The Black American Experience: Living the Challenge of Our Creed

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all are created equal. That they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”

These words which launched our nation’s improbable experiment in democracy, setting our nation’s course towards liberty and justice for all, were drafted and ratified by men who contributed to the evils of slavery, America’s original sin. Yet they outlined a story of a people beyond their original conception, with their ideals inspiring generations of African Americans to dare to carve out in the face of institutionalized and often-brutal racism a place for themselves in the history of an unfamiliar land and unforgiving society.

We stand on the shoulders of those giants who held firm to that daring resolve, fighting for and following these truths to define through their struggle and shared determination a more complete American story that included them and their loved ones. 

On the shoulders of ancestors who looked to the heavens and prayed for the strength to fight for the liberty they knew was their stolen birthright, before sprinting under cover of night to follow the North Star towards freedom. 

The shoulders of generations who fought to hold on to their dignity under the hateful eye of Jim Crow; who reached for the great American equalizers of the ballot-box and a good education and were met with the threat of genocide and a wave of fear.

The shoulders of everyday Americans who subjected their bodies to clubs and hoses, to spitting jeers and snapping hounds; who were brutalized on Freedom Rides and Montgomery buses and those who marched on anyway in Selma to shine a light on the evils of racism in our country.

The shoulders of a dreamer who followed that North Star, quoting these words on the National Mall at the March on Washington and challenging a nation to live out the true meaning of its creed.

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all are created equal.

These words which were front of heart and mind in the struggle to pass the long-overdue Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965; that inspired Shirley Chisholm to run for Congress and then to aspire to the nation’s highest office; words that paved the way for our 44th President, Barack Obama to be elected the leader of a nation that just fifty years prior would have denied him the right to vote. 

In our 400-year journey from our ancestors’ subjection to the sub-human conditions of American slavery, we have made great strides towards a, “more perfect union,” – towards a more inclusive, “We the People,” than our founding fathers could ever have conceived. Yet, we still have so much more to build – so much farther to climb.

Shackles don’t have to be made of iron to hold people back. Black children are much more likely to attend under achieving schools, to live in low-income neighborhoods, to be victims of crime. Black women are more likely to die in childbirth while young African Americans perish at the hands of law enforcement. In an already-tough economy, Black families are having a harder time getting loans, putting savings away and getting promoted at jobs. 

We must choose to look beyond the acknowledgement of explicit racist bias and commit to addressing the systemic inequality that informs these issues. While most Americans today agree that we are all created equal, too many of us are unwilling or unable to acknowledge that we do not all start our lives with the equal resources, assets and opportunities that our dedication to a “more perfect union” demands.

We must all shoulder the responsibility of writing the next chapter in the legacy of our great nation, of creating a more perfect union that belongs to all of us; where everyone has a place at the table – where every child has access to world-class educational opportunities and where our Muslim citizens and immigrants feel safe; where refugees are welcome and black and brown bodies are not disproportionately targeted by law enforcement; where trans and non-binary people can use the restroom in peace and where our commitment to workers’ rights is strong.

We must ensure the prosperity of America extends beyond corporate barons to include more of those who have been systemically pushed to the margins, and we must demand that our institutions break down the barriers that persistently keep the playing field for the marginalized tilted against them, setting us back from tangibly achieving the equality that promised by the Constitution. 

And we must all recommit to working to create a truly fair and equitable society where skin color is not the dividing line.

Ralph's 2018 - 2019 Reading List

As a child, my favorite day of each school year was the day I received my textbooks for the year. I remember poring over them for hours on end until I'd finished them all, cover to cover, by the end of the week. In the spirit of back-to-school, I've compiled my reading list for the upcoming year – a tip about teachers' children, the "new" year for us will forever begin in August and end in June. 😉

This list was curated to help grapple with the social and political climate of today and challenge us to craft a better, more equitable tomorrow. The full list is at the blog below! Share in the comments, what are you reading?

