Posted on 08/02/2013 9:12:24 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
A photo of the author
On the day of college graduation, I told my friends and family the news: I was leaving the country I had lived in since childhood.
I just need a change, I told them, but they knew there was more. Was it some romance gone awry, they wondered? Some impulsive response to a broken heart? And I was running from heartbreak. My relationship with the United States of America is the most tumultuous relationship I have ever had, and it ended with the heart-rending realization that a country I loved and believed in did not love me back.
Back in the 90s, my mother brought me from our home in the Caribbean islands to the U.S., along with my brother and sister. I was 4 years old. She worked as a live-in nanny for two years, playing mommy for white kids whose parents had better things to do. She took trips to the Hamptons and even flew on a private jet to California as the help. My mom didnt believe that nanny meant maid, but she did whatever was asked of her, because she was thirsty. She had a thirst that could only be quenched by the American dream. One day, she thought, her children would be educated. One day, they might have nannies of their own.
That was our path. Get a good education. When the neighborhoods with quality schools became too expensive for my mom to afford as a single parent with three kids, we traversed the United States with GreatSchools.net as our compass. New Jersey, elementary school: decent, mostly Hispanic school, even though my gifted and talented program was predominantly Indian. Texas, middle school: Found a great school for you guys, my mom said while rain poured into our car through the open windows where the straps of our mattresses were tied down. It had an A grade and was 70 percent white. Florida, high school: Hey, Tiffanie, you should have this egg. Its the only brown one like you! my classmate told me during AP biology. Philadelphia, Hawaii, North, South, East, West. Car, U-Haul, Greyhound, plane, train. New York City, private university: I really want to write an essay on being the gentrifier, one courageous young man pitched in a journalism class. I was one of only two people who were disturbed.
For a long time I survived by covering myself in the labels Id accumulated over the years. I plastered each one to my body with super glue as if they were Post-It note reminders that I was someone. Sports fanatic (hot pink). Feminist, beautiful, writer, comedian, fashionista, friend (fuchsia, yellow, blue, purple, red, green). I hid behind them; they were my only shields.
Green covered my eyes when a childhood friends family banged down my front door and demanded their daughter get out of the house full of blacks. Blue protected my heart when my black peers ostracized my enjoyment of complete, complex sentences. Yellow blocked my ears when whispers floated through the air at my ex-white-American boyfriends home like haunted ghosts: I cant believe he is dating a black girl. The words passed like a gentle breeze barely creating flutter.
I existed right there on the fringe of ugly, ignorant and uncultured. Black but not black enough for my positive attributes to be justified. Where are you from? potential dates asked when they met me. I am from Trinidad and Tobago, I said. Oh, thats why you are so beautiful and exotic I knew you couldnt be all black.
Black people dont really know how to swim, my co-worker once told me when I worked as a swim instructor at my neighborhoods pool. What about me? I asked. Oh, you arent black. Youre from Trinidad, she said.
The black children dont like to read very much, I overheard one librarian discussing with another while I sat down reading a book a couple feet away. They passed right by me with smiles.
I was the model minority absent, yet present. The yardstick to which other minorities were measured. If I could finish high school and college, why couldnt so many African-American people find their way out of their hoods and pull themselves up by their bootstraps? If I could speak English without using a single ebonic slang, why do others call themselves niggas? If I managed to make it through 23 years without contracting an STD or getting pregnant, why do black women have the highest statistical risk of disease and teenage motherhood? Daddy America looked to me to prove that he did something right. After all, one of his children turned out all right. The others must simply be problem kids.
I survived because I was never able to make America my home. I never watched my childhood neighborhood become whitened by helicopter lights in search of criminals or hipsters in search of apartments. No state, city or town has been a mother to me, cradling generations of my family near her bosom, to then be destroyed by unemployment or poverty. No school system had the time or opportunity to relegate me to remedial, rejected or unteachable. I never accepted the misogynistic, drug-infested, stripper-glamorizing, hip-hop culture that is force-fed to black youths through square tubes. I am not a product of a state of greatness but a byproduct of emptiness.
In that empty, dark space I found my blackness. I stripped myself of the labels, painfully peeling them off one by one. Beneath them there is a wounded, disfigured colored woman who refuses to be faceless anymore, remain hidden any longer. My face may be repulsive to some since it bears proof that race continues to be a problem.
