Sunday, December 27, 2009

"It's Complicated" -- a plausible romantic comedy for aging baby boomers

My spouse and I (we married three years ago at mid life -- a detail important to this review) trudged out in the snow and ice on Christmas Day to see "It's Complicated," a romantic comedy starring Meryl Streep, Alec Baldwin, and Steve Martin. And guess what, my fellow over-50 people, it works! It's plausible! It's hilarious! The characters are sexy in a way that fits for their age; they reveal their aging bodies in a way that is charming, self aware, and not at their expense (a chubby Baldwin, sagging eyelids on Streep). They make poor dating/sex decisions and get their hopes dashed and feelings hurt as a result, just like older people who are dating do. (Yes, some things never change. What is it about sex and romance that can make us lose our minds, whether we are 25 or 55?)

Even though the characters all had a lot more money than me, were heterosexual, their adult kids were well adjusted (actually a little too well adjusted), and everyone was white, I knew their story. As someone who got divorced, dated throughout her forties, and married in her 50s, I could envision myself in the story. "It's Complicated" is not some misguided fantasy about what's possible at mid-life and beyond; it's a very funny comedy about what -- indeed -- is possible.

The audience included mostly aging baby boomers like me, but there was a decent showing of under thirties, too. I wanted to ask them what they thought. Did they imagine their parents as they watched the movie? Was it plausible to them? My twenty-something kids have a hard time wrapping their arms around the fact that I still like to go out and dance, fall in love, have and like sex, and that it's not gross or over the hill -- it's simply living!




Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Rachel Maddow on "debunking a cure for homosexuality"

This is Rachel Maddow at her fiercest, finest! On her Dec. 8 show she discusses the terrifying bill in Uganda that would make homosexuality punishable by life in prison, and rips apart Richard Cohen and his claim that he can cure homosexuals. She draws a direct link between the Ugandan bill and the anti-gay hate mongering by Cohen and others. Watch!

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Great Blend of Watercolors playlists

I have had the honor to be asked twice to guest deejay on the amazing Dee Henry Williams' radio show, A Great Blend of Watercolors, on KFAI radio, 90.3 f.m., a treasure of a community radio station in Minneapolis. Getting to do this is very cool for three reasons:
  • Being a radio deejay is a life-long fantasy of mine.
  • Being asked to be on this long-standing program of "music of the diaspora" is an honor.
  • Dee and I are family, connected through my granddaughter.

So I've made two play lists for the show. Check them out!

Great Blend of Watercolors #1
1. Up Above My Head (I Hear Music In the Air), Ruthie Foster
2. For the Love of you, Isley Brothers
3. Sexual Healing, Max A Million
4. Funkin' for Jamaica, Tom Browne
5. Boogie Oogie Oogie (Single Version 2), A Taste of Honey
6. I Don't Know, Ruth Brown
7. God Bless the Child, Jill Scott
8. When We Get By, D'Angelo
9. Where Are We Going?, Marvin Gaye
10. Save Room, John Legend
11. I Wanna Thank Ya, Angie Stone & Snoop Dogg
12. The Rain, Jill Scott & Will Smith
13. It's Your Thing [Extended Remix], Jackson 5

Great Blend of Watercolors #2
1.Try, The Sounds Of Blackness
2. A Song for Mama, Boyz II Men
3. Ocean of Tears (Mama), Ruthie Foster
4. A Woman In Love, Joan Armatrading
5. Soul Food, Leela James
6. Testify!, Nedra Johnson
7. I Idolize You, Lizz Wright
8. Hard Times No One Knows, Ray Charles
9. You Really Got a Hold On Me, Gaye Adegbalola
10. Bone 2 Pic (Wit U), Angie Stone
11. Always In My Head, India.Arie
12. Love Like This, Faith Evans
13. The Sweetest Thing, The Refugee Camp All-Stars
14. Walking Away, Craig David
15. Raining Revolution, Arrested Development
16. Po' Folks, Nappy Roots
17. Empire State of Mind (feat. Alicia Keys), Jay-Z

Dory is my new hero but I can't remember why

Quick, before I forget...

My brain is slowly disintegrating, especially my memory. A good friend calls it CRS or "Can't Remember Shit." If you are with me on this, no need to explain the details. If you aren't there yet, really you don't want to know... but it's coming your way, some day -- one of the many gifts of aging.

But something special happened today. I was having a typical CRS moment at a staff meeting, stumbling through trying to remember the name of a staff member (not in attendance thankfully -- that happens, too), and his department, both which I should know well.

Then suddenly, in mid brain scramble, like an angel of mercy, Dory popped into my head and smiled sympathetically at me. (Dory, in case you've forgotten, is the plucky memory-disabled fish played by Ellen Degeneres in Finding Nemo).

So I stopped trying to remember anything, laughed and told the group, "Forgive me, my memory is shot. I'm just like Dora!" While, almost. I forget, but maybe. Wait! Now I remember! Dora is that little short kid I've written about in this blog before. Dory is my new hero for mid-life.

I think.

Letter to President Obama on Afghanistan

I don't typically write letters to the President. I know (from working in an elected official's office myself) that such a letter is screened by some 20-something aide, then cataloged and perhaps sent a stock response. But I felt compelled to send the following email letter yesterday, on the afternoon before the speech explaining to the public the "justification" for escalating the war in Afghanistan. Somewhere in my heart I thought if enough energy is sent to Obama, he would access his heart and change his mind.

December 1, 2009

President Obama,

I fiercely supported your campaign for president and believe you are the best president for our country and our world.

I believe in your brilliance and compassion and your political savvy. I believe in your vision for change. I believe you are a change maker.

You inherited a huge mess and are trying to make your way through some unbelievable burdens not of your doing. I think you are steering us toward a better tomorrow on almost every front.