 

Personal Development & Idealogical Growth

Yes We (Still) Can: Politics in the Age of Obama, Twitter, and Trump, by Dan Pfeiffer 

Minority Leader: How to Lead from the Outside and Make Real Change, by Stacey Abrams

David and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits and the Art of Battling Giants, by Malcolm Gladwell

Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging, by Sebastian Junger

Between the World and Me, by Ta-Nehisi Coates

Black Silent Majority, by Michael Javen Fortner

Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, by Yuval Noah Harari

I'm Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness, by Austin Channing Brown

 

Reimagining the Social Contract for the 21st Century

Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City, by Matthew Desmond

Raising the Floor: How a Universal Basic Income Can Renew Our Economy and Rebuild the American Dream, by Andy Stern

Concrete Economics: The Hamilton Approach to Economic Growth and Policy, by Stephen S. Cohen and J. Bradford DeLong

 

Current Cultural Accounts, Analyses, & Critiques

Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis, by J.D. Vance

The Unwinding: An Inner History of the New America, by George Packer

Sleeping Giant: How the New Working Class Will Transform America, by Tamara Draut

Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right, by Arlie Russell Hochschild

The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion, by Jonathan Haidt

Deciding What’s True: The Rise of Political Fact-Checking in American Journalism, by Lucas Graves

What We Think About When We Try Not to Think About Global Warming: Toward a New Psychology of Climate Action, by Per Espen Stoknes

Prediction Machines: The Simple Economics of Artificial Intelligence

White Trash: The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America, by Nancy Isenberg

American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America, by Chris Hedges

 

Historical Accounts, Analyses & Collections

The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine, by Michael Lewis

The Invention of Russia: The Journey from Gorbachev’s Freedom to Putin’s War, by Arkady Ostrovsky

Hitler: Ascent, 1889-1939, by Volker Ulrich

The Anatomy of Fascism, by Robert Paxton

The Origins of Totalitarianism, by Hannah Arendt

The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914, by Chris Clark

Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II, by Douglas Blackmon

The American Transcendentalists: Essential Writings, by Lawrence Buell

 

Current Culturally Relevant Fiction

The Handmaid's Tale, by Margaret Atwood

1984, by George Orwell

It Can't Happen Here, by Sinclair Lewis

Jennifer Government, by Max Barry

Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury

The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald

On National Anthem Protests, U.S. History, and Why Black People Don't Owe This Country Anything

 

First things first, yes I'm aware that the title of this blog post is so long that it could easily double as a Fall Out Boy or PANIC! at the Disco song name (and that my posting is as erratic as their song release schedules, I'm sorry!).

I haven't written much lately for a number of reasons: Primarily because I spent the entire summer grieving with my family (I'll share more on that later), but also because my granny always taught me that if I had nothing kind to say, not to say anything at all...

 

and I have YET to be able to speak on current events or this Trump administration without my petty monster clawing its way outside of the closet where I try to keep it satisfied with videos of Auntie Maxine, Angela Rye, and the weekly episode of the Read.

 

So late last week when Crissle was sick (so she and Kid Fury, hosts of the Read couldn't tape their podcast), and President Trump stretched his tiny twitter fingers just a few hours ago (which he's verified to be the only part of him to get any regular exercise) for their daily cyberbullying workout, I knew this post was coming.

His comments last week deriding NFL players as "sons of b**ches" who should be fired  for peacefully kneeling in protest of this country's passivity towards and compliance with police brutality against black people seems to have struck a chord with his base (who to be clear, I'm still deeply distrustful of and will perpetually side-eye for their "questionable" judgement, but that too is another blog post). This morning, in response to the hundreds of athletes joining the demonstrations across the country on game day, I've seen dozens of inspired, seemingly patriotic (but anti-protest, which is an oxymoron?) comments mirroring the President's most recent tweets decrying the players' actions and attitudes as wrongly disrespectful down my usually serene Sunday morning Facebook/Twitter feed.

 

 

Now don't get me wrong, I like the national anthem as much as the average American I'd suppose (the first verse anyway - we all know how racist the second verse gets), especially when Beyonce is singing it, and Whitney's Super Bowl rendition always leaves me with my jaw dropped (but she could do that with the ABC's). Its ideals in a vacuum are honorable, even if their implementation has far too often excluded non white/cis/het/Christian/able-bodied citizens of the U.S. - all of whose freedoms the anthem is purported to represent. 

The irony of the differing perspectives being vocalized today is in the ire that these national anthem protests elicit from people whose strong feelings of love of country have been challenged by what they perceive to be "disrespectful" to a symbol - many of whom have shown they have absolutely no belief in or care to fight institutionalized racism and state-sanctioned violence against black and brown bodies the system represents and even sometimes advocates for.

 

How is it okay that their hurt feelings matter more than our lives? It's almost as if they'd expect us to accept oppression for their comfort.

This country has been singing that same, tired song as its dominant narrative long before Francis Scott Key found words and melody for it. 

 

This country's wealth was built on my people's slave labor, on the backs of men and women treated and bred like less than chattel, the decimation of their families and the dismantling of their cultural identity.

