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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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To: Second Amendment First

Of the things that “happened” to her, each has happened to me as well.

I have had people approach me in stores and treat me like I worked there. If it was in my ability to help them - like if they asked where the changing rooms are - I would point them in the right direction, without pointing out that I didn’t work there. Why embarrass them needlessly? I never thought they were racist. Boy, was I ignorant!

I have had sales people treat me like I can’t afford what they are selling. I just thought they were rude. I never knew they were racist!

This woman is the epitome of what is wrong with Black Americans. If you see everything through the eyes of race, you will blame race for every slight, real or imagined. Certainly that will make you more and more hostile over time. A very sad way to go through life.


141 posted on 12/12/2014 12:51:46 PM PST by Crusher138 ("Then conquer we must, for our cause it is just")
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To: Second Amendment First

“I was strolling the aisle of Tractor Supply” dressed in my authentic oil and grass stained overalls wearing my muckers and carrying a roll of chicken wire when a voice spoke from behind me.” “You look like an able lass would you stand still while I check your teeth and feel your biceps?” Inwardly I groaned. Though I owned not a square yard of farm or ranchland and though I was wearing a very fetching cloche from knitted raw silk I was once again being mistaken for a plow girl for hire.

Darn these green organic farmers who eschewed the use of carbon based fuel, yet were because of their firm commitment to animal rights refused to use mule or horse to plow and till the rich bottom land. I was extremely offended. I don’t shop in low end local feed stores where any Billy Bob or Earlene makes themselves at home. I can afford the best and I shop accordingly. Sometimes only a pair of full length Ariat riding boots can ease the pain of my tormented soul.

I made a point of ignoring him by pretending a fascination with a post hole diggers (as if). Thankfully he left and I decided to continue my stroll around the store. Then I saw it. Right next to the Backyard Chicken Magazine rack. Pitchforks. I wanted to howl my outrage. Instead I immediately sought out a clerk. Grabbing her by her hand I dragged her over. “How dare you display these!!!. Why not just put them next to the lawn torches so everyone can know what they really mean!!?? At her confused look I snarled, “My ancestors were forced from their castle in Bergen County by angry villagers intent on driving them out because of fear and bigotry. I want these removed at once!!! Not waiting for her reply I stomped out of the store tears streaming down my face at the thought of such a display of not a mad scientist privilege.


142 posted on 12/12/2014 1:02:49 PM PST by lastchance (Credo.)
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To: The KG9 Kid

I hope she avoids the trauma of seeing rice, rice products and rice displays too.


143 posted on 12/12/2014 1:10:53 PM PST by Cecily
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To: a fool in paradise
are you SURE you didn't work there?

I have, in my employment career, worked a wide range of jobs from telemarketer to Chief Deputy Prosecuting Attorney. While some were crappier than others, I can't imagine a lower region of hell than working at a Wal Mart, if I were to measure that by the two Wal Marts closest to me. One is small town, where most of the clientele is the product of generations of selective inbreeding. The other is more urban, and after dark it resembles the Zombie Apocalypse.

I would remember working at a Wal Mart.

144 posted on 12/12/2014 1:52:41 PM PST by henkster (Do I really need a sarcasm tag?)
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To: henkster

;)


145 posted on 12/12/2014 1:59:26 PM PST by a fool in paradise (Shickl-Gruber's Big Lie gave us Hussein's Un-Affordable Care act (HUAC).)
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To: Second Amendment First

Narcissism trumps racism. Three words vs 2,000...


146 posted on 12/12/2014 4:08:36 PM PST by outofsalt ( If history teaches us anything it's that history rarely teaches us anything.)
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To: kalee

Yes, Virginia is too far north to be the Land of Cotton. Her ancestors in Virginia picked polyester.


147 posted on 12/12/2014 6:05:07 PM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: Second Amendment First

Snippy, I’d say.


148 posted on 12/12/2014 8:43:47 PM PST by gogeo (If you are Tea Party, the Republican Party does not want you.)
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To: madprof98

When I stand in a store or somewhere in public in a suit, people assume I’m the manager and start asking questions...am I supposed to be offended?


149 posted on 12/12/2014 8:45:16 PM PST by gogeo (If you are Tea Party, the Republican Party does not want you.)
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To: Gaffer

She’s auditioning for the new Bill Cosby show which will be so so bourgeois


150 posted on 12/12/2014 8:47:41 PM PST by dennisw (The first principle is to find out who you are then you can achieve anything -- Buddhist monk)
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To: Second Amendment First

Blacks sure don’t appreciate how good they have it here. When you are only 13% of the population there will be problems same as for any other minority. White have their own problems such a affirmative action which is nothing but discrimination against them for jobs, gov’t jobs and education. I doubt this spoiled brat ever thought about this. She prolly got all kinds of affirmative action scholarships where the only qualifications are that you are black and have a pulse

Living here Sure beats living in Africa. The gap is colossal between a black man living here or in Africa but blacks don’t appreciate it. So go back to Africa if you are so offended

Now if I told an Italian-American or Irish American who was complaining so much to GTFO and go back to Italy or Ireland...those nations are nice places to live that are civilized. The gap between life there and here is not that big. But the best thing that ever happened to today’s spoiled blacks was their slave ancestors being taken here.


151 posted on 12/12/2014 8:57:48 PM PST by dennisw (The first principle is to find out who you are then you can achieve anything -- Buddhist monk)
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To: Second Amendment First

Gotta be satire. No one could be this dense.


152 posted on 12/12/2014 9:07:28 PM PST by sitetest (If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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To: Red Badger

Bougie ( from someone who’s worked with some)

I know implicitly what Bougie is. Over the years I’ve worked with two bougie black coworkers. Both were basically nice, competent, caring people. That being said, I tended to avoid then when they’d start talking about their goodies.
The first one was male. Everything out of his mouth was what he had just bought. This is an actual conversation.
“ I bought a new Jeep. I was going to get a convertible, but I got the hardtop. It’s black, so it matches my BMW. I picked it up and stopped by the store to buy a new flat screen. I decided to put it in the back room. I now have 5 TVs in the house.”
This duded lived by HIMSELF. He had two kids. They lived in the projects with their ghetto mom that he’d divorced.
The female had a coworker stop by who deals in high end purses. She was showing one of my coworkers her new
designer purse.
“ I already had one in mocha. I had to get this one in cranberry.”
“How much you pay?”
“ The same for each one. Nine hundred dollars.”

It might sound dumb, as their family incomes are
much higher then mine, but I feel sorry for them. It must be torture to think that your worth is judged by what you’ve bought.


153 posted on 12/12/2014 9:23:14 PM PST by son of awcomeonnow ( HUD is the root of most evil)
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To: WayneS

because it is a bullsh1t term invented by racist progressives to try to make us feel guilty for things we have not done.

...and by the modern Catholic church, that decided it would be peachy keen for us to confess for’what I have failed to do’ at Mass...


154 posted on 12/21/2014 8:51:19 AM PST by IrishBrigade
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To: Second Amendment First
It usually starts as I step inside the store. “Hi, can I help you?”

The Horror!! The disrespect!!! The overt racism!!!!

155 posted on 12/21/2014 9:05:52 AM PST by southern rock
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