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I’m tired of suppressing myself to get along with white people
Salon ^ | Jan 19, 2015 | Priscilla Ward

Posted on 01/20/2015 10:02:13 AM PST by Second Amendment First

I met my new roommates on Craigslist. Two white, one Chinese. Together we represented Portland, Florida, China and (with me) D.C., and as we moved into our apartment in Bed-Stuy last fall, I was excited for the potential of cross-cultural exchange.

We had a get-to-know you powwow on the rooftop. We talked about ourselves, what brought us to New York. It was a warm evening in September, a couple of weeks after Michael Brown was shot, and somewhere in the mix I brought up Ferguson, hoping to spark a “conscious conversation.” Then it happened. The nightmarish response.

“What’s happening in Ferguson?” one of my white roommates asked. “I heard some kid got shot or something like that.”

The words clamored in my ears. How could he not know? Weren’t his Twitter, Instagram and Facebook feeds flooded with opinions and hashtags? I’m sure he meant nothing by his statement. We’re all ill-informed from time to time. But as I stood there, awkwardly not saying a word — while hundreds of words ran through my head — it was a reminder of how much I would have to suppress in order to get along with my white male roommates in our tiny four-bedroom apartment. This place I would call my home for a year.

It hasn’t always been like this for me. I’m a girl with a fro, raised in the place once known as “Chocolate City.” I grew up part of a black nuclear family, was home-schooled, then became part of of the mini-Historic Black College Experience at Temple University. After arriving in New York, I became an intern at Essence, a magazine so safe I likened my boss to an aunt. Those settings were as comfortable as my grandma’s cooking on any given Sunday.

I longed to crawl back to my tiny black universe. A place where I could create a sense of peace, identity and acceptance, a place where I could sit there, trying to untangle my fro and make sense of what it means to be an African-American woman in this country, rehashing our history while facing present pain. But life happens, and most of us can’t stay in our own utopias forever.

Now I faced a new reality. The brief conversation on the roof that hot September night lasted much longer in my head. I sent myself into a 200-year-old tizzy, reckoning with outdated ideas on race, tampering with prejudice and stereotypes. I became enslaved by my emotions.

I started to worry about all the other things I might have to explain: My hair, the food I eat, why I like Miles Davis, Nina Simone and Marvin Gaye. Maybe I should have considered it a teaching opportunity. But I wasn’t feeling generous. I was all twisted up inside, ablaze over racial dynamics and anxious what other minefields my roommate might stumble upon. I hoped he wouldn’t say something really ignorant, causing me to just snap and go off on an angry rant. Then I’d have to make my living situation salvageable by pocketing my black rage, putting on my best smile and telling him, it’s all love.

I wanted my home to be a refuge, a place where I could be wretched when I wanted, walk around in my bonnet, fry chicken and sing real loud to Aretha Franklin’s R-E-S-P-E-C-T. Suppressing my blackness every day is exhausting. Back at Essence, we used “sister girl language,” but since then, I’d faced tougher environments. I briefly worked at a (now-defunct) women’s fashion website, where I was one of the only black people. I would pitch ideas that mattered to me, like how to do natural hair, only to see them ignored, shuffled to the side or diluted like apple juice in order to be made palatable to mainstream “whiteness.”

I was tired of catering to everyone else’s comforts. How much of my day-to-day experiences as a black woman do I have to filter? I replace “hey girl” with boring hellos. I eat my leftover fried chicken outside the office. In order to have some common point of identifiable communication, I pretend to care about Taylor Swift, or white movie stars on their I’ve-lost-count remarriages and those other white pop stars I could not care less about. “Oh yeah, she’s cute,” I tell them. “Yeah, that’s cool.”

As summer turned to fall and then winter, I continued to be dumbfounded at the way, for some white people, the killing of Michael Brown just didn’t resonate. They didn’t feel the need to pay attention. I guess some white people do act “real vanilla” and only understand the realities of their own universe. Like running around drunk in Santa costumes in the name of SantaCon while “The Millions March NYC” launches in response to the non-indictment verdicts. That’s real.

In December, when the Eric Garner verdict came out, I became loaded down with more emotional baggage than I could conceal. I couldn’t take it anymore. I didn’t care if I wasn’t mixing with others. I found my little black planet at work. I went over to my black boss and talked real low and real brief about how disturbing this all was. I grabbed one of my home girls I work with. We took to the streets to protest right outside my job. I hoped no one would see me and think something misguided.

Walking home that night, I unleashed all my tears. I wanted to reach out and hug a black man. Before I arrived at my apartment, I dried off my face as though nothing happened. My white male roommate asked me about the protest; I gave him a non-detailed response. I said something like, “I’m really upset, but it was a good way for me to get those feelings out.” I couldn’t handle revealing too much; I wanted to avoid a loaded conversation. I took a deep breath and exhaled, closed my bedroom door, picked up the phone, and spoke in whispers about how racist these non-indictments were to my parents, and to my socially conscious white and black friends.

