Thursday, June 23

How to survive a break up

When you were really into them and they didn't have time for you


1- have a psychic knowledge the break up is coming, and prepare without really knowing why. Buy a bar of chocolate, prepare food in advance, stock up on tea, and definitely consume an entire bottle of wine.

2- precipitate the breakup. Put on your big girl panties, and text them how you feel, which is to say, like you're hanging yourself on the hook for their approval and they're not interested enough to notice. As your roommate says, you're drunk, what could happen?

3- when they text you to ask when would be a good time to call, definitely respond with "probably not now, while I'm drunk and slithering"

4- answer the call anyway. 

5- tell them, pointedly, you're wondering if you should just cut the rope.

6- when they tell you that's probably the right choice, take long, slow deep breaths. Do not worry about how much time has passed in silence on both ends of the line.

7- make some conciliatory remarks about that being fair. When they tell you that they'll get back in touch when they're back in your city, tell them you'd like that. Quietly hate yourself for saying it, because it's true, and you wish it weren't.

8- hang up the phone.

9- cue up Burn, from the Hamilton soundtrack, on repeat.

10- ugly cry. 

11- when your roommates come to check on you because you're playing the literal most perfect, most awful break up song that has ever existed, demand that they snuggle you. They will comply.

12- cover your roommates in tears and snot. They will forgive you.

13- drink several glasses of water, in succession, because you just cried your soul out into your sheets and you are now a dehydrated fish flake.

14- decide you might feel better if you showered. While in the shower, realize that you were right. Congratulate yourself for such excellent self care.

15- stand in your bedroom naked, lights off, eyes closed.

16- Admit that underneath the sadness, and the frustration, and the bone deep crush of realizing you were (maybe)(almost)(very much) in love, you're disappointed. This had so much potential, and you couldn't be chill enough to let it be what it was. 

17- bitch slap that mopey little voice full of disappointment and self-doubt and tell it that speaking up might not always get you what you wanted but staying quiet never got you anything.

18- take your roommate for a walk around the block. Say all your feelings out loud. 

19- cast a spell. For example, write the name of your newly minted ex on a small square of paper, with whatever words help you let go of the feelings you harbor for them. Fold it into a paper crane. Hold it close to your mouth, and exhale all the hurt in your heart into your palms and this tiny paper bird. Then, throw it out the window.

20- read a compiled list of every way your favorite satire website has ever referred to Donald Trump. Unexpectedly belly laugh at "stately hot dog casing".

Wednesday, June 22

Not Straight, Not White

Claiming my complicated identity in the wake of Orlando



When my best friend said “there was a shooting at a gay club in Orlando”, I didn’t gasp in shock, or turn to look at her, eyes wide; I didn’t offer up a murmured oh my god. My mouth closed. My jaw clenched. I halted my steps, let my head tilt back, and took a long, slow breath. Above me, the sky was a clear perfect blue.

I’d be the first to tell you I talk too much, but I haven’t said much about Orlando. I pride myself on my ability to articulate my emotions, yet every time I part my lips to give way to the roar inside my skull, I end up talking about something else. I felt similarly after Charleston, though I had a lot more to say about that. But certain thoughts, then as now, sidestepped my vocal cords and turned to ashes on my tongue. I couldn’t place the emotion I felt then. I almost didn’t place it now.

I’m afraid to talk about Orlando. I’m afraid to talk about how hard it hit me, afraid to talk about how much I hurt, afraid to open my mouth and give my full voice to the sorrow and anger and heart-stopping terror that just the name of a city now evokes. I’ve avoided confronting my fear because doing so will confront the uncomfortable truth of my existence. I am not straight, and I am not white.

