Thursday, November 26, 2020

Poetry:Flawful


You'd prob'ly just tell me, 'you're beautiful'.
You're supposed to because you're my friend.
But everyone knows that what matters most 
is what says the mirror in my head?

And if I would dare to be honest with you,
I'd say that I envy her smile
and her hair and her bust and her waist and her hips
I'm a monster, at least in my eyes.

I feel lucky to live in a time such as this.
I can
shun Mother Nature's mistakes;
And no one's the wiser, not that many care
if my DP's a real or a fake.

And what of the mirror that's inside my head?
Is it happy with what I have done?
Not when envy can never be satisfied 
Or when 'perfect', one cannot become.





Monday, November 16, 2020

"Born a Crime" by Trevor Noah: My (long overdue) take that nobody asked for


I read this book five months ago and wrote my first draft of a review shortly thereafter.
  
And you're only getting around to finishing now?!
And you wonder why that writing career you dreamed of never took off? SMH

Anyhoo ... still better late than never. 



You know how if your best friend comes to you and starts to tell you about a disagreement they'd had with someone you almost already know whose side you're going to be on?

That's how I started this book.  I turned to the first page giddy with excitement 'knowing' I was going to love it.

And, spoiler alert, I did.

My absolutely loving it was not that much of a real surprise I guess. I've only been Noah's fan for several years, following his YouTube channel and watching him on The Daily Show (now The Daily Social Distancing Show thanks to Covid...sidebar I love him with his uncut hair and sweat shirts just about as much as I do with him in suits #CovidUstillSuck).

A few of the stories in the book were therefore not entirely new to me.  It didn't matter though, I laughed just as hard, perhaps even more since I could now also visualise the memory of him telling that story - and Trevor is quite a remarkable storyteller. #insertSwoon

I would not be forthcoming though if I didn't admit that I did begin to wonder about the veracity of the stories.  How many of these are genuinely his "stories of a South African Childhood" and how many are merely parts of his material for comedic purposes and therefore drawn from the life experiences of others?

But does it really matter?  
Probably not. 
Heck, so many of his stories were so relatable it could easily have been stories from a Jamaican childhood.  This realisation then triggered an even deeper appreciation as I mused on how curiously many of us seem to be a part of each other's stories despite the oceans and state lines that separate us.
#nothinNewUnderTheSunRight

It also created something of a struggle between appreciating the comedic parts - getting a full belly of laughs while acknowledging the fact that the horrors mentioned were indeed someone's reality - many persons' in fact. Should I truly be finding these accounts funny?  But like Robin Williams once said, "comedy can be a cathartic way to deal with personal trauma".



STRUCTURE

The first thing I remember standing out to me was that the story is not told in a linear manner and that drove me near nuts.  
The main character is nine, then he is five, then his mom has just asked his father to have a child (him), then he is eleven, no wait, he is seven again.  
I hated that occasionally I wasn't sure of his age at the time of some incidents being relayed.

To combat my frustration with this format though, I reminded myself that sometimes when I was telling a story I often went back and forth, muddying the order of how things happened.  That's just how the brain works.  This format was in fact giving authenticity to the idea of storytelling.  The point is for the listener (reader) to get the gist of the experience.  I think once I got my brain in line with that thought I stopped being bothered... Not really lol but I got over it.

I also loved how each chapter was prefaced with a bit of information that helped the reader to contextualize what the chapter would explore.  It gave the reader an idea of not only what life was like in South Africa at that time; but also nuggets into the author's opinions on the issues surrounding the experiences in his tales.  

PARENTING 101

Can I just say how much I love Patricia Nombuyiselo Noah! From the first moment she appears shoving Trevor from a moving vehicle, to the moment she's recovering from a gunshot wound to the face and is letting Trevor know it's the only reason he can now claim to be the best looking person in the family. 

I think I love her for primarily three reasons:
Firstly, she's Trevor's mom and you can't help but automatically love your love's loves.😉
Secondly, in several accounts she is a type of Derek and Joan Willie wrapped in one. Reading about her gave me all the feels.
Thirdly, what a woman with drive!

