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I’m not a sales assistant (Whiny rich black girl)
Salon.com ^ | Dec 10, 2014 | Stacey Patton

Posted on 12/12/2014 9:16:04 AM PST by Second Amendment First

My style of dress is classic preppy. My fashion sense evolved from my years spent in boarding school, where I was required to dress that way for class: khaki pants, fitted dress shirts, crewneck sweaters, and penny loafers. J.Crew and Ralph Lauren could have used our campus to shoot their advertisements.

Some of my Black friends say my style is “boo-zhee.” What can I say? I prefer quality over quantity, avoid crowded stores like H&M, the Gap, and Zara where you’ve got scores of copies of the same item. I love blazers—especially those with patches—and own too many to count. That, along with my passion for seersucker suits, herringbones, calfskin loafers, striped belts, colorful braces, and plaids make me a female dandy. I can’t help it: If I’m wearing an outfit that makes me feel comfortable and look good then I feel like I can do anything.

But shopping at high-end stores while Black, especially young and female, too often feels like navigating a minefield of assumptions, microaggressions, and thinly veiled hostility.

It usually starts as I step inside the store. “Hi, can I help you?” from sales reps with an over-penetrating gaze never really feels like a warm greeting. I’m prepared to be watched closely, or ignored when I actually do need assistance because they assume that I won’t—or can’t—purchase anything. When I ask to see an item, they quickly tell me the price, then pause for my reaction to confirm that I’m pre-qualified to see the merchandise. When that happens I usually give the sales rep my dead-fish-eye look that says: Did I ask you how much it was? I asked you if I could see the damn thing.

White shoppers, especially White women in their mid-to-late 50s and up often assume I’m there to serve them:

Miss, can you start me a fitting room for me, please.

Do you have this in a size 8?

Can you tell me the price on this?

Where is the bathroom?

Do you have kale chips?

Which aisle are the Goji berries in?

Can you throw this in the trash for me?

Excuse me, I’d like to speak with your manager.

Miss, you’re all out of the Ms. Meyers lemon verbena countertop spray. Can you check for more in the back?

What time do you close today?

Mind you, I’ve never worked a retail or service-sector job a day of my life.

Once I was in a Brooks Brothers in an airport in Chicago to purchase a sweater because I hadn’t dressed warmly enough. A woman standing in front of a set of shelves next to me asked me three times to “get her size.” I ignored her. Didn’t even make eye contact.

She huffed: “Miss, I asked you if you have this in my size.”

“I don’t work here, lady!” I snapped.

She shot me a look as if I had slapped her in the face, then glanced at my carry-on bag. Instead of apologizing, she turned up her nose, giggled, and said, “Oh, I thought you were just checking stock.”

I’ve found myself in Whole Foods with my groceries at the checkout line and been accused of taking a woman’s baby bok choy. Turns out, hers was still in the bottom corner of her cart.

As if those continuing incidents weren’t stressful enough, I recently encountered a painful symbol of America’s racial history in one of my favorite stores. On the day that the Staten Island grand jury announced that there’d be no indictment in the controversial police choking death of Eric Garner, my spirit was weighed down with sadness. I was still grieving the loss of Trayvon Martin, Mike Brown and the non-indictments in the Ezell Ford case and others.

I thought that shopping at Brooks Brothers would help soothe my pain, and that finding the right shirt or blazer would be good for my soul. Fortunately, nobody eyeballed me, followed me around or mistook me for “the help.” Things were looking promising as I made my way past tables of neatly folded cashmere cardigans and satin deco scarves. But then, I stumbled across a display with a small decorative bale of cotton stalks. In that instant, Brooks Brothers went from being a place for therapeutic shopping to a hostile environment. WTF? I thought to myself.

On a day when it was difficult just to be in predominantly White spaces, I was accosted by the sight of raw cotton. You may wonder: Why is this such a big deal? Because to African Americans, the sight of raw cotton is equivalent to a swastika. Without going into unproductive comparison of various holocausts and genocides, cotton is the icon that reminds us why our ancestors were snatched from their homeland, carted across the planet and subjected to centuries of nonstop horrors to build the infrastructure and wealth of this nation.

Non-Black people might look at the fluffy bolls and see something soft and pleasant. But we see endless fields of torture and misery. We are reminded of generations of backbreaking, soul-crushing unpaid labor, of the whips and stings of bare skin split open by whips and rubbed raw by chains. Of families torn asunder and nonstop rapes and the degradation and humiliation passed down in our DNA. We hear the Confederate anthem, “I Wish I Was in Dixie Land,” and it’s famed lyric:

Oh, I wish I was in the land of cotton,

Old times there are not forgotten …

Sure, we wear cotton, sit on it, sleep on it, and use it in everyday items just as everyone else does. But raw cotton is every bit as painful and offensive as those other visuals icons of white supremacy: the Confederate flag, burning crosses, KKK regalia, and lynched black bodies hanging from trees. It’s a form of the N-word that we can see and touch and smell.