I have had difficulty explaining even to myself how intertwined these identities are. For most people, race and sexuality are whole and distinct facts. For me, they are question marks. I'm bisexual. I'm queer. I'm biracial. I say them out loud sometimes, testing whether I believe my own declarations, gauging how much unease I feel when I make it a statement, rather than a question. Asserting my blackness hasn’t always gone well; I was once told after revealing that my Grandfather was black and my Father was biracial that I was “only a quarter! That doesn’t count.” This is a person I still consider my friend, whom I admire greatly, who is one of the best people I know. She dismissed my identity with a wave of her hand, and instilled a lifetime understanding that the very fabric of my being was subject to approval, that what I looked like was the greatest determining factor in who the world decided I was.

While my formative experience of erasure is unusual, it is far from unique. Erasure of interracial people has a long and documentable history, particularly in this country, where the words for my racial makeup and appearance are “quadroon”, “high-yellow”, and “passing”. But as a white-presenting person in predominantly white spaces, I am insulated from confronting these realities. Interestingly, it is stories of bisexual erasure that have resonated the most with my own experience. Being told “oh honey, you’ll get there”, being asked “wait, I thought you were a lesbian?” overhearing, dismissively, “he’s gone straight”. In all of these experiences, the common narrative thread is the total absence of belief. The refusal to acknowledge our experience as valid, our narrative as truth.

I hesitate to say our. I hesitate to include myself in these communities. I wrote on facebook “your anger is valid, your existence is valid, you deserve more.” I have family in South Carolina, with skin much darker than my own. I reached out after the Charleston shooting to ask how they were, offer my support, my love. In the wake of these all too frequent tragedies, I offer an endless litany of yours and yours and yours. The grief is never mine, never ours.

My self-exclusion stems less from fear of outside judgement than it does from judgement from within. “Who is this white girl trying to to co-opt our suffering? Who is this straight girl trying to champion a cause that isn’t even hers? Who does this bitch think she is?” I wouldn’t fault you for thinking so little of me. The world is full of well-meaning white women speaking on behalf of people who can damn well speak for themselves. Faced with the fact that the ongoing suffering of my people is not my lived experience, I have willingly consigned myself to allyship. It never occurred to me that I was taking the easy way out.  

I’ve never had to come out. I’ve spent my life surrounded by communities where it was just a non-issue. The closest I’ve come is telling people I’m polyamorous. Yes, I have multiple partners, yes, I’m happy, yes, I’m marrying my fiance, no, we are not (are never) breaking up. I have been supremely lucky, and profoundly privileged.

I have been operating under that assumption that my blonde hair and my boyfriend exempt from violence. Not sexual violence, because misogyny is such a given that it hardly bears comment, but racial violence? Hate crimes? Those are things that happen to other people. Things that happen to queer, brown people, not queer-adjacent white girls.

And I could so easily make this true. I can opt out. I can choose to let my skin do the talking, point to my frilly dresses and fiance and let people draw their own conclusions. Like Eliza before me, I can erase myself from the narrative, and I’d never have to look back. It would be so easy to wrap myself in my privilege, in my assumed straight whiteness, and be silent.

There are 49 queer black and brown people who did not get to choose. There are hundreds, thousands, millions of voices that are silenced not by choice, but by the choices of others. There are people at this very second that do not feel safe in their neighborhoods, their homes, the places they carved out where at last they can be unafraid. I, who have spent my life holding hands with girls in public, I, who have kissed women in broad daylight without a thought, I, who spent 6 years as the only white girl on my street and wanted so badly to have my father’s red-blonde afro, what right do I have to choose silence, to choose complacence, to choose fear?

I am under no illusions that claiming my identity as a queer black woman is going to go smoothly. The act of choosing blackness is painfully fraught at best; choosing your sexuality cuts to the very heart of what the queer community has fought so long to discredit. It would be much simpler to deny my identity than be forced to defend it. But my identity isn’t simple, and it never has been. No longer can I use my skin as a security blanket, no longer can I use my boyfriend as a buffer. I have spent my life tentatively occupying spaces of queerness, living alongside people of color while allowing my appearance to hold me apart, knowing I’d never be a target of police brutality and believing that meant I was safe. An automatic rifle doesn’t care that I have a fiance. A lone gunman in a black church might shoot the man next to me and leave me alone or he might call me a race traitor and execute me on the spot. I cannot continue to live in these spaces, to love these people, to call them my friends and family, and pretend that I am exempt from their struggle. That I am exempt from danger. I am not.