Like Patricia, my parents would punish me then still expect me to come kiss them 'good night' before bed.  
I was not allowed to go to bed mad at them (well at least not visibly so).  After an incident, they'd be acting like nothing happened, treating me like normal and clearly expecting that my response be the same... you do realise you just gave me a hiding (with the ruler/ belt you sent me to fetch then return to its place too #asIf)
So when Trevor speaks of his mother's actions of punishment then coming to him to participate in bonding activity, I genuinely laughed out loud at his response because they most certainly mirrored my own.

                        What? What kind of psychopath are you? You just beat me!"
                        Yes. Because you did something wrong. It doesn't mean I don't love you anymore. (p.85)

I can almost hear the modern 'experts' denouncing my parents' actions as (whatever they have expertly named it).  
As a naïve child I'd most certainly have agreed with them - how dare my parents discipline me then still expect me to demonstrate love? I surely didn't want to be bonding with my parents and would rather have spent time fuming at them for punishing me after I did something they had previously told me I'd be punished for.  
As a mature adult however, I'm filled with gratitude.  It is because of them I learned early that disagreement does not equate hate - a lesson much of our world would do well to learn.  I knew that no matter where I ended up they would never be so angry to turn me away. 

Like Patricia, my parents were (still are) wholeheartedly committed to going to church. 
My parents literally had a set of keys for the building LOL and that meant I had to be there too.  While my journeys to the building were in no way, shape or form as adventurous as Trevor's, we were there several times per week, rain or shine whether our car was working or we had to walk.  Many times we were sometimes not home until almost an hour after services had ended because we had to greet everyone then drop home several others before we actually headed home.  

But I digress, this is supposed to be a review about a book.

It is abundantly clear throughout this story that Patricia Noah's faith was a visible one throughout her son's childhood - not only of her words but also demonstrable.  While he did not then agree, and continues to disagree with her views based on this faith, it is something that he undoubtedly learned was an anchor in her character. This resonated strongly with me because of my own parents.

Mi poor pickney

Everything I have ever done, I've done from a place of love.  If I don't punish you, the world will punish you even worse.  The world doesn't love you... When I beat you, I'm trying to save you.  When they beat you, they're trying to kill you." (p. 243)

Being a parent must be a labyrinth of sorts. The complexity of having to navigate the delicate balance of correcting those ills that are a natural product of mankind's innate sinful nature; but doing so without scarring physically or emotionally, is not a job that will be executed well by the faint of heart. 
Add that to the dynamic of  being a parent in a world where you're of the 'wrong race' which then puts your child in perpetual danger for merely existing.  A parent's attempt to correct may then be amped by a desire to create a perfection that will hopefully (though not likely) safeguard that child against the radar of those who will see any wrongdoing magnified by the color of the child's skin.

My laughter morphed into snarls as I read the accounts of mindless racial injustice.  None of these were new to me but can one truly get to the point of being emotionally untouched by repeatedly hearing of such accounts?  Hopefully not.
Incidentally my reading coincided with the marches spurred by the Black Lives Matter events that were then raging in the United States and other parts of the world. 
Perhaps that was why my emotional response was so strong?

I've always, and perhaps forever will be, bewildered by this question:  
On what basis does one person, with no control of the circumstances of his/her birth then justifiably view that birth as making him/her better or more worthy than another born in different circumstances?
#ahWell 

MORE DEEP STUFF

Because Trevor is a comedian I'd been prepared for the laughs.  What I hadn't anticipated was the deep stuff.  The heart tugging kind of stuff.

Being the descendant of slaves, I know some history of my fore parents' woes.  But growing up as a Jamaican black person, even with our share of colourism issues, I realise that I had been tremendously shielded.  I never, until recent years, understood the depth of physical and psychological warfare just so black people can have a place in the world. For these topics to find place in a comedic work is both sad and meaningful.  On the one hand it's scary that such a reality exists, and on the other, as Williams said, it's cathartic that we can still find humor in the midst of such harsh realities.  