So standing in Brooks Brothers, visions of the perfect shirt or blazer temporarily wiped from my mind, I realized that I needed to address this faux pas. I was calm and gracious as I pulled one of the workers aside, a nice White lady whose nametag said “Helen.”

“Excuse me,” I said to her. She smiled expectantly. I pointed at the cotton display and made a face as if it stunk to high heaven. “Can you all please stop decorating your stores with cotton?”

“Oh,” she said, appearing confused as she looked between me and the display. “What’s wrong with it? Why don’t you like it?”

“My ancestors in Virginia had to pick that,” I said wearily. “I don’t want to see it in my face while I’m shopping.” Just like I don’t like going to urban stores like G-Star Raw and being verbally assaulted by the n-word and misogynist and homophobic rap lyrics blasting from the speakers.

Helen’s eyebrows converged, the blood ran out of her face, and her entire spirit dropped down into her loafers. She looked at that cotton as if she was seeing it for the very first time. I stormed away from her and continued shopping. On the way out with my crisp new 100-percent cotton fitted shirt in hand, Helen smiled at me and said, “Thanks for shopping with us.”

I responded by nodding back at the cotton display and saying, in my haughty Maya Angelou tone of voice: “Make it go away, Helen.” I went by to check the next day, and the display was gone, evidence that Helen took a lesson from that teachable moment.

I’d had a similar experience when I lived in the Fort Greene section of Brooklyn as it was becoming gentrified. A new plant shop opened up on Myrtle Avenue next to a Black-owned barbershop. The shop was run by a 30-something White woman and man; let’s call them Ashton and Jenny.

Walking past, I made a note to stop in when I saw it: a huge tin bucket of cotton stalks displayed outside the store. Understand, despite gentrification, Black folks were still in the neighborhood and many of us lamented the overnight influx of White people and all that came with it – high rents and food prices, the entitlement, colonization, pricing out, amped up and overaggressive policing of people of color, and complaints about how loud and long our church services are. So I stood frozen, mouth gaping outside the shop next to a chalkboard listing prices of various kinds of plants. A Black man walking by popped his head in the doorway and yelled: “Y’all on some shit! You in a Black neighborhood sellin’ cotton. That’s that bullshit right here.”

Ashton seemed shaken. Jenny stood next to a pair of orchids looking like she had just been street-harassed.

I strolled into the store with a smile on my face. Ashton and Jenny looked cautiously hopeful, as if they expected me to assuage their emotions in the wake of the man’s cursing. I said in a tone that was both sharp and gentle, “The cotton is not such a good idea in this neighborhood. You’re right next door to a Black barbershop. Might want to bring the bucket inside and put it in the back. Out of sight.” Ashton swiftly did so.

After my recent Brooks Brothers incident, I wondered which other stores might include raw-cotton displays in their décor. The list that came up included Hobby Lobby, Michaels, Cracker Barrel, and Jo Ann Fabrics. When called to ask about this practice, only Hobby Lobby and Michael’s responded, both saying that they sell cotton stalks in their stores. The public-relations reps did not have definitive answers about the use of cotton in displays or décor.

It’s about much more than the cotton, which after all, is a pretty rare sight in most high-end stories. It’s about the assumptions, the attitudes, and the microaggressions that hang like a cloud over all Black shoppers, especially in businesses that seem incompatible with our demographics. The sheer energy of being watched, followed, spoken down to and taken for a faceless employee for no reason other than our Blackness, means we must brace ourselves for whatever indignities a simple shopping trip might bring our way.

It’s exhausting. We just want to move through the world like everyone else. We go to work and maintain our homes, shop for groceries and maybe indulge in a bit of retail therapy as a respite in tough times. We don’t want to be eyeballed, followed, mistaken for “the help,” or assumed to be thugs or thieves. And we damn sure don’t want a raw symbol of all the reasons we’re still suffering and struggling today to be decorating a space in which we are prepared to spend our hard-earned money.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: blackrage; cotton; hatespeech; ivorytower; rawcotton; whineylilbeotch
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Wow! That was a 1,825-word exercise in self-indulgence that loudly begs the question, “WTF were you shooting for, a shoulder to cry on?” I, for one, am having a very hard time feeling your privileged righteously indignant pain. While I concede the fact that those of us who shop while Black can, at times, be subjected to certain slights and ignorant assumptions, but I am most impressed by your absolute inability to appreciate the fact that you have enough financial resources to visit high-end clothing stores on a regular basis. Further, I am impressed by your ignorance of your own penchant for making uninformed assumptions about people you’ve never met.