I am still afraid. Afraid that I will face rejection on all fronts. That I will be told I have no right to my bi-racial heritage by black and white people alike, told my bisexuality is invalid, inauthentic, a phase. I am afraid to discover what I have long suspected, that I belong nowhere. That I am too other, too alien, to claim any place, any people, as my own. I am afraid I will be told that my identity was never mine to begin with. At these lowest moments, I repeat to myself the words of Nelson Mandela, a man far braver than I will ever be: “I learned that courage was not the absence of fear, but the triumph over it.”

If you were here beside me, you would see me shaking. You would see my eyes red from crying, welling up yet again. You would see the tension in my shoulders, hear my shaky breathing. The truth is, I have never had to be this brave, and I am not ready.

But the time has come for me to start living the truth of my complicated existence, ready or not.

Monday, September 7

The Pilgrimage

I did this crazy awesome thing called ChoreoFest where I stayed awake dancing all night and got up the next day and performed the dance that we made. It was a blast. While we were building the piece, we were asked to write about a journey we'd taken. I liked what I wrote enough to post it here.


On Christmas Day when I was sixteen, I put on the new cream corduroy slacks I unwrapped that morning. I had an Angora sweater that matched, perfectly. I braided one long, thin braid in  my hair. I slid a pair of nail scissors into my pocket. I checked my reflection, testing if you could see their shape through the thin fabric.

I went downstairs and put on my coat. I felt the weight settle heavy on my shoulders, the black hem brushing the floor. I wore black ballet flats. There was no snow.

I got in the car with my mother. My grandparents stood in the door. My brother didn't say goodbye.

The car took a long time to heat up. We drove in silence. I pressed my hands into the pockets of my corduroys. Under my coat, I pressed the point of the scissors into my thumb so hard I thought I would surely break the skin. Puncture the film holding the air in my body, the air in the car, pressure valve, sudden release.

I thought about Sarah McLaughlin songs. I thought about snow on gravestones. I watched the empty roads roll by.

I couldn't press hard enough to break the silence.

The car stopped. I couldn't remember making the turn into the hospital parking lot. "Okay," my mother said, soft. I thought she might ask if I was ready.

"Be careful when you get out, there's ice on your side." I nodded.

We walked slowly up to the doors, trying not to slip. The hems of my slacks dragged along the ice and I could feel them growing damp and grey. We entered through the side doors and passed the donor wall. I paused to read the names.

"Robert," my mother's voice loud in the quiet corridor. I turned to see my uncle shuffling toward us. He seemed too thin, translucent in the florescent lighting. The skin beneath his eyes shadowed like a bruise.
We said things. I can't remember now. The words kept shifting away from me. I remember:

"They told us we should leave"  "When did it happen"  "He was awake"  "They won't move him yet"

I drifted up the hall. The family waiting room, tv always on; the hallways full of quiet noises. Whir. Beep. Shuffle.

I remember the doorway, but not the walk. His face. His body. Beneath the sheet. The sheet the color of my clothes. The scissors in my pocket. Pressing not hard enough. My mother leaving to find a nurse.

I remember my father.

My father with skin like paper. My father with eyes like glass.

I remember waiting for his chest to rise or fall. The feeling of cold flesh over bone.  My voice too loud and too little in the silence. His body like a monument. His eyes like empty houses.

I remember no snow.