One drop (not the Jamaican dance)
Trevor alludes to an otherness I've heard black mixed persons express because they too often find themselves rejected by the groups that make up their 'halves'. Not black enough because of the other half, yet not acceptable to the other half because of the black blood.  
I've also heard him joke about the 'one drop' rule formerly used in South Africa and the Antebellum South where a person was considered black if even one ancestor anywhere on their family tree was black.  According to Trevor, it's a hilarious irony that such a rule meant to belittle someone for being part black actually demonstrated the remarkable strength of the black race if one drop of black blood was impactful enough to void the existence of the blood from the other race. Regardless of where on one's family tree there existed even one black ancestor, the one drop rule meant that the other ancestor was relegated a non factor. 
#SomeRacistDidntThinkThisOneAllTheWayThruHAHA.  
But then prejudice doesn't likely produce rational thinking I guess.


"You never know how strong you are until being strong is your only choice" - Bob Marley

The third reason I love Trevor's mom was because of the amazing strength of character she displays time and again throughout the story. Instance after instance recounted made me think "wow, some people have serious will!"
To just keep going when the odds are seemingly stacked against you is a mark of one's strength; and Trevor's mom is quite a role model in this regard. You know someone is impressive when you ask yourself if you think you could handle 'that'  in response to something they have had to deal with.  Not everyone has that kind of mettle.
Her strength is such a significant textbook juxtaposition of the weakness of her abusive husband, Abel, it could have been a fictional creation.  The audacity he displays in blaming her for his failures as he raises a gun to attempt to kill her, stirred tremendous anger in me.

 "You've stolen my life.  You've taken everything away from me. Now I'm going to kill all of you." (p 276) 

But isn't that the response of the weak? Always blaming others for their shortcomings.  Always believing that by pummeling others into the ground they will be able to stand. 


CONCLUSION

Good stories are supposed to connect the reader with the characters. That's why we laugh or cry or become angry while watching a movie - even the purely fictitious ones (heck I've cried while watching sci-fi). The writer, director and actors have connected us to that world. 
It's twice as intense if it reflects something that we know actually exists beyond the screen or the pages we turn. 

Trevor's character, in my mind at least, never displays the naivety of a child's thoughts - it is after all being told through the eyes of his adult self; where memories have arguably been tainted/improved by life's experiences.  
However, the widening of his physical world as he grows older and begins to interact with others from different walks of life, allows him to begin to see and, by extension, discuss a world outside of his small family circle. 
The struggles he faces and adjustments he makes to survive a life as a mixed child in a racially divided society, help the reader to interpret a broadening/ development of his world view and demonstrate an awakening in the character.
Plus there is lots of opportunity for riotous laughter.

#LOVEDIT

Monday, July 20, 2020

Just incase you date a black woman...

A non-black friend of mine told me of his interest in a woman who just happened to be black and his desire for pointers on 'how to' approach a relationship with her.

"Is it me? Because that would greatly affect what I tell you."

Turns out it wasn't.

I did however ask him what advice he would give to me if I asked him about how to date a (his race) guy.
He thought for a moment - complete with furrowed brow and tilted head - then he finally came out with
"I dunno. He's a guy."

"Exactly!"

Interestingly, most of the stereotypes I know about black people, I learned from T.V; specifically, American TV.  Many of these realitites don't exist where I'm from.

Like that time I was out with a non-black friend and when he's about to go get us some sodas he asks me what flavour I want.  I shrug I don't know - I've kinda stopped drinking sodas - so he says "they have Fanta grape" with a laugh.  But I don't get the joke so I just shrug again and say 'ok'.
As soon as he returns though he is bumbling that he thinks he should apologise for being racist just now.  I am completely clueless and when he repeats his apology I take a minute to replay what happened so I can assess how I feel about his apology.
I'm no more aware so I ask him to explain; and that's when I learn that 'black people love Fanta grape' (Just about as much as we love fried chicken apparently though for the life of me I can't understand why that is a stereotype about blacks... who doesn't love fried chicken?)
#insertConfusedEmoji 

Anyway, I learned something about 'me' that day.