And the song played on.

My people were expected (and during draft time, demanded) to fight for this country often with half the resources as their white comrades-in-arms, only to be treated as second-class citizens when they returned home from war.

And the song played on.

This country has methodically assassinated my people's leaders and in their absence successfully conspired to flood our communities with drugs only to declare a war on black people and fill the jails with the very people they set up to fail.

And the song played on.

Even today, with its mass criminalization of people of color, particularly young African American men, this country has perfected its most efficient system of racial control (outside of slavery) with legal wage free income since the days of the Jim Crow sharecropping Dixie.

So no, considering it has been an institution of our oppression since its inception, black people don't owe this country a damn thing, much less our respect. Any notions of fondness or goodwill we may feel for this nation are benevolent, and honestly, it's probably for the best that we haven't been keeping score because I'm almost certain this country owes us a hell of a lot more than the mere dignity and equality we're presently demanding.

PS: If you're wondering, I'm still waiting for someone to show me Jemele Hill's lie.

 

The Moon Is Relative to the Starlight

The girl loved the boy, in a way, but she was otherworldly
She was the kind of effortlessly beautiful that wouldn't do to be ignored -
It was as if the whole world leaned in to her orbit, drawn to her light.
Still, hers was the only gravity to ever bend the queer out of the boy's body,
To touch her was to float outside of time, amongst bated breath and flashing lives.

Einstein's theory of relativity:
Distorted space and time influence the way that material objects or light move.

It's remarkable the things we do to stay close to the ones we choose.
And so the boy was grateful to become her moon,
To reflect every bit of his bright
To light her nights
To gift her his soft glow
To pull the tides from her thighs
And disappear behind blue skies in the wake of her morning sunlight.

Einstein's theory of relativity:
Time and length are not as absolute as everyday experience would suggest

Moving clocks run slower,
Moving objects are shorter

Four years later, they lie on opposite sides of the same city, what was left of their "them" long ago shattered and swept away.
Yet in a way, the boy still loves the girl
The boy lies awake at night
His eyes shining green in the darkness
His phone screen glowing next to him
He has deleted her contact but knows the number on sight.
Somehow, he has drifted back to her.
This time, his heart beat is steady, his breathing measured and slow
What once gave him butterflies has become all too familiar.
The boy pauses to wonder how long this moment might last.
His thumb hovers over the green circle that will bring her to him.
Missed Call.
He belongs to himself now.

Coming Out, Facing My Fear, and Finding My Happy

If you’ve been following me much for the past four years, you probably know I’m all about running towards the things that scare you, and this one is terrifyingly beautiful.

 

Here goes.

 

Fear and shame are such a powerful and dangerous combination, and they’ve been given quite the platform as of late. From our politics to our pulpits, I’ve never been more sure that this is necessary. Brene Brown says “Owning our story can be hard but not nearly as difficult as spending our lives running from it. Embracing our vulnerabilities is risky but not nearly as dangerous as giving up on love and belonging and joy—the experiences that make us the most vulnerable. Only when we are brave enough to explore the darkness will we discover the infinite power of our light.” This is my bit of truth, my bit of light. 

If you haven’t noticed lately, I’ve chosen to be happy, black, and queer and hold tight to my faith. 

How political that choice is.


In the end, it wasn’t a person, a teaching, or my emotions which convinced me it was possible to be queer and Christian, 

It was Holy Spirit, present, living, breathing, speaking.


I’ve been afraid of this moment for as long as I can remember - I still am, but I am no longer ashamed. I can't quite pinpoint when this happened, I think it was slowly at first, and then all at once, but life became so much more fulfilling when I realized you should never feel like you have to convince someone to love you.

With that in mind, today I’m walking in the fullness of God, of love and hope for myself and the world. I am unashamed, unrestrained, and fully in love with Jesus. More in love with Him than I’ve ever been. And this is just the beginning of my story. I am brave. I am fearless. I am His. I have found myself, and learned to love who that is.

This might get messy. But it will forever be me.

This is my journey - my, “Send me!” response to the call, “Who will go for us?”.
 

So I will go. I will continue to develop safe, faith positive spaces for people navigating LGBT experiences within and outside of the church. I will be complicit no longer in a homophobic culture which creates the perfect storm that breeds suicide, homelessness and hopelessness in LGBT youth. I will continue to dance with Jesus across lines that divide and challenge the falsification that LGBT people need permission to exist as they are, and those like me will dispel the notion that it is a responsibility or right of any institution to silence, dispose of, or marginalize them.

