said...

    Oh, how wonderfully and creatively you write! We as Black women take a lickin' and keep on tickin' - we are strong, resilient, and proud. And I'm so very proud of you!
    Keep giving Isaiah love while you resoect his individuality. This will give him the courage to face the world :-)

    Dina said...

    There are many of us who share the same experience --- mine was back in the 60's, early 70's when the world was changing for sure, but the transformation was slow and convoluted.

    John Mayer's statements took me by total surprise. I have his albums, for goodness sakes. (Oops, I just said "albums" and I know some of you may not even know what I'm talking about. ;)

    On some blogs (of color), Mayer's been applauded for his truthfulness, but I have to say that he should have kept his thoughts to himself. I just had a flash of him at the Michael Jackson funeral/tribute. Remember his sincerity? Remember the admiration and respect we all had for him?

    He's scheduled to appear here in a few months and I was going to be one of the first to buy a ticket. Not now.

    Tiara Faith said...

    @Dina, I can only imagine the difference between then and now. I feel like now it is a different kind of hurt - it sneaks up on you just when you feel comfortable - just when you think "my, how things have changed." But - I can't believe some blogs are applauding him for his honesty. Sigh. Is thinking before you speak or act a lost art? I think that is certainly more sincere then blurting out the first ignorant thing that comes to mind.
    Oh - and don't worry, I had his "albums" too :-).

    Post Tenebras Lux said...

    Mayer's comments make me so sad. Sad and angry. Thanks for sharing a great post.

    T.Allen-Mercado said...

    Wow, what a powerful post. I had a similar upbringing, although I also lived in the predominately white neighborhood until the summers where my time was spent in Awendaw SC, Gullah town-talk about two vastly different worlds and cultures.

    The diversity in that experience has shaped me. It has had such an impact, that Black cannot be used against me. It's like someone calling me spaghetti or some other inconsequential word. Unless it is used in the proper context, I disregard it, glancing back at them as if to ask them why they don't make sense.

    I am a fan of John Mayer's music and will most likely continue to listen to his music. I'm sure there are other less outspoken but equally as nonsensical artists who benefit from my patronage. He can have my iTunes money, but I will not give his words any credence or power.

    Tiara Faith said...

    Thanks so much, Post Tenebras.

    @T-Allen, I can't tell you how much I admire that resolution. I strive to arrive at the point of ease - where I don't feel the need to yell, scream and maybe even shed a tear. It isn't so much that the label bothers me - in fact, it doesn't bother me at all. I think its more the way people use the label to diminish our individuality. I wish I could still rock out to John Mayer... at most, I just think he is an idiot... but it will always be lingering in the back of my mind and now his songs are bittered. Same reason I can't watch Seinfield... I can't even laugh at Kramer anymore. It all just makes me sad.

    adiaha said...

    Nice post and blog. Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I appreciate your feelings and thoughts.

    I too will have a difficult time enjoying Mayer's music.

    The Adventures of Princess Zaria said...

    I hate that that happened to you. Kids can be so cruel, even today. We must pray for our community and hope that our children never go through the things you did. Keep up the good work :)

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