Still, I count myself lucky. Where my open cuts remain, eventually scars will take their place and those scars will fade with time. For many, their wounds will never heal. Gunshots bore coin-size holes into their chests that will never close. Their chained wrists and ankles will continue to bruise. Their minds have collapsed under the weight of a failed education system.
I was already back in Trinidad and Tobago when the Trayvon Martin verdict came down last week. I wasnt surprised, but I was speechless. My hope is that it will force Americans to reexamine their post-racial beliefs. A friend of mine posted on my Facebook page, You made the right choice. I think I did, too.
I have found freedom by leaving the land of the free.
This whiny screed deserved it.
She’s a graduate of “New School”, a NYC radical Marxist college.
New School marxist?? No wonder we can't understand their idiotic point.
Thanks! I needed that.
To the positive, she is clearly intelligent and writes quite well, even compellingly. Her mother's efforts were not at all in vain.
To the negative, her rootlessness and detachment has progressed into alienation. She's still looking for love that she herself can't return, though, just pining away in the stunted manner of which she is capable, and has now internalized the antiquated black power radicalism of the college campus. The difficulties posed by an uncritical embrace, of the very same same people who rejected her much more so than any other identifiable racial group in this country, is lost upon her poor rudderless soul yet again.
She has an attachment disorder, a problem of emotion and distancing, an inadvertent lesson she also learned while along for the ride on her mother's Bedouin educational odyssey. There will be no improvement wherever she alights, as the problem exists within herself.
Maybe being “home” ancestrally speaking will help her see this. Home is good and she's never really had one. This psychological homelessness was not imposed upon her by America or Americans, however. She encountered the good, the not so good and the unintentionally ignorant here.
There is not any other, magical geographical location where this won't be encountered. She's verging upon recreating the wandering trek of her childhood in search of the unobtainable.
Sort of sad, really. She's beautiful and bright, but damaged.
Don’t let the doorknob get stuck in your ass!
Grow up, Tiffany. You’re acting like a wind-up toy.
She has square wheels.
By the way, Tiffanie - you will not be missed and take the rest of your scum sucking friends with you.
“Gee, Tiffanie, so sorry we failed you.”
Adults from Trinidad that I know despise American blacks and easily relate to whites.
She makes a few comments such that she seems close to getting past the white guilt plus black race warlord narrative of race relations and issues in the US, but ultimately she fails to exhibit the necessary level of independent thinking in order to do so.
“One friend of ours was talking to one of these nannies who told her it was totally incomprehensible to her that somebody WOULDNT take every free dime they could get from the government. She went down the list of goodies she was getting in a well, of course kind of manner. I guess its a cultural thing - - some cultures have absolutely no shame.”
Those people are the reason why abortion will always be legal in this country (even past the point of birth); nobody wants these “golden ticket” children, and you can only hope the hate-filled ones that survive the pregnancy meet a cop’s bullet before they’re ever in a position to kill you.
Why?
Because very few blacks in the US really want an honest discussion on race.
Which means our “wounded” heroine will be much more in a world of hurt as she discovers the discriminatory practices of Trinidad!
The woman was educated by this country, and I have difficulty in believing a lot of her examples of personal discrimination against her.
Seems to me her mamma was a hard worker and cared that her children be educated. Unfortunately for the mamma, her daughter did get educated - in an institution that taught her how to see herself as a ‘victim’ in every aspect of her self-segregated life.
Her expectations as a child/woman (too young to really have experienced womanhood in a meaningful way) in this country were not immediately met, so she trots on off back to magical Trinidad. I wonder if she’ll desert he college loan, too?
We, US Citizens, don’t need her. She can stay there for all I care. She has nothing to contribute except overly gauche imagery and disjointed thought transcription coupled with a black-victim-first attitude.
Just let us all know when you ind someplace better!
Just let us all know when you find someplace better!
“Tiffanie Drayton is a freelance writer and graduate of The New School University”.
How’s that for an example of being unloved and intolerance?
More pointless self-absorption.
Some of the worst Americans are 1st generation (though usually muslim). I largely blame the culture which denigrates this country, and pushes multiculturalism.
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