I spent last week at #GCNconf where I was a featured poet in the company of 1500 other LGBT Christians and allies, most of whom had stories like mine. My friends and I had breakfast with the first openly gay bishop in the Episcopal church, and it changed my life.
 

It never occurred to me until that moment what I was denying others by not giving voice to my experience and a face to my story until I looked at him and felt permission to become. I’m done robbing those who will come after me of that visibility.


If you are one of those young people reading this, know you can talk to me anytime. Know that the gospel is good news for you too! You are not the exception. You are celebrated as you are. You were spoken into *being*. You do not have to live in repentance of existing. Whether in your pursuit of shalom, your conviction leads you to choose to pursue a relationship or feel a call to celibacy, I promise, you are loved radically because of who you are. 

Your identity is not a consolation prize. 

There is hope on this side of heaven.
There is hope here for you.

 


And just like that, the fear that gripped my very being is gone, and all that remains in the absence of the specter is the embrace of perfect love. Its taken a while, but I’ve found my happy and if today seems dim, know that the future will be bright - wait and see.

It gets better. I love you.

Holiday Season: To Love Me Rightly

Christmas hasn’t felt right to me in a long while.

I am not a child, and everyone has their person.

The lonely is cold. I spend the day with family filling my role.

Its a constant reminder that this is a spectator sport.

I resent driving home alone. 

I resent my resentment. It makes me feel selfish, defensive and unworthy.

Joe is our neighbor. He’s incredibly thoughtful and kind to us - 

He invites us for dinner, helps with things that need fixing, opens bottles of wine,

I once joked that I just wanted a live-in Joe.

Do I really want to be in a relationship with a person or an idea?

Am I really willing to be fully available to someone, mind, body and spirit?

Sometimes I think all I really want is someone to bring me cheap Chinese food and wine and cuddle with me on a bad day.

I’m not entirely sure that’s a bad thing.

I’m tired of feeling like someone’s flavor-of-the-week.

I still don’t write enough.

Sometimes, I’m not afraid to write what I’m feeling, I can’t find the words to get down.

This was never a problem until I decided the only thing I wanted to tell was the truth.

I want to learn to love my body.

I’m not even sure I know my body.

Today I resolved to eat at least two whole meals a day next year, and to never go hungry.

I haven’t kept that promise in over ten years.

I think this might be a good start.

I know none of this is coherent enough to publish.

I’m not sure it needs to be.

Maybe this - even writing for me, is a beginning.

Sometimes all we have is our stream of consciousness.

Sometimes we need to wade deep in the stream to collect the pebbles of truth worn smooth along the bottom

If only because they have weathered the current and have not been swept away.

Like them, I am here to stay.

Holy Hell: On President Elect Donald Trump

 

Confession: I believe President-elect Trump showed us exactly who he was with his rhetoric and his actions. Perhaps I am wrong, or maybe like Glenn Beck, he too can change. I would love nothing more than for this to be the case, but if history follows the all-American trend of whitelash, I do not have that luxury.

Dear Trump Supporters (especially those I call friend)

I still love you, even though it may take time to move past the initial hurt and anger (and lets face it, fear) into relationship again. TBH white Charismatic evangelical churches probably wont feel like sanctuaries to me for a long time. You have my word. 

I will not stoop to the level of petty obstruction and disrespect that President Obama endured. I will pray for our new president when the time comes and wish him policy success, where it doesn't clash with loving my neighbor. I am prepared to be a hell of a fighter, but I will only fight hatred, bigotry, fear-mongering, exclusion and xenophobia. I am a force, and if he chooses these tactics, I will use every modicum of influence I have to call them out. I will re-energize the movement of the needle of progress against them, and personally bend the moral arc of justice by creating content that causes all to look and listen. I will write and speak and rally and scream. I will protest and organize and resist these things with everything in me. If you love me, show me and join in. If you can't, don't get in my way. I have a feeling its going to be a busy four years.

The "I love you's" feel like endless platitudes at this point. And I hear your heart on voting your conscience with thought towards my community, even if I disagree with your decision. At this point, I am less focused on who my white, Charismatic evangelical friends voted for, and more concerned with whether they will stand with me if our federal government makes good on president-elect Trump's campaign suggestions like instituting nationwide stop and frisk policies which disproportionately target black men, or persecuting American Muslims for how they pray - holding them accountable for the violence too often directed towards them by ISIS. Where will they stand if undocumented immigrants are deported and their children remain here? When families are torn apart? What will they say if Mike Pence pushes on a federal level for public funding for reparative therapy, or when Americans' husbands and wives are no longer allowed a say in how their spouse is buried or the dignity of allowing them to visit the ones they have chosen if they are critically ill? What will they do if RvW is repealed, when the abortion rate rises, and women find themselves turning to unsafe procedures? Will they commit to assuring the care of the babies that are born? Will they fight for the babies' education and futures? Will they demand their disproportionately black and brown bodies be valued and that their #blacklivesmatter or will pro-life only refer to legislating the womb? 