. . . make me a female dandy.

I would never begrudge you your sartorial prowess or your desire to brag about being unduly devoted to style, neatness, and fashion, but I can’t ignore how adroitly you set yourself up as one who is most undeserving of pity from the very outset.

Some of my Black friends say my style is “boo-zhee.”

You were probably too busy doing a lap at one of your high-end haunts to bother looking the term up, but it is spelled bougie, which is a truncated form of the French word bourgeoisie, or did you miss that unit back in preppy school?

I can’t help it: If I’m wearing an outfit that makes me feel comfortable and look good then I feel like I can do anything.

Really? I’m sorry to hear that you can’t help buying way-too-expensive clothing to feel good, but I should think that such a hear-me-roar attitude would come from a clear sense of self-esteem, not some OCD-like sense of style. Am I to assume that your ability to do anything is inextricably linked to what you have on your back rather than what you have in your brain?

But shopping at high-end stores while Black, especially young and female, too often feels like navigating a minefield of assumptions, microaggressions, and thinly veiled hostility.

I don’t mean to spit hairs, but, then again, you’re splitting heads over balls of cotton so, here goes. For the sake of parallelism, you should pluralize your last noun – hostilities, especially since you have already suffered people's assumptions and microagressions (whatever they are).

When that happens I usually give the sales rep my dead-fish-eye look that says . . .

If you really want to imbue such situations with a modicum of the didactic, it would be better to avail yourself of these many, many teachable moments by opening your mouth and schooling those errant sales associates. But, I’ve heard that, rather than saying what is on your mind, nothing sends a message more emphatically than looking at someone like a dead fish.

Mind you, I’ve never worked a retail or service-sector job a day of my life.

Why make this such a point of salience? Could it be that you feel that you are too good to work in the service sector?

Non-Black people might look at the fluffy bolls and see something soft and pleasant. But we see endless fields of torture and misery. We are reminded of . . . blah, blah, blah, yadda, yadda, yadda.

This all-inclusive we of whom you speak would be . . .? My mother used to regale me with countless stories of her days picking cotton in rural Georgia (she was born in the early 20s), but I never saw her break out in a cold sweat or slip into a hydrophobic rage at the mere sight of raw cotton. Instead, she graduated from college with a BA and an MA so she would NOT have to ever pick cotton again. By your own submission, your readers know that you are young and black. So, whence the vivid memories of being raped, beaten, and having your flesh torn by chains? Could you be suffering from P-T-S-D or Post Traumatic Slavery Disorder? If so, I recommend that you seek out a good therapist post haste!

“My ancestors in Virginia had to pick that,” I said wearily.

So, was it also in Helen’s job description to telepathically familiarize herself with your family history upon your unanticipated arrival? Would it have been better for her to assume that all black Americans go Adrian-Monk crazy whenever they see fluffy balls of cotton? Or, are you simply taking umbrage at a perceived affront that is bursting at the seams with misguided assumptions about poor Helen’s role in some racial conspiracy? What was it about her demeanor or appearance that let you know that she was an inveterate racist, hell-bent on exploiting YOUR irrational aversion to raw cotton? You need to stop wallowing in your role as victim and start being the victor that you are. Some of us shop at lower-end stores out of frugality, and others shop "down" out of necessity. You, on the other hand, have the means to be a dandy denizen of the realm of all that is preppy who buys overpriced clothes to ease her pain. Others of your fellow world citizens can only afford to soothe their angst with a bar of chocolate or a bowl of mac & cheese. Still others have to get by on less than a dollar a day. So, stop with the fish eyes and use your expensive and presumably expansive academic past to teach those who would be educated and ignore those who do not warrant angry retorts. In other words, learn to pick your battles lest you lose the war, and stop telling yourself that we black Americans are joined at the hip by dint of a similar hue.

1 posted on 12/12/2014 9:16:04 AM PST by Second Amendment First
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To: Second Amendment First
I've had that happen to me. I didn't realize it was racism. I feel so cheated that I missed an opportunity to be offended.
2 posted on 12/12/2014 9:17:54 AM PST by E. Pluribus Unum (Any energy source that requires a subsidy is, by definition, "unsustainable.")
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To: Second Amendment First

Tribulation is going to be a major wakeup call to her kind.


3 posted on 12/12/2014 9:18:23 AM PST by jsanders2001
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To: Second Amendment First

So....okay, we been punked! Okay, okay....so what is this? An advertisement for that new show that’s a black ripoff of “Modern Family” or something?... BAPS or something? We wants to know......


4 posted on 12/12/2014 9:19:27 AM PST by Gaffer
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To: Second Amendment First

Presuming that she has a job is so demeaning.