That said, I feel compelled to write to say I do not support your decision to increase troops in Afghanistan. I say that having family members who are in harm's way, right now, serving there. I know there is a belief that more troops will make them safer and will make the outcome of the war better. I disagree. They will be safer if they come home. We can address issues of instability in that region without this escalation. If anyone can figure out how, I believe it can be you.

President Obama, we need our energy, our dollars, and our hearts focused on the crisis at home. We need better health care, better public education, more affordable housing, more jobs.

Please, listen to your heart, which I believe is the heart of a peacemaker, not a war maker.

I know you have weighed your options carefully, but do not go down in history as the person responsible for escalating this conflict.

Rather, I urge you to be the leader who stands in line with Ghandi, and with Martin Luther King Jr., and insists that change is possible through peaceful action.

Sincerely, and with respect,

Ann Freeman

I am also honored and humbled to be asked to post this letter on the blog for the Fellowship of Reconciliation.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Race and class divide is deep and wide amongst queer folks

The race and class divide amongst queer folks is wide and oh so deep, yet so often not talked about or addressed as one of THE issues in our community -- and it is.

So read this article, posted on The Griot! Here's an except:

Black working class gays left out of national gay rights agenda

When Obama delivered his "gay agenda" speech to the well-fed, well-scrubbed mostly white crowd of gays and lesbians at the Human Rights Campaign's Annual Dinner on Saturday night, anyone outside of the LGBT community would have assumed by the applause that the entire "gay community" is in agreement that access to serve in the military, gay marriage, and hate crimes legislation are our primary issues. But in reality, HRC's political agenda is not what I want. It does not speak for me, nor for the lives of many other black, poor and working class LGBT people.

Given the fact that we're in a long recession where hundreds of thousands of jobs have been lost in almost every month of 2009, and national unemployment numbers are at nearly 10 percent, why are we not talking about the issues that most people are concerned about - health care and the economy - and their impact on the LGBT community? The truth is, for many people at that dinner who could afford the cheapest ticket at $250 a plate, jobs and wages are of little concern.
Let's keep talking about our stuff, people!

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Update from post racial America, October edition

This in the news this week (in case you though you were in a time warp, this is indeed October 2009):

Interracial Couple Denied Marriage License By Louisiana Justice of the Peace

A couple of "lowlights" from the article:

A Louisiana justice of the peace said he refused to issue a marriage license to an interracial couple out of concern for any children the couple might have. Keith Bardwell, justice of the peace in Tangipahoa Parish, says it is his experience that most interracial marriages do not last long.

"I'm not a racist. I just don't believe in mixing the races that way," Bardwell told the Associated Press on Thursday. "I have piles and piles of black friends. They come to my home, I marry them, they use my bathroom. I treat them just like everyone else."

Hmm, last I checked, anti-miscegenation laws were banned in 1967 by Loving v Virginia.

Seriously?!

Related post: A "Loving" kind of day, or is it?

Related photo -- heh!:





>Hmmm. Last I checked, all miscegenation laws banned by Loving v Virginia in 1967. 42 years ago.

Related post: A "Loving" kind of day, or is it?

Related photo:

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Join the Too Big For My Skin Campaign

Check out this amazing video and note from Minneapolis's own amazing Desdamona and get involved!





Too Big For My Skin - The Campaign


Hello - I'm writing to invite you to be a part of The Too Big For My Skin Campaign. Many of you have probably heard my poem by the same name. But "Too Big for My Skin" is not just a poem. With the help of BFresh there is now a video for the poem. We are working to build an international campaign that invites people to leave responses to the video in the comment section or to submit their very own video response.

It's about positive body image, acceptance and strength.

It's about finding your voice and speaking.

Join us in the campaign.

More is to come! We are planning on expanding the project to include interviews with the women in the video. A group of women from Loyola University have already taken the title as their theme for the year.

The word is spreading. Send it along to others who you feel may benefit from seeing and hearing the words.

I am hoping to tour the video and do workshops in correlation with the video and well as performances and Q&A. So, if anyone is interested in this please contact me: desdamona4@aol.com

Thanks!
Desdamona

~~~~

About Desdamona

DESDAMONA is an international, award-winning artist; who has taken her distinct lyrics, sound and artistic stylings to audiences from Minnesota to Hawaii, from Puerto Rico to Germany; gracing some of Hip Hop and poetry’s most illustrious stages.

ALONGSIDE: Desdamona has had the pleasure of opening up for distinguished artists including Wyclef Jean, GURU, Bahamadia, Zap Mama, Black Uhuru/Sly & Robbie, Saul Williams, Ursula Rucker and Rhymesayers Artists. She has also shared the stage with other influential Hip Hop artists including Canada’s Eternia and bgirl Rockafella.

EVENTS & TOURS: Desdamona is one of the founders of B Girl Be, the first international festival, which celebrates women in Hip Hop. She was a featured performer at the We B*Girlz Festival in Berlin, Germany (2008), the SheRock Festival (2008), and was a Minnesota Music Awards featured performer (2005). Desdamona won the award for Best Spoken Word Artist from the MN Music Awards five consecutive years. Desdamona was a featured artist on the SummerJam Tour (2007) with legendary, Grammy Award winning artists Sly & Robbie. She and beatbox partner Carnage (as Ill Chemistry) also headlined The 2nd Nature Tour (2008).

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

No one puts baby in the corner

A quote to live by, a song to love, a dance to remember.


It is also so funny to remember what was "dirty dancing" in 1987...


And look how much my wuzband and me look like Johnny and Baby.


And then there's this. Oh so timely and hilarious!



Thursday, September 10, 2009

Ellen!

This is why I love Ellen Degeneres. She is my middle aged white girl dancing diva role model! Go Ellen Go Ellen Go Ellen!




Friday, August 21, 2009

Blaog -- by Bao Phi


UPDATE DEC 27, 2011: This year Bao Phi published his first book of poetry, Sông I Sing.” It is off the chain good. Get it today! 


Here is an excerpt of a review from the New York Times:
In this strong and angry work of what he calls refugeography, Bao Phi, who has been a performance poet since 1991, wrestles with immigration, class and race in America at sidewalk level.
~~~~~

"Blaog" is a new blog in the Star Tribune's "Your voices" by Bao Phi, an amazing performance artist and poet from Minneapolis. He is also an incredibly kind and generous person who speaks a fierce and lovely truth. Go to this blog and read it!!!!!