I am watching and waiting and hoping for the best, but expecting little without heavy resistance. Still, I am remembering to find confidence even in the impending darkness, because I believe that suffering produces perseverance, perseverance fulfills character, and character will always lead us to the Hope that will not disappoint us, because God has poured out His love into our hearts through HS.

I have spent the past several hours searching my soul for peace, for words of reconciliation and unity, and have scraped up nothing but grit and determination. 
White supremacy is acceptable to half of our country.
Half of our country cosigned on a candidate who suggested Muslims be profiled and rounded up based on how they pray.
They’ve rang out a resounding yes to racism, misogyny, and sexual assault.
They’ve agreed to turn their backs on refugees, and to inciting violence against the press and black and brown bodies. 
To them, using the restroom in peace is not a right that everyone should have, and they have made clear their opposition to our government protecting its people's right to spend the rest of their lives with the ones they choose.

But this nation is not defined by just that half, as much as we’d like to allow an electoral map to suggest the opposite.

If you believe this is the end, you are wrong. 
Even if we lose tonight, we are still here and I promise you we will fight tooth and nail.
We will not be denied our places at the table. 
We are the people of color in your congregations, 
We are your daughters, your immigrant neighbors, your gay brother, your Muslim coworker, your trans friend. 
We will continue to make clear that Donald Trump’s character and his policies are not representative of us, or our idea of American values. 
We will demand that we live peaceably with our neighbors, building cultural bridges, not walls. 
We will reject any notions of hatred and bigotry that come from Washington for the next four years with the same aplomb with which we celebrated the progressive strides of the past eight. 
We have fought uphill battles our entire lives, and we are better at it than you can begin to imagine.
The fight begins tomorrow.
This is not over, it is only just beginning.

On Brothers, Surprise Birthday Parties, and Mattering

If I had to describe my family in one word, it would be, “busy”, and I don’t think that’s all too uncommon in a twenty-first century American household. My mom leaves home at 7am to teach until three in the afternoon, will likely stay at work until five or six, comes home in the evenings to grade papers, finish lesson plans, help with homework, and maybe even cook dinner if she’s not too exhausted before collapsing into bed by midnight and doing it all again the next day. My dad’s schedule is more of the same, with meetings and hearings taking the place of classroom time and choir rehearsals/bible studies occupying assorted evenings.

 

There’s no wonder that we don’t really do birthdays. Let me explain.

 

We usually get through birthday parties for the younger years (There are pictures of me in various party attire from 1-5), but then, something happens — too many homework assignments, parent teacher conferences, soccer games and suddenly, the date has come and gone with little more than a Happy Birthday wish, a gift and a promise to celebrate the next year.

 

My brother, Joshua too fell into this cycle.  The last time I remember us celebrating his birthday, he was three years old, and every year we watched as he became more and more frustrated with us as he watched his friends, classmates and cousins celebrate their birthdays without celebrating his.

 

I don’t think we knew just how much it affected him until this year. This year, amidst all that I had learned about crafting around my intention, treating my body like a prayer box and being the one that I’m waiting for (you know, all those catchy phrases I’ve adopted and use to explain the crazy course of my life lately) - I decided to stop waiting for my parents to find the time. I was twenty two years old, and I was going to throw my baby brother a surprise tenth birthday party.

 

I thought big - no, over the top was the way to go. I invited fifty kids, booked a DaveNBusters-esque venue that would be considered chic even to adults, ordered a giant Star Wars cake, shelled out cash for eight large pizzas at the venue restaurant, unlimited laser tag and bowling for each child, bought expensive bags with real, themed toys and candy for each child. I needed him to know that all of this mattered to me because he mattered to me, to us.

 

In the lead-up to the big day, my cousin thought Joshua might have been tipped off, and planned a small gathering at my parents’ house with her son, another cousin, and two of my mom’s friends’ grandchildren who were around his age. There was an inexpensive banner and cheap candy in dollar store bags with a simple blue tablecloth and Spiderman themed plates. The menu was hot dogs and chip bags, and cupcakes that were leftover from the local grocery store. It was all orchestrated to be an elaborate ruse, a joke. No one expected what happened next.