These non-indictments reiterated what I’m up against every single day: the unintentional ignorance of white people. But I was also aware of my willingness to put away my justified “black rage” in order to ensure that my interactions with white people remain comfortable. And the more I hid it, the more crazed I became. By the time my birthday rolled around, in December, I was cooped up in my bed, without an appetite, my fro needing a good deep conditioner. I was making myself sick.

I know this needs to change. I understand that for my own growth, and in order to forge honest relationships with white people I meet — whether it’s my roommates, or my co-workers, or anyone else — I need to reveal myself more. I need to start sharing about my history and my culture and how it plays out in my everyday life as an African American woman. I don’t want this rage to fester into bitterness, or infect the very close white friendships I already have. I don’t want to ignore my rage, but I don’t want to be controlled by it either. Concealing my emotions has made me feel like a ticking time bomb just waiting to go off.

Things are calm right now at the apartment. I don’t bring up these sorts of conversations. I don’t talk about what happens every 28 hours — a black person is killed. My white male roommate and I, we just don’t go there. It makes things easier. Instead, our conversations shuffle between our day-to-day experiences at work, dating and the nuances of the city. I keep those “forbidden” conversations behind closed doors, and even when I’m alone I speak in code. I don’t say “white.” I use “they” instead.

But I want to stop tiptoeing around race. My blackness is not a secret I have to keep. I want to be able to publicly express my honest admiration for being black, outside of my little black planet. I don’t want to feel marginalized, like I can’t speak hard truths about myself. Having honest and challenging conversations with people of another race will hopefully disrupt other people’s ignorance. But it will also help me. I need to stop with my mental temper tantrums. I want to get free.

Priscilla Ward is a writer whose work has been featured on Health.com, AfroPunk.com, Youngist.org, as well as in Essence and Ammo magazine. She's obsessed with natural hair, bell hooks, sandwiches and really cool art shows.You can find her tweeting about running one moment and being black the next @Macaronifro.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: crazywoman; hateful; loco; loon
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To: Second Amendment First

“... I might have to explain...why I like Miles Davis, Nina Simone and Marvin Gaye.”

Maybe there’s no magazines, TV or radio in their apartment.

Because about 95% of the media in the US is minority oriented.

BTW, Years ago I went to a Miles Davis concert in Cleveland. About 400 people there... only TWO black couples. Actually, most black people I speak to about this stuff don’t know who he was.

Also, I used to work with a black girl who didn’t know who Mahalia Jackson was or Jesse Norman, etc. No clue!!


81 posted on 01/20/2015 10:37:21 AM PST by SMARTY ("When you blame others, you give up your power to change." Robert Anthony)
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To: newnhdad

Nailed it.


82 posted on 01/20/2015 10:37:45 AM PST by Timber Rattler (Just say NO! to RINOS and the GOP-E)
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To: Second Amendment First

Diversity! You aren’t being diverse young lady.

Us evil white males are continuously brow beaten into submission about how we’re supposed to “celebrate cultural differences”, yet you BMW about reciprocation...pretty much what I expected from the “other side”.


83 posted on 01/20/2015 10:37:49 AM PST by SZonian (Throwing our allegiances to political parties in the long run gave away our liberty.)
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To: eyeamok
I think this chick made a video. I think this may be it.

LMAO!!!!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXi2j6WfTlI

84 posted on 01/20/2015 10:38:18 AM PST by Gargantua ("...Fee tine a mady..." ;^)
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To: Second Amendment First

She should just leave then.

If I was one of her room mates and had to hear Aretha Franklin screeching R E S P E CT and smelling fried chicken grease everyday, I’d have to just leave too, but then, that’s just me .


85 posted on 01/20/2015 10:38:30 AM PST by goldi
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To: Second Amendment First

She doesn’t need to suppress herself. She can open up to me - and I will open up to her. I’ll point out Mike Brown was a thug who tried to take a cop’s gun and died for it, just as I would if I acted like that. I’ll point out Gardner was obese and had heart problems, and white guys like that who resist arrest sometimes die of heart attacks too. I’ll tell her I like fried chicken, so she doesn’t need to “eat my leftover fried chicken outside the office” - just share.

I’ll tell her I’m tired of suppressing my anger that 3% of the population commits 50% of the murders. I’ll tell her she can “use “sister girl language””, but I’ll feel free not to understand - or care. Why? Because she has no claim on me that ANY human doesn’t have. She is JUST a human. She isn’t special because she is black.