A little more about Bao: Bao Phi has been a performance poet since 1991. A two-time Minnesota Grand Slam champion and a National Poetry Slam finalist, Bao Phi has appeared on HBO Presents Russell Simmons Def Poetry, and a poem of his appeared in the 2006 Best American Poetry anthology.

You MUST go read the whole blog, but a couple of excerpts are below:
As a three month old baby, I spent an evening in my mother’s arms at Tan Son Nhat as bombs fell for hours and hours, shaking the dark bomb shelter around us. My family was huddled with many other Viets as the airport was shelled all night long, trying to wait out the bombardment, waiting for our chance to escape.
With the aid of Lutheran sponsors we tropical people settled in Phillips in South Minneapolis, unprepared for a life of snow and English speakers and hot dish made with hamburger meat and little tater tots on top. When we came as the first wave of Southeast Asian refugees, local papers ran articles about how we kidnapped pets in order to eat them, how Viet gangsters had taken over Coffman Union’s basement and plotted murders over the pool tables and would kill you for looking at one of ‘our women’....

....It’s over 30 years later, and not much has changed. My parents still live in that house, two blocks from the Little Earth projects. People are still saying Asians eat cats and dogs, except now it’s plastered all over billboards for certain wealthy white eateries and they’re winning national advertising awards for their blatant racism...

...Understand that, at this point in my life, I feel more privileged than I ever have. My partner and I bought a small, fixer-upper house in Powderhorn. She and I are not rich but we are not starving, and I have a steady job which I absolutely love...

...One of the insidious benefits of being a person of color raised in Minnesota is to be acutely aware of how race impacts you on several different levels...

...Being an Asian American writer, writing about Asian American issues, is to risk going unread. But maybe that’s not the point. Maybe the point is, we need to exist.
Bao, Thank you for continuing to put your voice into the universe!


Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Warrior Girl

Music feeds the soul. I made this mix for a special Warrior Girl. Music for strength, courage, and healing.

1. Say Hey (I Love You) [feat. Cherine Anderson], Michael Franti & Spearhead
2. Salala, Angélique Kidjo Feat. Peter Gabriel
3. Bandy Bandy (Featuring Erykah Badu),Zap Mama & Erykah Badu
4. Sweet Melody, Zap Mama
5. Up Above My Head (I Hear Music In the Air), Ruthie Foster
6. I Believe I Can Fly, Etta James
7. Oh Happy Day, Etta James
8. Melodies from Heaven, Kirk Franklin
9. Lean On Me, Kirk Franklin
10. Three Little Birds, Bob Marley & The Wailers
11. Rivers of Babylon, The Melodians
12. Morning Has Broken, Cat Stevens
13. Just The Two Of Us, Bill Withers
14. Blackbird, Dionne Farris
15. Skylark, Cassandra Wilson
16. Somewhere Over the Rainbow / What a Wonderful World, Israel Kamakawiwo'ole
17. God Bless the Child, Jill Scott
18. Brown Eyed Girl, Van Morrison
19. My Girl, The Spinners

Most of mix can be found on iTunes here.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Say Hey and I love you

Wherever you are, whatever sorrows or worries lie in your heart, whatever your struggle, this video, this music will bring a smile to your face and beats to move your body closer to the light. This was sent to me during a time of struggle from my friend Lynette. Now I share it with you. Peace, love, and light.

Michael Franti and Spearhead : Say Hey Music Video

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Summer blogging break

I live on the northern tundra in the upper Midwest. This means our summers are short and sweet. I love the sun, the heat, the long daylight hours. I am outside whenever possible and not doing many other things, including blogging. For example:

Vacation days: kite flying at the beach


I'll be back. Promise. The summers are short here.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Buying Home: The Story the Story the Story


I am super excited to present the first guest post on this blog, by Sherry Quan Lee! This piece is a must read about the complex issues of race, class, gender, and privilege. Ann


Sherry Quan Lee

Note from author: I started to write an essay about my experience buying a foreclosed townhome. A second story wanted to appear, one about race. Does everything always have to be about race? The second story is in caps. Then, someone wrote to tell me about her experience buying a foreclosed home in North Minneapolis. Yet another story wanted visibility. The letter to Dear Caucasian (in italics) is not a replica of any sent letter to any particular person, but hopefully gets to the heart of the difference of understanding and of experience. It is difficult for me to write a story without including factors of race, class, gender, age, etc., whether I want to or not. Thus, the following story may feel disjointed and be unwieldy to read, but that’s the point.


Buying Home: The Story the Story the Story


I am a single woman, with a low/average income, student loans in forbearance, a bankruptcy on my credit report, no savings account, and no down payment; however, I just experienced buying a home. Foolish, lucky, naïve, and determined, I now live in another new neighborhood.


Nomad. For forty-two years, since I left my childhood home at the age of nineteen, I’ve moved at least fifty times. In the past eight years, I moved eight times. I moved because I had to. I moved because I wanted to. I moved because someone else wanted me to. I moved for love. I moved to get away from love. I moved because the moon was full and I was foolhardy. My most recent move, moved me, surprised me, challenged my bravado. Told me some things are not true, some things are.