 

When he arrived, and we all said surprise, he froze, all fifty-five pounds of his slender frame, his mouth and eyes wide with shock, hands stretched at his side like solar panels taking it all in and then, crumpled into tears. I’ll never forget the way his sobs wracked his body, as he bolted up the stairs. I followed, the overprotective big brother concerned with protecting his dignity - breaking down in front of your party guests definitely qualifies as being different, and at age ten, being different can be brutal. I’d learned that the hard way. It was a lesson I’d never wished him to repeat.

 

His initial shock was soon replaced with joy, and joined by gratitude, and the glimmer behind his eyes as he repeated “Thank you.” and “I can’t believe this is MY party.” over and over was so genuine, I made a silent promise to myself to always continue to follow that light.

 

The moment inspired me, the effect that such a small act of acknowledgement could have on his psyche, and yet was an incredibly sobering reminder of a major need of the human condition - to feel seen, known, and valued. We gave him the world every year - for birthday gifts he’s gotten iPads, other tablets, game systems, money, notebooks, etc. and he deemed this his best birthday ever. I wonder how many queer kids would trade all the things their parents provide for them in exchange for an, “I love you.” or “I see you.” or “You have value to us.”

 

I believe I still would. Most of the turmoil of the past decade, I can directly tie to this fear that I believe we all have shared from the beginning of time, that no one sees me and says to the world as a complete statement with no caveats, “You’re good.” That no one ever will. 

 

The fact that that idea still rings even the slightest bit true to me, means I have not yet completed my journey to self-love, but I’ve found the best way to inspire love for yourself is to truly love your neighbor. And so I continue to show up, I continue to start new support groups to sit and listen, or to share when asked. I show up in hard conversations with activists, pastors and faith leaders entrenched in the gospel that many of my fellow believers would love to exclude me from and the stigma of following a God my non faith-positive friends see as an archaic superstition with my big leaky heart, dripping “I love you”. I show up bringing homeless queer kids pizza and baked goods from Publix, I pass out shampoo and conditioner, body wash and lotion, and condoms - that are all my way of saying, “If you need to hear this, know I love you, and you are valuable to me. Value yourselves too, okay? Promise me, and I promise never to be too busy to see you.” Its never much, but I’m unsure much is all any of us need. More than anything, we need each other, and I can do that. 

 

Josh is a special kind of firebrand. He is outspoken and has inspired my boldness. His fearlessness stirs my confidence. I can only hope that I am as befitting a brother to him as he has been in all he's taught me. Happy Birthday Josh! I am trying not to shrink back from the gravity of the I love you’s and I see you’s that I so desperately still need. I am learning how to sit in my shock, soak them up and declare my gratitude. I’ve learned this from you. I can’t wait to find out how much more you have to teach me in the years to come.

Pride: An Exhale

I’ve been out of school for four years and I still carry a backpack everywhere I go.
When I ask other people to hold it for me, their eyes grow wide as they realize
What I’ve shouldered across my small frame as long as they’ve known me.
My shoulders are strong.

Sometimes it's hard to gauge just how much weight you’ve carrying until you put it down.

Last Thursday, I found myself walking into the doors of a church of my own volition for the first time in months.
It was an exhale. It was coming up for air.
It was the first time I walked into a church and felt like more than a specter.
I was fully there. I cried a lot.
And with saltwater baptismal pools brimming in my eyes, I took communion and was welcomed to the table. 

A priest and an elder saw me standing in a pew by myself in this moment of divine providence and locked eyes with me.

I didn’t look away. It was the first time in years I can remember not looking away from a faith leader’s gaze.

They came back later to wrap me in mom hugs and smiles.
I hadn't had those in a while.
The wax of my trauma holding me together melted into the incense of their vestments.
Sometimes, life affords me moments when I can manage to forget if only for an instant that by existing I am a political statement.
And I never really liked politics. Maybe that’s why I have such a hard time.