5 posted on 12/12/2014 9:19:33 AM PST by E. Pluribus Unum (Any energy source that requires a subsidy is, by definition, "unsustainable.")
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To: Second Amendment First

“I thought that shopping at Brooks Brothers would help soothe my pain”

OFFS......


6 posted on 12/12/2014 9:21:04 AM PST by Lurker (Violence is rarely the answer. But when it is it is the only answer.)
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To: Second Amendment First
...too often feels like navigating a minefield of assumptions, microaggressions, and thinly veiled hostility.

Simple ignorance is NOT the same thing as "thinly veiled hostility".

Oh, and by the way, I purposely ignored your use of the term "microaggression" because it is a bullsh1t term invented by racist progressives to try to make us feel guilty for things we have not done.

7 posted on 12/12/2014 9:21:57 AM PST by WayneS (Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos.)
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To: Second Amendment First
Do you have kale chips?
Which aisle are the Goji berries in?

People who shop in stores where questions like that come up deserve whatever happens to them.

8 posted on 12/12/2014 9:22:24 AM PST by madprof98
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To: Second Amendment First

““My ancestors in Virginia had to pick that,” I said wearily. “

A neat trick since tobacco was the cash crop. Virginia isn’t part of the cotton belt.


9 posted on 12/12/2014 9:22:44 AM PST by Pelham (Treason, not just for Democrats anymore)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

As I recall Oprah pioneered this theme.


10 posted on 12/12/2014 9:23:01 AM PST by SWAMPSNIPER (The Second Amendment, a Matter of Fact, Not A Matter of Opinion)
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To: jsanders2001

Most won’t wake up though....they’ll just “take it” & get their due reward.


11 posted on 12/12/2014 9:23:26 AM PST by Roman_War_Criminal
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To: Second Amendment First
MICROAGRESSION!!!


So someome dressed in J-Crew style, as required by J-Crew associates, people mistake you for an associate. And I suppose all those times I'm in a hardware store in my Dickies or Carharrts and an elderly woman asks me for advice about something or to reach an item on a high shelf I am the victim of a horrid mysandry microagression too?
12 posted on 12/12/2014 9:24:21 AM PST by Organic Panic
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To: Second Amendment First
...at the checkout line and been accused of taking a woman’s baby bok choy.

Yikes. That will leave a mark.

13 posted on 12/12/2014 9:25:01 AM PST by Drango (A liberal's compassion is limited only by the size of someone else's wallet.)
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To: Second Amendment First

. . .and my ancestors died to free YOUR ancestors. Check, and mate. . . .


14 posted on 12/12/2014 9:25:42 AM PST by Salgak (Peace through Superior Firepower. . . .)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Upon rereading this, I have decided it is an outstanding example of satire.

There is NO way anyone can be that “racially sensitive”, even in overly-racially-sensitive New York.

By the way, WTF is “baby bok choy”?


15 posted on 12/12/2014 9:25:50 AM PST by WayneS (Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos.)
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To: Second Amendment First

16 posted on 12/12/2014 9:25:52 AM PST by RightGeek (FUBO and the donkey you rode in on)
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To: WayneS; E. Pluribus Unum

Sorry, this was suppose to be directed at “Post #1”.


17 posted on 12/12/2014 9:26:37 AM PST by WayneS (Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

What a tool. Good God.

I get approached all the time in stores, and my wife and I laugh about it.

It is because I wear a shirt and tie to work, and I am white.


18 posted on 12/12/2014 9:28:06 AM PST by rlmorel (The Media's Principles: Conflict must exist. Doesn't exist? Create it. Exists? Exacerbate it.)
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To: Second Amendment First

How typical is this young woman of Black America?

My guess is not very much - I mean she clearly has the disposable income and can enjoy the life that comes with it.

What I find off putting is her lack of gratitude and whining about all the imaginary insults and slights she has to endure throughout the day.

Many people in this country black and white, would be grateful to be in her shoes. And her paranoia about raw cotton is simply over the top.

This young woman needs help. I’ve never seen a less classy or more self-conceited person in my entire life. Here as always, its not about race, or even wealth.

Its the values, stupid. As well as character - the kinds of things no amount of money can buy.


19 posted on 12/12/2014 9:28:31 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
In today's slob culture (check out the 350# tattooed fatties at Wal-Mart. The one in the ripped dayglo spandex is stalking me!)anyone decently dressed in a department store will be assumed to be a member of the sales staff.

I feel the charming and well branded young Negress' pain. I would counsel her to tell everyone that what they are looking for, "is on the tenth floor behind the kayaks."

I also feel that this apparently well-prepped label snob would be well advised to become a Community Organizer and to open a training program to help looters from the 'hood make better choices.

20 posted on 12/12/2014 9:29:08 AM PST by Kenny Bunk (The fate of the Republic rests in the hands of the '15 -16 Congress. God help us.)
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