§


THE STORY I WASN’T GOING TO TELL, THE STORY I DIDN’T THINK WAS PART OF THIS STORY IS TRYING TO BE HEARD.


§


I didn’t plan to take advantage of low interest rates, and foreclosed homes. My plan was to take control of my life. Stop whining about relationships, renting, winter—any number of, perhaps, unrelated things. It was time, I thought, to plan my future. An ad for a senior high rise, enticed me. There was something seductive about the neighborhood, and about the building itself. It’s subtle curve. How it leaned into the sky. How the price was—affordable. However, by the time I was, much to my surprise, pre-approved for a loan, the affordable unit was sold. Other units in the building I couldn’t afford, especially the remodeled unit with a tenth floor view of star filled nights.


§


THE STORY I AM TRYING TO AVOID IS REMINESCENT OF TOO MANY STORIES. THE ROOMMATE WHO LOCKED ME OUT OF OUR APARTMENT WHEN I TOLD HER I WAS BLACK. THE APARTMENT THAT WAS SUDDENLY UNAVAILABLE WHEN I SHOWED UP IN PERSON. THE ALL WHITE NEIGHBORHOOD I GREW UP IN. NEIGHBORS WITH GUNS. THE LUTHERAN CHURCH I WAS A MEMBER OF (TAUGHT SUNDAY SCHOOL AT, SANG IN THE CHOIR, AND EDITED THE NEWSLETTER) THAT SAID NO BLACK PEOPLE WERE WELCOME.


§


I had no money and not the best credit, but I was paying $720 for rent in an unkempt, noisy apartment building with no heat or too much heat, broken windows, mold, and any number of annoying problems. I had been feeling sorry for myself for being such a loser: no partner, no home, no career, and no extra $s. I would forgo the penthouse, exercise rooms, stainless steel appliances, and a short commute to work for anything that came with an affordable mortgage.


§


DID IT MATTER WHO MY NEIGHBORS WERE? SO WHAT IF THEY WERE ALL WHITE. IF THEY DIDN’T LIKE ME, SO WHAT? IT WAS TIME I NO LONGER WORRIED ABOUT OTHER PEOPLE’S REACTIONS TO ME.


§


Dear C (Caucasian),

Thank you for sending me your new home announcement. Congratulations on purchasing a new home. Yes, I am sure you are thrilled that you were able to buy a low cost home, and given thousands of dollars extra to live in North Minneapolis, even though you had a suitable down payment. And, yes, I am sure you are happy that you will be living in a diverse neighborhood (wherever I live, the neighborhood is more diverse by one person).


§


I found a realtor on the World Wide Web. He recommended a mortgage broker: if anyone can get you a mortgage, this man could. I was pre-approved—for less than some people still pay for cars. Tears of joy. I was going to own a home.


§


C, do you want to know why your happiness makes me angry? As a white person you can use your unearned privilege to move anywhere you want and expect to be safe, and even welcome without giving it any or much thought.


§


WAS I WORRIED ABOUT HOW NEIGHBORS WOULD REACT TO ME, OR WAS I WORRIED ABOUT HOW I WOULD REACT TO THEM?


§


When I was a girl, my aunt lived in North Minneapolis in the projects—how much choice did she have? Another aunt moved into the, then, Jewish neighborhood in North Minneapolis—was she safe or welcomed?


§


Silly me. I knew I would need a down payment, but I didn’t bother to calculate how much, or other expenses. (The first time I dropped out of college it was because I was going to fail math.) I can’t believe I asked a friend to gift me the down payment, but asking is what we sometimes have to do to take control of our lives, and it doesn’t have to be about shame.


§


HE GAVE ME MONEY IF I ASKED FOR IT, BEGGING. I GAVE HIM………. HIS FATHER HELPED BUY US A HOME, BUT I HAD TO PRETEND I WASN’T BLACK………HE DIVORCED ME TO MARRY A WHITE WOMAN WITH A FATHER……..MY CHINESE FATHER LEFT HOME. HE AND HIS NEW WHITE WIFE AND THEIR KIDS MOVED NEXT DOOR TO MY BLACK RELATIVES IN CAMDEN WHO WEREN’T ALLOWED TO VISIT MY MOM, THEIR SISTER, IN OUR NEIGHBORHOOD, OUR HOUSE, BECAUSE THEY WERE BLACK AND WE WERE PASSING FOR WHITE.


§


Yes, Dear C, you are correct, it was a long time ago that my aunts lived in North Minneapolis, but don't fool yourself into thinking racism has disappeared. Just the other day three Black men were stabbed because the white man that stabbed them didn't like Black people. Just the other day, I saw KKK painted in life-size letters across a garage in a Minneapolis suburb.


§


Unfortunately, the bottom line isn’t always the bottom line. There are half truths and avoidances. Extra expenses included a pre-purchase house inspection, and fees and interest I only half understood. And, boxes, and bubble wrap, and movers--$10/hr and pizza and beer. And locks, and window coverings, and cleaning supplies, and painters—$10/hr and pizza and beer.


§


I GREW UP POOR. BEFORE GOVERNMENT CHEESE THERE WAS CANNED MEAT AND POWDERED MILK. WAITING IN LONG LINES. AID FOR FAMILIES OF DEPENDENT CHILDREN (AFDC). SALVATION ARMY FOOD BASKETS AT THANKSGIVING. MOTHER WAS A DIVORCED SINGLE-PARENT ( FIVE CHILDREN) WITH AN EIGHTH GRADE EDUCATION, YET SHE OWNED A HOME. I AM COLLEGE EDUCATED WITH A GRADUATE DEGREE. I OWN NOTHING, BUT A BIT OF SHAME (AND SOME REALLY GOOD BOOKS). IS IT TRUE THE DOLLAR IS WORTH LESS TODAY THAN FORTY-FIVE YEARS AGO?