I’m lasered in on these out breaths of discovering my Pride.
Tables where the Eucharist is broken for me, and tables of hard conversations.
In taking photos with each other and offering forgiveness.
In the sweat of building bridges and the still of prayers for healing

I’m the ice cream of my favorite Oreo Ice Cream Sandwich on a hot summer day
The happiest leaky heart basking in the sun
And between the whisper of “I love you.” from God, and the whisper of “I love you.” from inside, I’ve found
A heart that leaks, “I love you.” The greatest commandment.
My Pride is my body, this prayer box of a house
Built in worship of a caricature by a person who was never expected to live there.
And yet I am still showing up here, ready to share. What redemption.
All pillar, and stone and open window. Let them see.
All unlocked door, and gritted tooth, and grin. Let them in.
Old insecurities now newfound confidence.
I have raised this altar stone by stone,
Wall by wall from the smooth granite I unearthed in people I dared to trust
This is borne from pain and humility and grace and hope.
And the glory is so thoroughly honest that I am finally sleeping soundly at night.
I have built sanctuary. I am creating home.
It's funny how habits can convince us to carry things that are long since unnecessary
I am just now learning to let them go.

Memorial Day Fishing, Police Brutality, and Good White People

It was a crisp Memorial Day morning, and our reels were threaded with fresh line. We hadn't been out together in a while. I believe there was Atlanta sports talk on the radio. We saw the trailing officer's car first. It followed us for about a mile, then we heard the sirens of the backup. The lights flashed against the morning sun. In what seemed like seconds, our SUV was surrounded. The officers exited their cars with guns drawn, pointed inside the vehicle at us. My dad sat in the driver's seat, and I was riding passenger side. My little brother, of five sat in the back.
 

I remember taking my cues from my father. I had never seen my father's fear, but there was something else - anger maybe? And yet only his eyes gave away his secret. His face was a practiced mask of calm.

Those emotions were dangerous here.
 

When I think about the look in his eyes, I can recall the scene in vivid detail -- the smell of the McDonalds biscuits once happy now sitting sourly in the air, my shock and curiosity at how small the barrel of a gun seemed -- I'd never had one pointed at me before.  One of the officers yells at my father to keep his hands in sight. My father places them on the steering wheel. The car door is locked. The officer tells him to unlock the door. My dad moves to comply with the demand. The officer yells at him again, gun still pointed at his face to keep his hands visible. I think the officer is afraid too. I cannot understand why. The officer has the gun. My dad lifts his hands up and asks the officer to unlock the door. The officer tells my dad to get out the car, but he is wearing his seatbelt. The officer tells me to remove it. I do. They snatch him out of the car, handcuff him and place him on the hood of his own vehicle. His sons watch helplessly from the cab. The five-year-old begins to cry. He doesn't understand why they are doing this to his dad. The five-year-old has not had the talk yet. Dad likely thought him too young. The eighteen-year-old has. The trauma would follow him. I remember what he's told me. I call my mother and relay everything that is happening as best I can. They later found out the car was his. It had been reported stolen a month prior, but was found by the police department and returned the same week. He was sitting on the pavement for an hour still cuffed before they asked for his license from his wallet. They didn't stop treating him like a criminal until they saw his Fulton County administrative ID.  
 

It took years to stop rationalizing this experience. 


Four years later, blue and red lights fill the darkness of the cab of my Jetta. Fear grips my heart. I fumble for my phone with the urgency of a boy reaching for his mother. She answers. I speak quickly and quietly, and I gather my license and registration balancing them in my hands on the steering wheel. The officer comes in minutes. I feel my heart leaping out of my chest. Each beat a jolt of adrenaline, pounding, "Run. Run. Run." I feel trapped and unsafe. He approaches my open window. I say, "Good Evening." He asks me where I'm headed, and where I'm coming from. I know why he's asking those questions. It's late and I don't look like I belong here. This community is monolithic. He asks me is this my car. Yes. He tells me I'm lying, the car is not registered to my name. He says he will ask me again. This time, I remember that it's registered to my mother. I give him her name, my voice shakes. I hope that he believes me. He asks for my license. My address is not the same as hers. It's not the same as the house I'm currently renting two streets over from the side of the road where we're stopped. My hands shake. My voice shakes. My eyes tear when he walks back to his car. I just want to make it home. I haven't broken any laws. I did nothing wrong. He brings my license back and tells me I'm free to go. He never did tell me why he pulled me over. I knew better than to ask. He didn't need a reason. I make it home that night, and counted myself lucky.

I will not sugarcoat this for you, my white friends. This is my life, my pain, my experience, my reality and they matter. These are more than isolated incidents, but shared experiences that are symptoms of a far more pervasive problem of institutionalized, systematic racism that has gone unchecked for far too long and I am calling you into accountability.

I love you, even when the only black icon you seem to quote in times like this in the midst of your many Fox News shares is Dr. King, and yet I understand more than ever exactly how frustrated he felt with white moderates in America from the Birmingham Jail. Not much has changed.