So what do I do with his apology though? I'm not offended, but was he being offensive to blacks in general?
Which brings me to my next point - being expected to represent all blacks wherever I go.

BLACK AMBASSADOR
I've even had black people advise me that I should respond a particular way to certain things while living in a country where blacks are less than 1% of the population.  I should do this because I may be the only black person with whom many here come in contact, and their interaction with me can determine their perception of black people.

Really now?

Pssh. No thank you.  I'll pass on the race ambassador gig.  Anyone who meets me can take away whatever they wish; but my goal is certainly never going to be to help them create some perception about a whole gosh darn race of people.

But let me rewind my focus to black women.


As an Afro-Caribbean woman I'm completely dumbfounded by some of the expectations since I don't portray the stereotypical characteristics and neither do any of my friends.
Don't get me wrong. There are undoubtedly many people who exhibit the behaviours found in stereotypes because after all, isn't that kinda how they get formed in the first place?
But, as Merriam-Webster rightly points out, stereotypes represent 'oversimplified opinion[s], prejudiced attitude[s] or uncritical judgement[s]'.
To broadly ask for advice on 'black women' is to assume that it's our skin color that predetermines the types of persons we are and not our culture and experiences.

I didn't bite my friend's head off - that would have fed too well into the stereotype LOL .
If we are honest, we'd admit that at some point or another we all make an assumption about persons because of their race - I know I've done it.  I think the important thing is to realise what we're doing and make a mental note not to.  Whether our stereotypes put an individual in a positive or negative light, it's just best not to fall victim to accepting assumptions as fact. Instead, the goal should be to know someone based on who they actually present themselves to be.

All of that being said, here are a few things worth considering.

MY POINTERS WENT AS SUCH

Makeup
Many women wear makeup; so this hazard crosses the boundaries of racial hue.  When I wear makeup I always try to be ultra careful if I hug people because while I also wear good setting spray, the darn thing still manages to leave a smudge (though Covid-19 has kinda helped reduce this concern #upside?) Dark chocolate stains may or may not be something you have to deal with when you date a black woman.
MY advice: DON'T FREAK OUT - it's easily removed with a normal stain remover and washing.

Hair
Hair is a big deal to all women regardless of race.
(I know. Earth shattering revelation #sarcasmIsntAlwaysApparentInPrint)
This is why hair products make up a billion dollar industry.   The only difference is race may affect/influence the way it's styled, but at the end of the day it's still just hair. Black hair is also quite versatile so sometimes a black woman will wear her hair short, other times long; this week in braids, the next it's bone straight. It all depends on the woman. Her individuality determines her styling preferences.
It also determines how she feels about people touching it. I know some women who will definitely not take kindly to someone touching their hair. Most times I don't care; but if it's arranged in a way that touching it lends the possibility of ruining that arrangement - BACK. AWAY. FROM. THE. HAIR!
MY advice: DON'T FREAK OUT - sometimes her hairstyle will sit separately on the dresser sometimes it sticks with her. Sometimes you can play around with it, other times don't dare. Different women prefer different styles. #JustAsk

sidenote: women of other races wear extensions too #feltItNeeded2bsaid LOL

Behaviour
Black women often get the label of being 'angry'. I know many women who are afraid of expressing dissent in the workplace because they fear being stuck with this label and that whatever they have to say will not be taken on its merit but as just another black woman being mad about something.  Which is totally weird since 'Snapped' and many of the 'Houseswives of (fill in the blank)' reveal that women of other races can be just as ratchet.  It's not the race, it's the cultural/social experience.
MY advice: KNOW THAT MANY BLACK WOMEN DON'T EXPRESS THEMSELVES BY YELLING (and I didn't yell that. I was just going with bold caps for the advice so this one came out like that too hahaha)

Culinary Expertise
Maybe I'm bringing this one up because it's especially close to home.  I'm still believing the LORD for a significant other who loves to cook and is actual good at it - because I'm neither. There's no cooking gene.
MY advice: LEARN TO COOK FOR YASELF

And the list could go in: dancing, sexual prowess, athletic ability...
Just stop with the assumptions already!