§


The process of finding a home, putting in an offer, and closing, took three months. My realtor, mortgage broker, and closer were patient and mostly calm—unlike me--the frustrated, impatient, nervous, sometimes angry buyer. I was in control of some things. Checking the MLS listings daily, telling the realtor which townhomes I wanted to see. Most things I had no control over: where properties I could afford were located, the condition of the properties I could afford—and if they were FHA approved.


§


WHEN I FOUND A HOME I COULD AFFORD IN A NEIGHBORHOOD I WASN’T FAMILIAR WITH I ASKED MYSELF WHO LIVES HERE—ANY PEOPLE OF COLOR, ANY GLBT, ANY WRITERS, ANY ACTIVISTS, ANY GRANDMOTHERS, ANY ………….. WITH NO TIME FOR ANSWERS, I MADE AN OFFER, WHICH WAS ACCEPTED. I KEPT TELLING MYSELF, IF THEY DON’T LIKE ME IT’S THEIR PROBLEM. IF THEY DON’T LIKE ME, IT’S THEIR PROBLEM. I KEPT TELLING MYSELF I WAS NOT AFRAID.


§


In response to your proclaimed happiness, I am writing this letter to tell you about my experience. I too recently moved. IT WAS NEVER NOT ON MY MIND IF I WOULD BE WELCOME and IF I WOULD BE SAFE in my new community.


§


Both the realtor and the inspector were surprised by the condition of the foreclosed home I purchased. It was not trashed. Apparently it had been tidied by Fanny Mae. The appliances weren’t missing. The walls weren’t bashed in. Although the property sat empty for a year, there were few cobwebs, no mouse turds, not a stain on the carpet. Okay, there was/is that icky smell of dog pee.


§

The townhome I bought is what I could afford. What I could afford wasn’t much. No swimming pool, no gym, no balcony, no flowers, no picnic benches.(No grass to cut, no snow to shovel.) The furnace is twenty-five years old. The dryer doesn’t work. The dishwasher is covered with hard water stains. The front door handle is missing, as well as a window screen. Next door, another foreclosed property sits empty. What isn’t much, is much more than I expected—and I am thankful for my new home (as well as truly sad for someone else’s misfortune).

§


FEAR IS THE FEELING SUNK INTO MY BONES, HISTORY CLINGING TO THE PERSON I AM. MORE PREVALENT THAN FEAR, ANGER. ANGER, WHICH EVERYDAY I TRY TO TRANSFORM INTO LIVING, INTO LOVE.


§

I have made one friend where I live. I have made a couple of enemies. Others, pay me no mind. Not all people in my neighborhood are white, though according to the 2000 census, most were. I look forward to the next census.

§

MY MOTHER IS HERE, I CAN HEAR HER, AND MY AUNT GRACE AND MY AUNT MARION. THEY ARE SAYING IT IS FORTY-FIVE YEARS LATER. I SEE THEM. THEY ARE SHAKING THEIR HEADS.


§


Dear C, do you really think that I would believe you? How could you honestly say you had no other options?


Sincerely,


A woman who didn’t learn about oppression from a book.