Wednesday, September 2

Not Easily Explained

words by me
 
I once had a discussion with a friend
whom I admire and respect 
during which I asserted "I am Black."
Our conversation stuttered
she uttered, incredulous, "What?"
and I, suddenly less sure, said
"My grandfather is African American, and so am I"
only for her to scoff out "That's only a quarter, that doesn't count"

How dare you
I didn't say
Yes I am
I didn't say
Who are you to decide
I didn't say
my words turned to molten metal in my mouth, sliding down my throat and burning out the bottom of my stomach, radiating red liquid heat into my skin
and then 
like a hot iron plunged into cold water 
I knew
She didn't see me.

I once described my experience of my life as liminal
as occupying the space between spaces
my racial identity is quicksilver 
mercurial at best
changing with the angle and the hour and intensity of light
White girl in Brooklyn
Weird girl in Long Island
Black girl in the lines of my palms
the shiver in my bones
in all the places hidden by my skin
Black girl
Invisible.

I didn't understand why I was so upset
at first,
with my friend,
who didn't see me.
I didn't have the language or experience to frame what I felt.
That came later, with time and reflection 
a degree of self awareness that pierces
like daylight through darkness
that curls around your heart and your lungs and your mind
that cuts to the core of what you think you are

I was upset because
If we met on the street and had a conversation about the weather and the traffic
and I mentioned the Black Lives Matter protest happening that day
"I'm all for racial equality" you might say, "But-
-Do they have to be so disruptive?"
you might say
-What's the problem with all lives matter?"
you might say
-I'm sick of the racism police"
you might say
-Just between us White people"
you will say  
with your wry half-smile and the conspiratorial tilt of your head
and I might say
Nothing
and you would never know that my skin 
is a lie
that my hair
is a lie
that my eyes and my voice and my clothes 
are lies that allow me to pass 
Unseen

I was upset because my race is 
Complicated
because my identity is 
Other
because the validity of my identity
can be challenged
can be picked up and put down at will
can be ignored
discarded
disregarded
divorced 
because the ongoing oppression of my people
is not my lived experience
and my position is not ally
is not oppressed
is not easily explained
is not easily lived 
but I do.

Every day
I swallow down the guilt of being
too White
I swallow down the guilt of not being
Black 
Enough
I swallow down the heat in my throat 
and my eyes do not water at the pain
Every day
I stare into the darkness
I stare into the daylight
I stare into the mirror
I ask
Do you see me?

That one time I was an angry feminist BALLER



So yesterday, I was in a really spectacular mood as I was walking home along the bike path from Davis Square. I was looking at my phone as I passed these two young men sitting on the side of the path, and I noticed their conversation stop, followed by a whistle.


I stopped. I turned. They were both looking at me, and when they saw me looking back, their faces shuttered, their posture shifted, tensed. "What?" Said the one kid, "I was just whistling"

"No," said the other guy, shaking his head, "keep walking".

If they'd kept their mouths shut, if they'd looked away, if he'd said anything, ANYTHING else, I might have moved on.

But I was having a great fucking day.

And you, you little piss-ant mother fucker, you don't ever get to fucking tell me to keep fucking walking.

Smiling wide, arms outstretched, I walked right up to them, and replied, "You don't have the right to harass me. You don't have the right to talk to me and expect me to not talk back."

"You don't seem like a happy person", says bad of dicks 1.

"I'm a fantastically happy person. The sun is shining and it's a beautiful day."

"You look like you've never had a problem in your life" says fuckface 2.

"I have tons of problems, I just don't let them weigh me down."

"Yeah? I bet your daddy could bail you out of all your problems" says skuzz guzzler 1.

"HA! I'm broke as shit dude, and my father is dead."

"So what it's a crime to whistle?" continues douchecanoe 1. "I could be gay, what then?"

"Actually, being gay does not absolve you of street harassment"

"You think this is harassment?" retorts misogynist moron 1, implying that 1) this is not harassment 2) that harassment is something much worse, always, and 3) I could show you what "harassment" looks like.

"Why yes, in fact, this is in fact harassment."

"Lady, you need to just keep walking," interjects asshole 2, talking over me, as they have been this entire glorious, terrible time.