Race cannot cause an automatic skill or lack thereof. Have we ever stopped to think that it's the historical realities that have resulted in some races channelling their interests and efforts into certain activities?
While genetic make up may yield varied results for the races in some activities; nothing comes automatically and to excel in any area, skills have to be honed and nurtured regardless of one's race.

RED FLAG?
Several women in a social media group of which I'm a part, often tell stories of being approached by men who claim to have always wanted to date a black woman.  I can't help but be wary (even fearful) of such attitudes. That desire has the ring of nothing more than a bucket list, something to tell your friends that you did.
Love doesn't distinguish colour in that sense... at least not as far as I believe.  To want to be with me because of my race screams an adherrance to certain assumptions about what I may or may not have to offer.

FINAL ANALYSIS
Stereotypes are funny - well many of them are - and those jokes have their place. The problem is, some people take these views into real world scenarios. 
More often than not, if a statement begins '(insert a whole race of people) do this or that' there's a great likelyhood that a lot may be inaccurate about that.

But then that's just how I see it.

Sunday, June 07, 2020

Still Single?

#post40Dilemma

For a long while my biggest fear was falling in love with someone shorter than me; after all, my second toe is a wee bit longer than my first and we all know what that means.  Not to mention the fact that I'm a little taller than the average female and I love wearing three inch heels.

Never in my wildest dreams though would I have thought it conceivable to not fall in love at all ... Well actually I did fall in love, it just was never reciprocated.  Which is totally weird considering I'm not all that bad looking and (if you ask me at least) I've got a killer personality.  I'm reasonably talented in a few things, have a variety of interests, and though not of a YouTube video calibre with a pot and spatula, I haven't starved myself yet.

But before you go 'Oh dear' and feel compelled to DM and express some version of encouragement, let me make my for the record pronouncement:


I know and believe I am a completely whole person and not in need of a significant  other to be validated (I wrote a whole book about that ten years ago remember)

But hear me out.
There is an undeniable comfort in knowing that if you need to be rushed to the hospital at two in the morning, there is someone legally bound to do that PLUS stay with you during the ordeal.  They will not need to leave to tend their own family's needs because you are it!  Add that to the fact that you've gone and hauled your rear to another hemisphere where, after 'Hello' and 'Good Morning' it's gibberish from their lips to your ears; and you are going to want to know there's someone who feels justified to raise hell and see to it that you're getting optimum care should the need to do so arise.

(Well that's what I think happens anyway; but another thing we all know is that things look waaay different when you're on the outside looking in)

And of course I could just as easily haul my rear back home...

How to be Single

I recently added this movie to my Netflix watch list (I haven't got around to watching it; which I'm sure you probably realised because I most certainly would have tossed in a reference or two to something that happened LOL). 

Maybe I should do an addendum to this after I watch it - though it's not for research or guidance but rather for laughs. #RebelWilsonIsHilarious 

I actually do believe there are more benefits to being single - and that ladies and gentlemen is the crux of my problem. #conundrum
I face a complex battle between desperately desiring to keep the liberty I experience with being single, but fearing the repercussions of said liberty.
#AhhTheBeautyOfAging

Most of my friends are no longer single. Of course they have time for a chat or an occasional outing but they have the responsibility of a family depending on them and their energies are, rightly so, invested in those families. 
If I feel out in the cold it's because maybe I should have gone and got my own family.

Sidebar: I'm happy I can't tell my 30 year old self any of this because I'm sure I'd have tried to 'fix' it and stopped myself from some of the most fantastic experiences... But then the different ones probably would have been equally fantastic? #insertQuestioningShrugEmoji
I guess it doesn't matter since turning back time only happens in songs and movies and we see how chaotic it gets and that sh!t is scripted.

Sure there are no guarantees even if you check 'taken' but you gotta admit, a lot more is up in the air when no one feels obligated to you.