§


I await my tax credit. I have some gifting to do and some carpet to buy.


~~~~


SHERRY QUAN LEE, author of Chinese Blackbird, 2002 (“an underground favorite”) (Asian American Renaissance, 2002, reprinted Loving Healing Press, 2008), approaches writing as a community resource and as culturally based art of an ordinary everyday practical aesthetic. She is a honorary Distinguished Alumni of North Hennepin Community College. She earned her MFA in Creative Writing at the University of Minnesota in 1996. Recently retired from ten years of teaching Creative Writing at Metropolitan State University, Saint Paul, Minnesota, Quan Lee facilitates community workshops at Intermedia Arts/SASE: The Write Place, and elsewhere. Quan Lee was a first year participant of Cave Canem. Previously, she curated cabaret performances and edited journal anthologies for the Asian American Renaissance.


Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Another hair story: Fiercely free or unkempt?


Renee of Womanist Musings recently posted a piece, Nappy Hair In the Jolie-Pitt World, in response to negative responses about the condition of Angelina Jolie's daughter's hair in this photo (Zahara). I think the post is really interesting as are the comments.

In her post, Renee takes exception with comments from others about Jolie needing to learn how to take better care of her daughter's hair:
While braids and bows are certainly one way to treat hair, again why is it so unacceptable that Zahara is allowed to have her hair flow freely?

One of the first thing a little Black girl learns is that unlike White children, her hair is automatically assumed to be a problem to be managed. Rarely are we taught to marvel at the gravity defying shapes that it can take on and before we can articulate any coherent feelings on the matter, the world has already encouraged us to internalize a negative concept of Black womanhood.

I know that as a white mother who raised a black daughter, I was judged -- especially by black women -- on my fitness as a mother based on the condition of my daughter's hair. People had no problem coming up to me and telling me her hair was a mess and how to fix it. Frankly, they were usually right. I didn't take in those criticisms as internalized hatred of their hair or my daughter's. Until I learned how to better care for my daughter's hair, I had allowed it to be dry, broken, unkempt. Learning how to braid, twist, oil and comb her hair was not being anti natural hair; it was, for me, about love for her and respect for her cultural identity.

My granddaughter is growing up in a time when natural hair styles are embraced for kids and adults alike (not so true when her mom was small). She and many of the kids at her day care proudly sport Afro puffs, 'fros, locks, and more. I love this freedom of expression. But when I head to that day care at the end of a day, I can see clearly see among the kids a difference between a lovingly kept head of natural hair, a natural style that's gone messy by the end of a day of play, and hair that is dry, broken, matted, and neglected.

So while I agree with everything Renee says about loving and claiming natural hair, when I look at this picture of Zahara, I don't see an example of natural hair embraced for its fierce curls and kinks. I see hair that needs some TLC, regardless of if her mother is white or not.

What's your take?

Related post by me on this topic: (Nappy) Hair Notes

UPDATE 8/10:
I have listened to the people who chose to post their comments or email me and I have come to realize I need to evolve. My "white mom/brown child" hair issues were born 25 years ago and times have changed. It's time for me to catch up! As a friend would say, "Let it 'fro!"

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Post Racial America: Black kids booted from swimming pool

Today cries of pure rage could be heard across the Blogosphere and Twitterville when folks began to post and share this dispatch from "Post-Racial America"

Pool Boots Kids Who Might "Change the Complexion"

More than 60 campers from Northeast Philadelphia were turned away from a private swim club and left to wonder if their race was the reason.

"I heard this lady, she was like, 'Uh, what are all these black kids doing here?' She's like, 'I'm scared they might do something to my child,'" said camper Dymire Baylor.

The Creative Steps Day Camp paid more than $1900 to The Valley Swim Club. The Valley Swim Club is a private club that advertises open membership. But the campers' first visit to the pool suggested otherwise.

"When the minority children got in the pool all of the Caucasian children immediately exited the pool," Horace Gibson, parent of a day camp child, wrote in an email. "The pool attendants came and told the black children that they did not allow minorities in the club and needed the children to leave immediately..."

"They just kicked us out. And we were about to go. Had our swim things and everything," said camper Simer Burwell.

The explanation they got was either dishearteningly honest or poorly worded.

"There was concern that a lot of kids would change the complexion … and the atmosphere of the club," John Duesler, President of The Valley Swim Club said in a statement.
So angry you could scream? Me, too. But what fuels a deeper rage is the harsh reality that if you are a black child in America, this is your story, too, and some version of it has happened or will happen to you. The election of Barack Obama does not and will not protect you. The illusion of a post-racial reality is dangerous to your well-being.

Here's what my friend Quiana said about that truth: "A black president is not the same as the end of racism...We have to worry about the kids, white, black and those who live somewhere in the middle... messages about body, skin and self are painfully branded in moments like this. No matter what the club does, I hope all these kids have a caring adult who can support them to learn and heal instead of hurt and grow hard."

I remember with clear precision the first time my daughter was on receiving end of an overtly racist remark/action from an adult -- she was three. A mother on our block told her she couldn't come in their house because she was black and left her screaming in the front yard two doors down from me as the other children went inside. One of the children she let in was a very light biracial girl who must have "passed" to this woman. I ran and grabbed my child, not knowing why she was screaming. As soon as I knew (she told me), I raced and got that other girl's mom who snatched her child right up out of the that house. Our daughters had played like neighbor kids do on the sidewalks with the two little white girls from that home without prior incident. Who knew?

My son was five, in kindergarten, the first time he experienced the sting of a racist taunt from a classmate (I don't think I need to explain that one further). I will say it was a very racially mixed school that praised itself for its diversity and welcoming environment.

As a young, naive white parent I was shocked at each of those experiences. My Black friends just shook their heads and said to me, "So what did you expect?" They understood what I still needed to learn -- that it was just the beginning.

That was the 80s. Now here we are, a generation later, and even after we elect a Black man President of the United States, for some kids in a pool in Philadelphia, it's the same old same old same old.

Related posts

Womanist Musings: Black Kids Change the Complexion of a Pool

Harriet's Daughter: The Longer I live in post-racial America

Pam's House Blend: Black kids booted from Philly club's 'whites only' pool

Jack and Jill Politics: 60 Black Kids Booted from Philly Pool for Being Black


Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Michael and the Mirror

I read the best post yet on Michael Jackson today. The best because it is full of humanity and understanding for this complex man. The writer, Carmen Van Kerckhove, looks at Jackson through her heart and through her sharply focused lens on the complexities of race and identity.

The post, which was originally posted at cnn.com is also on