I am calling you Higher - to more than just your thoughts and prayers, but to the next level of love and support for your black sisters and brothers' equality by breaking your silence.

Your quiet, introspective empathy alone does nothing to move the conversation forward forward and in the silence that you find more agreeable than protests and more comfortable than hard conversations, we've continued to mourn the echoes of black bodies across the nation hitting the pavement at the hands of law enforcement. 

Every time an unarmed black person dies at the hands of law enforcement that took an oath to protect and serve them, I go silent for a period in response to my instant hyper-awareness of the powerful force that I am while my instincts are screaming for me to be a destructive one.

In those moments, Andrea Gibson's The Etiquette Leash reminds me to be my best self. The spoken word poem starts with "I want a good heart. I want it to be made of good stuff...", but the apex is when she begins to suggest that love is more than something introspective, that it will call our bodies to action. She says,

Hallelujah to making everyone uncomfortable.
Love readies its heart’s teeth, chews the etiquette leash.
Love insists well-intentioned white people officially stop calling themselves color blind.
Insists hope lace its fucking boots.
Always calls out the misogynist, racist, homophobic joke
Refuses to be a welcome mat where hate wipes its feet.
— Andrea Gibson


The truth is, I'm surrounded by good white people.


Good white people who've affirmed my destiny, spoken into my life, loaned me money, who care about my well-being, etc. And when I consider my parents' experiences, and some of my family's stories from my mom's hometown or even undergrad in Tallahassee, I certainly feel fortunate. I'm likely surrounded by more good white people than anyone else in my family has ever been.

In the years since the BlackLivesMatter movement first gained nationwide attention with the murder of Trayvon Martin, I've only deleted a single Facebook friend (he shared a series of Tomi Lahren rants and other incredibly offensive memes about the protests, the movement, and how if black people would only act right, they wouldn't get shot. He thought BET was racist, and wanted a white history month. You know the type.). 

The vast majority of my white friends have been silent, but most who have responded to recent events have done so with empathy. Fewer with outrage. Only a handful engage other white people on the subject -- at least through social media. Strangely, I am more frustrated with them than the condescending racist trolls. I see silence, and fluctuate between anger and grief, feeling the increasing weight of cumulative black trauma and death. I think about their silence and willingness to justify murder while I watch black man after black man bleed out on the concrete. As the officers always watch the life escape their body. As none of them call for a medic or offer first aid.

I see Philando Castille, with his fiancé and child in the car and think of my father on Memorial Day almost five years ago. I see Alton Sterling's size and think of my Uncle Art. Tamir favors an old mentee. Trayvon reminds me of my cousin Trenton. Sandra Bland with her sass but a compass that always points north, of my cousin Rhonda. Indictments are always rare, and never followed by convictions. 

They form rationalizations like,

"If only the audio were clearer, we'd know for sure he was innocent."

"Don't make assumptions! Its not as if there's a video. Only two people saw what happened and unfortunately one is dead."

"He was afraid for his life, he had to defend himself."

"The video doesn't show *all* the angles. He could've been reaching for a gun."


They are good white people, and they don't even realize that they are putting dead men, that they have already presumed guilty on trial for their own murders - the same trend of presumed guilt which is especially reserved for black people in this country and pervades our collective national consciousness, black people included leaving men like my father sitting on the asphalt, and others not so fortunate lying there breathing their last.
 

We all want so desperately to have moved forward, to step finally into the light on the other side of the shameful wounds of genocide, slavery, and inequality that blight our nation's past that it becomes easy to relegate things like racism to history - something to be associated with long gone Civil Rights leaders and politicians, and folded away in long ago discarded KKK sheets and hoods. And when this is the approach we take, it is easy for some to believe racist police brutality as being invalid and nonexistent if not racially motivated. 

This might surprise you, but while I do believe that the string of most recent high profile police shootings recently have been racist, 

I think the vast majority of the officers involved in these altercations are good white people too. I don't think they wake up motivated to kill black people. But what good are their good intentions if they kill us?


So open dialogue with your white friends with good intentions, especially if you are my white friends. Speak up at racist comments when you hear them. Question racist behaviors. Challenge statements and jokes that perpetuate harmful stereotypes of black people. Because the truth is as loud as I protest, and as well as I write there are some people that I will never be able to influence, that my voice may never be able to reach, but you can, and yours will -- if you have the courage to let it. And for whatever reason, whether naivety or optimism, I cannot decide, I believe in you.