86 posted on 01/20/2015 10:38:43 AM PST by Mr Rogers (Can you remember what America was like in 2004?)
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To: Second Amendment First
Hell, we all have to suppress ourselves to get along. If my wife and I didn't do it almost everyday, our marriage wouldn't have lasted a week. Almost didn't, in fact, as I managed not to suppress my wise-cracking mouth just after the honey moon,

42 years this coming September.

So my heart just bleeds for her. But I have an idea. She doesn't have to suppress herself, but can't ask her white acquaintances to, either. Make the deal right up-front with them.

Otherwise, I will not suppress myself around people that think I should be worried about their problems more than my own.

87 posted on 01/20/2015 10:38:49 AM PST by chesley (Obama -- Muslim or dhimmi? And does it matter?)
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To: Second Amendment First

“I, I, I, I, I, me, me, me, me, me...”


88 posted on 01/20/2015 10:38:49 AM PST by Albion Wilde (It is better to offend a human being than to offend God.)
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To: Second Amendment First

When her new roommate said “What’s happening in Ferguson?” I heard some kid got shot or something like that,” she missed the opportunity to take the conversation further. Instead, she stayed silent, chose to paint her roommate as a racist because he wasn’t overflowing with in-depth knowledge about the happenings in Ferguson. She was raised in a black city, home-schooled, went to a small black college, worked for Essence Magazine, and she looks down on whites because they don’t know or care to know what’s going on in a black community hundreds of miles away? Must be nice to have nothing to worry about in your life except what’s currently going on in the news. No mention of ever having any white friends back home. It appears to me she has nobody but her parents to blame for not ever having long-term interaction with whites while she was growing up. All she knows is what she was taught by her parents. She’s the one with the blinders on. How many white people murdered by blacks can she name? My guess is none.


89 posted on 01/20/2015 10:40:59 AM PST by mass55th (Courage is being scared to death - but saddling up anyway...John Wayne)
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To: Second Amendment First

Apparently she is annoyed that she has to suppress her inner bigot.


90 posted on 01/20/2015 10:43:47 AM PST by DoodleDawg
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To: Kirkwood

Just goes to show how ignorant this little girl is. She assumes everyone uses social media just like her. I’d hate to see what she thinks about people like me who could care less about any of that stuff.


91 posted on 01/20/2015 10:44:30 AM PST by mass55th (Courage is being scared to death - but saddling up anyway...John Wayne)
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To: Cubs Fan
I too am distrubed by this white person's comment.

My guess is the white roommate knew full well what was going on in Ferguson but was having to suppress himself since he knew he was being race-baited into a conflict. And even that set him up as the bad guy.

No win situation.

92 posted on 01/20/2015 10:45:29 AM PST by 5thGenTexan
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To: windsorknot

“Mother Africa beckons.”

I got a good laugh out of that. I will have to use it sometime.


93 posted on 01/20/2015 10:47:19 AM PST by Parley Baer
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To: Second Amendment First

“Don’t you know a young black man was killed?”
“Oh yeah. How.......unusual.”

Summary: Why are white people allowed to have their own opinions? Why don’t they agree with me?


94 posted on 01/20/2015 10:47:47 AM PST by AppyPappy (If you are not part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: Second Amendment First

If I was one of her room mates and had to hear Aretha Franklin constantly screeching R E S P E CT and smelling fried chicken grease everyday, I’d leave. It doesn’t take me long to find out I’m in a place where I’d rather not be.


95 posted on 01/20/2015 10:47:59 AM PST by goldi
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To: Second Amendment First
He, Priscilla. I heard some Jew people had a hard time in Poland. Ya' know anything about that?
96 posted on 01/20/2015 10:48:52 AM PST by pabianice (LINE)
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To: Second Amendment First

What a load of hog wash. We all have to find places where we feel comfortable. I’m uncomfortable around liberals - white and black alike - so I avoid them. You don’t like your white roommates then find some black ones. Easy.


97 posted on 01/20/2015 10:49:09 AM PST by KevinB (Barack Obama: Our first black, gay, Kenyan, Socialist, Muslim president!)
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To: marron

Ha. She describes a world with her own kind as “utopia”, we have more in common than she will ever know. May we both have our dreams realized some day.


98 posted on 01/20/2015 10:49:23 AM PST by The Toll
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To: Second Amendment First

Pathetic.

She hates herself and it’s everYone else’s fault?

.


99 posted on 01/20/2015 10:51:02 AM PST by Mears
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To: Second Amendment First

I would like to have a dollar for every “I” in that story...self-absorbed much?!


100 posted on 01/20/2015 10:52:59 AM PST by jacknhoo (Luke 12:51. Think ye, that I am come to give peace on earth? I tell you, no; but separation.)
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