Van Kerckhove's Web site. I'm linking to it here with permission:

Michael Jackson on race -- and who he saw in the mirror


Be sure to read the whole post, but here are a couple of excerpts:

Race is never simple, especially when it comes to a complex artist like Michael Jackson...

...A rush to judgment accusing Michael Jackson of being a race traitor is unfair to the complexity of his life. Unless we take sufficient time to develop an understanding and empathy for his story, it’s easy to make simplistic claims or assumptions about why he wanted to change his appearance.

From what I have been able to discover, Michael was not trying to erase his race; he was trying to get comfortable with his face. He wanted, as we all do, to love the man in the mirror. Why he never did, we’ll never know...
Carmen Van Kerckhove is co-founder and president of New Demographic, a diversity education firm. She also blogs at Racialicious and Anti-Racist Parent, and you can follow her on Twitter.

Here is a 2002 video clip that shows what Michael Jackson might have looked like now without any plastic surgery. It also shows his changing face over the years and has some sympathetic commentary about the man in the mirror:


BET Awards and Racist Tweets in Twitterville

Jamie Foxx's Michael Jackson tribute -- "Beat It" on BET Awards
(video at bottom of post)


One of the things I love about Twitter is following other people's live tweets during programs I am watching on TV. It's one big conversation happening out there and good entertainment for comments on all kinds of things going on. Twitter has also become the best source for news, especially if you are following media folks and regular folk all commenting on the same stuff.

So on Sunday night, I tuned into Twitter as I tuned into the BET Awards, which promised to be a tribute to Michael Jackson. It was fun to watch and tweet. I weighed in on the good, the bad, and the ugly of the evening -- along with others I follow. I used #BET Awards (hastags allow you to follow others tweeting on a topic) to check in on what folks all across Twitterville had to say. I was pretty excited to see SO many African American folks tweeting and weighing in, and that the performers and the show itself were all trending for the night.

But the next morning, as I reviewed my BET tweets, I had a bad feeling in my stomach. While I hadn't said anything super negative about the show or performances, I had taken a few shots. Once again, as a white person who lives in a brown family, I found myself on that nebulous bridge between black and white. Taken out of the context of my life, my tweets as a whitegirl seemed out of school and borderline offensive. Examples: "My daughter and I are texting each other about the BET Awards. Jamie Foxx is acting stupid drunk." Or, "Keith Sweat is definitely not old school and he's not that good, either."

So I took them all down.

It reminded me of how different it feels to watch a Tyler Perry movie, for example, in a theater full of white people vs a theater full of black folks. The jokes FEEL different. Watching with a white audience feels like white people laughing at black people, stereotypes reinforcing their (our) misguided reality, etc. When it's black folks, it feels like people having a good time laughing together, getting the jokes on a whole different level, good fun.

And there's this: The morning after the awards, @humanitycritic, who I follow on Twitter and is funny as hell with a razor sharp mind, posted this: "I'm now convinced that this Boondocks portrayal of BET is close to reality - http://tinyurl.com/9adckx"

The clip is hilarious and captures the ongoing debate among some black folks about whether BET sucks or not. I love love the Boondocks, and I agree with the complaints about BET, but I didn't pass the clip along. Why? Watch it. First through the lens of a black person, then through the lens of a white person. My point exactly. Not my place to make the joke.

Back to Twitter and the BET Awards. After I had taken my tweets down, I learned that the BET trending topics on Twitter had spawned some very ugly, racist tweets by white folks offended that black folks were "invading" Twitter and worse.

To get a really good sense of what happened, read these two great posts:

The first, posted by Renee on Womanist Musings: OOPS The Blacks Are Chattering On Twitter

The second, posted by Carmen Dixon on Black Voices: Twitter, BET Awards and Racism

Needless to say, while my tweets were not racist, I am so glad I listened to my gut and deleted them. My opinions were valid, and mine, but on a public feed on Twitter, they were part of an ugly, slippery slope. And the last thing I ever want to do is fuel that fire.

Michael Jackson tribute performance -- BET Awards


Monday, June 29, 2009

I love this rant about age bias and hotness -- from a young guy!

I follow @thinblackduke aka Kevin on Twitter. He blogs at Shadow of the Bridge and A Slant Truth. He's great on any topic, but I had to share this one today. Great to find an ally in a young guy! He gets what many people don't -- that when people say to me (or any other middle age/older woman), "I can't believe you are 53. No way do you look that old," it is not a compliment, even if it is well meaning. Translation: "No way are you that old because 53 is old, beat down, and decrepit looking."

People, next time you want to compliment a mature woman, just say, "You look good!" or "You look hot!" or "Damn girl, you be working those jeans!" Drop the qualifiers! Kevin says it better here:

Rant Time

Why do people say shit like “getting older, but she’s still hot”? Getting older does not preclude hotness. And why does this “getting older” standard only apply to women? No one ever comments on dudes this way. No one ever says, “well, Sean Connery is getting older, but he’s still hot.” Ever.

I know the answers, but still… shit just got on my nerves today.


Saturday, June 27, 2009

Michael Jackson Playlist


Here is a Michael Jackson playlist I mixed last night. It samples my favs and classics from the Jackson Five era through Bad. Be sure to check out Track 1 (link provided) -- a young Michael doing an amazing cover of the Bill Withers classic "Ain't No Sunshine." It's haunting, soulful and beautiful, and so very poignant now that he is gone. Another gem is Track 2 (link provided) of a young Michael (again) just killing a cover of the Isley Brothers "It's Your Thing!" Amazing!

DJ Dancing Diva's Michael Jackson Mix

1. Ain't No Sunshine
2. It's Your Thing (Extended Remix)
3. P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)
4. Man In the Mirror
5. Rock With You
6. Billie Jean
7. The Way You Make Me Feel
8. Bad
9. Thriller
10. Off the Wall
11. Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'
12. The Girl Is Mine
13. Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough (Single Version)
14. Black or White
15. Dangerous
16. Shoo-Be-Doo-Be-Doo-Da-Day
17. ABC
18. I'll Be There
19. Never Can Say Goodbye

This playlist is on ITunes under this mix

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Embracing my age, a whitewater adventure!







These amazing photos are from my first whitewater rafting adventure ever. We were on the Menomonie River in Wisconsin. This is a level four rapids out of a possible six. Pretty big. The idea of whitewater rafting has both terrified and intrigued me for years. So when I was invited to join a group of women to go on this adventure I took the plunge (sorry, couldn't resist). It was incredible. Lesson one: my fear of whitewater rafting was far exceeded by how exciting it was. Lesson two: You are never too old to try something new. Life is short. Have fun!

Happy 37th Birthday Title IX!

In honor of the 37th birthday of Title IX, I am posting a commentary I wrote ten years ago, on the 27th birthday of the legislation that changed the landscape of women's sports forever. A slightly different version of this was published in the Minneapolis Star Tribune in 1999.

A generation of girls who compete as a matter of course