"Keep walking? I need to keep walking? MOTHERFUCKER YOU CAN GET YOUR ASS UP AND KEEP FUCKING WALKING. GET UP. GET THE FUCK UP MOTHERFUCKER. YOU THINK YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO DO WHATEVER YOU WANT? TREAT ME HOWEVER YOU WANT? SAY WHATEVER YOU WANT TO ME AND HAVE ME BE SILENT? FUCK YOU. WALK AWAY. WALK AWAY MOTHERFUCKER. WALK. THE. FUCK. AWAY."

I was in their faces. I didn't back down. I caused a disturbance. I was making a scene at noon in Davis Square and I was so. Happy. They got up. They tried to intimidate me with their size. But I was louder, and happier, and righteous in my fury, and they were angry, and defensive, and uncomfortable in the extreme. They walked away from me, pretending that they were done, confused and unsettled by this girl, this woman, they tried to make an object of their lust, who dared to make herself a participant, an opponent, equal, human.

"You're real fucking brave doing this in Davis" said who the fuck cares "You wouldn't do this in Roxbury." Implying 1) that in Roxbury you could get away with assaulting me in public? 2) that in Roxbury I'd be too afraid to stand up for myself.

Out loud I said "I would do this in Brooklyn. Where I grew up. Until I was 8."

In my head: No. I wouldn't. Because I don't live there. I don't know the area. I don't know the distance to the nearest store, I don't know if I could sprint to a residence or a business with a phone, that would open the door, that would let me hide. I don't know if anyone would stop to help me if things when south. I don't know where all the alleys and dark, hidden places are where two men bigger and stronger than me could catch me, drag me, hurt me, rape me. I don't know if I'd survive. Which is why here, in the sunlight, in my neighborhood, in my home, I'm telling you to go straight to hell, you pig fucker cock monglers.

By this point, they were calling me retarded, walking away, hurling insults, calling me stupid and crazy because I didn't let them treat me like a piece of semi-sentient sexy meat.

So I said "I'm done with you losers. Bye Felicia" and sauntering away, invigorated, resplendent in my fury, with a two finger salute, exclaimed "My god, it is such a BEAUTIFUL DAY."

Saturday, April 23

All this and HTML coding, too!

So I think gmail is filtering out some emails that I should be getting. NOT COOL.

Semi-relatedly, last night I saw AMANDA F-ING PALMER at a small concert at MassArt and it was awesome. This is what happens when I actually leave the house.

Speaking of leaving the house, ONE WEEK TO THE MOVE! JP, HERE WE COME! Very exciting, but lots of painting to be done, which is most likely what I'll be doing the rest of the day. And the rest of the week. Oh my.

Keep your fingers crossed for me, as I have been applying to jobs and may hear back from one this week.

Things have been changing a lot lately, and suddenly I have a lot more things to do. Very interesting indeed.

Further bulletins as events warrant.

~Isha

Thought of the day: WHY DOES THIS APARTMENT HAVE SO MANY CEILINGS!?

Wednesday, March 30

Poetry Break

And now, a brief change of content.

Old Familiar Feeling

I feel it growl behind me, quiet
rising up within to surround
Strike
sinks its fangs into my ankle
Pinned
to the ground
Animal in a trap
that is living and breathing and drawing blood
bigger and faster and older and stronger
Still
breath out slow, steady
wait inhale wait exhale wait
I feel it grow inside me, silent
drawing up before me to
Lift
the updraft pushes, purposeful
I loose my leg from my trap
Refusing
to be captive
to myself

And now, we return you to your regularly scheduled format.

I'm just gonna give it away right now; the noodling above is about fear, and not falling prey to my old patterns of doubt and panic. I had a creative surge, and I thought, Hey! Why not post it to the interwebs for all the world to see? Or, at least the 5 people who stumble across it.

Let me know what you think. I'm off to write a cover letter.

Isha

Thought of the day: References? You mean I was supposed to stay in touch with those people I worked for?