I was a pre-Title IX female athlete. Twenty-seven years later, my 13-year-old daughter is one of the thousands of soccer-playing girls riding high after the U.S. women's soccer team World Cup victory. I can say from personal experience that the recent Republican-sponsored House resolution to pay tribute to the U.S. women’s soccer team without acknowledging Title IX and its impact on the evolution of women’s sports was grievously wrong.

In 1972-1973, I was a junior at a suburban Minneapolis high school. The coach of the boy’s varsity ski team asked me to tryout for the team. While I skied competitively for an area ski club, there was no girls varsity ski team at my high school, and thus, no opportunity for me to compete in varsity sports, at least in my sport of choice.

So I tried out for the boys’ team and made the third-pace slot. However, the Minnesota State High School League, the governing body for Minnesota high school sports, had a rule that girls could not compete on boys’ teams, even if they legitimately earned a place on the team. The League informed my school that the entire team would be disqualified if I competed in a varsity ski meet.

My parents decided to challenge the rule and took the issue to court. The courts ruled in our favor and I was allowed to compete for my high school. Suddenly, much to my embarrassment, I was in the news as a barrier breaker. In 1972, girl athletes such as myself who trained hard, developed muscles, and thrilled to aggressive competition, were typically viewed, especially among our peers, as weird. The last thing my fragile self-esteem needed was more attention for being a jock. I just wanted to ski.

However, I am absolutely grateful that I happened to be in the right place at the right time, and thanks to Title IX, did get to ski for my high school and earn two varsity letters, something for which I am very proud.

Since then, I have thrilled at the change in both opportunity and attitude for women’s sports and athletics. 1n 1999, from the Sunday afternoon jogger to the serious athlete, girls and women now have a full array of competitive sports and fitness activities in which to participate.

My athletic daughter is coming of age at a time when sports, sweat and muscles are just a normal part of being female. She started playing soccer when she was nine at the neighborhood park because all of her friends were signing up to play. She now plays in a competitive girls’ soccer league full of other girls who love to play hard. They yell, “Be aggressive!” at the beginning of games. They are praised for being tough on the field, for teamwork, for pushing to the max.

I think the best thing about the post-Title IX world of female sports is that these young girls don’t think twice about being competitive athletes. They have no idea that 27 years ago there were far fewer athletic opportunities for girls. They have no idea that the general attitude toward female athletes was indifference at best and contempt at worst.

My daughter didn’t even watch the U.S. World Cup victory live. She had me tape it for later, when she got back from the mall. For her, it was not, as it was for me, a rearrange all your plans, historic, not to be missed event. It was a cool and important thing, but just one part of the fabric of her adolescent life. Yet, thanks to Title IX, she and millions of other girls don’t have to want to be like Mike when they imagine themselves champions. They can want to be like Brianna, Mia or Christine, and think its no big deal. Now that’s a revolution.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

My Big Fat White-Privileged Life

White privilege, or at least how to blog about my take on it, has been on my mind of late.

I'll start here: This morning I was going about 75 on a freeway with a speed limit of 55. So were most of the folks around me. We were on a stretch of freeway that is a known speed trap. I was distracted and wasn't thinking. So I swore at myself when I flew by the traffic cop and saw him pull out and turn on the lights. Then I breathed a big sigh of relief when he pulled over another car and not me. I tried to look to see if the driver was black, but I couldn't tell.

The fact is that if he was black, he was much more likely to be pulled over and ticketed than me. Driving While Black (DWB) is all too real (Click on that link! It goes to "Why it Matters: The Connection of Driving While Black To Other Issues of Criminal Justice and Race," by David A. Harris
).

Driving While White (DWW) is also a fact. Here are the two ways white privilege plays into this story. First, as already noted, I am less likely than a black person to be pulled over and ticketed due to my white skin. Second, I can drive around every single day with less worry about being pulled over for speeding, a broken tail light, a trinket hanging from my rear view mirror. This makes for less stress and anxiety in life, which in turn improves my over quality of life and well-being. And we wonder why diseases like high blood pressure are higher in African American communities? Come on.


True story: My daughter called me in tears a couple of months ago because a cop had pulled her over for a broken side mirror, and while she was stopped, her four year old daughter unbuckled herself from her car seat and he slapped her with another $150 fine for having a child not properly secured in the car. She's fighting that one in court. But did that happen because she is black? Or poor and in an old car with problems? Both? Yes or no. That's the crazy making. You both know and don't know. Every time.

As anyone who is a person of color knows implicitly, these driving stories are a couple of about 100,000 examples I could have pulled out about how we white people have it easier because of unearned racial privilege. But because most white people live in a place of complete unconsciousness about this privilege, we are clueless we are enjoying it each and every day.


Or if we do become aware of our privilege, our first reaction is to feel guilty, or to get really defensive, which is such a waste of energy.
It is what it is. We could make so much more progress if we could just get over our guilt and stop running around trying to prove we aren't prejudiced.

When my kids were little (over 20 years ago), I flung myself passionately into "Racism 101," driven by my desire to be a good mom for my biracial children. (If you don't know what "Racism 101" means, read this great post at Racialiscious. It's also the title of a terrific book by Nikki Giovanni.) I was on a mission to become culturally competent. To not be one of "those" white parents of black children. I was over the top. I even recall tallying up the racial mix at my kids' birthday parties, making sure there was good representation. Ouch.

But all that effort was, in the end, a good thing. I obsessed my way, slowly, into real cultural competence. I get racism and privilege in a way that most white people don't (but almost not at all in comparison to a person of color, who lives with that oppression).


My life over the last 30 years has slid from a mostly white world and worldview to a place somewhere on a bridge between black and white. When a friend who is black tells me, "You're really just one of us now," I take it for the huge compliment that it is meant to be but I also cringe.

Privilege, at its core, is about power and choice. The truth is, I could choose at any time to walk away from the life I've made and disappear back into the great wide world of white people (not that I would do this, but the choice is there).

Which brings me to this: Having privilege of any kind feels good, even if we don't want it to. It is benefiting us even as we work to dismantle it or at least to put it to good use. Think of what could happen if we would just 'fess up about that truth and get on with it.

The racist right gets this of course, and it's why they are is so terrified of Obama -- he symbolizes a threat to their privilege. Our privilege.

I will end with a nod to the comedian Louis CK. Please take another few minutes and watch this video of his bit on why it feels so great to be a white male -- the first funny thing I've ever seen a white person do on white privilege. He speaks the truth and it's funny as hell.