Sheesh. This line of reasoning does sound self serving. #almostEmbarrassed

Action Plan?

So what now? Well it's a good thing I like making lists so here's one I'm working on:

1. Tinder profile

Some people may frown on online dating but like everything it has some pros.  For starters it'll definitely widen my geographical reach - an absolute necessity when the likelihood of finding someone who speaks English, has remotely similar interests, AND has a similar religious persuasion  is slim.
Though, again if I'm willing to be honest, geographical reach may not be the problem of someone who has lived in three countries BESIDES their home country... #MiraclesFor1000

Which perhaps has inspired the next point of my brief list...

2. Scrap the falling in love narrative


Love is a decision.

While this is an idea I've often mused on, I've never actually put it into practice.
I figure it's past time to test this hypothesis.

#wishMeLuck








Sunday, April 05, 2020

Celebrate ya own damn self!

My friends' two year old very enthusiastically cheers herself, like all the time! LOL #tooCute

Undoubtedly, she is mimicking her parents' responses to her; but it just cracks me up because I think 'that's the spirit!' 

She puts her toys back into the toy box then yells her name and adds "jozu" (good job).
She removes her bib, then puts it on again - "name jozu"
She correctly names an object in both English and Japanese - "name sugoi" (amazing).

She's recently begun to learn to use chopsticks. At the start of her meal she does what I call a 'ceremonial bite' by using the chopsticks to put the first bit of food into her mouth then tossing it and using her spoon the rest of the way LOL.  Needless to say (though I still am gonna say it) she yells her name and adds "sugoi" for that one use of the chopsticks LOL.


Like most things though, it's always cuter when a baby does it, but it still got me thinking, maybe it's not such a bad idea to give yourself a pat on the back every once in a while.

Self praise is no recommendation... or is it?
After praise number five or six, my friend (the toddler's mom) often tries to rein her daughter in by telling her to cool it - praising yourself is not good.  This is equally funny since the toddler doesn't understand what her mom is advising. But, does mom have a point?

It all depends.  What does the evidence say?

When Usain Bolt ran across the finish line and thumped his chest; or when Serena Williams did a fist pump after scoring a point; or when a football player flexed his muscle after taking the ball into the end zone; were those times appropriate times to celebrate themselves?

How about when someone completes a period of study and posts their graduation photo and a copy of their transcript on their social media page?  Or when someone starts an exercise regimen and frequently broadcasts their progress, is it ok then?
With the advent of social media more people have certainly got a platform to showcase themselves.  But ever tooo often I read dissenting comments on this practice - usually along the lines of the celebrant being a showoff.
 
If you ask me, it's the fake humility that's disgusting.  Pretending to downplay your efforts because, for some reason, acknowledging that you believe you deserve accolades for your success might be offensive, is ridiculous.
Sorry, #notSorry but why is it my fault that you are jealous?  #whosDisingenuousNow

The flip side
Meaningful life is all about balance of course.  Celebrating yourself is no different.
So here are some pointers.

1. Taunting is not classy - it's ok to cheer your success without pointing out another's failure
2. Share the spotlight - it's also ok to acknowledge someone else's contribution to your success and not lose any of your shine
3. Keep your feet on the ground - becoming successful, even the best in your field, doesn't make you a better human being than everybody else.  You still gotta follow the rules, pay your taxes and obey the speed limit when you drive.


Dance like no one is watching
According to my Bing search, some dude named William W. Purkey (never heard of him) is credited for reminding us not to become overly concerned about what we think other people think:

"You've gotta dance like there's nobody watching, Love like you'll never be hurt, Sing like there's nobody listening, And live like it's heaven on earth."
Though if I could just interject a quick addendum for my tone deaf friends "Sing (in your bathroom) like there's nobody listening"... because we really don't want to be.

But I digress #forgiveMe

Why should you wait until someone else says 'jozu' or 'sugoi' in reference to your work when nothing's wrong with your own mouth? 

Celebrating yourself comes out of a belief that you have done something worthwhile and believe that thing is worthy of recognition - even if it's your own recognition... for now.
Besides, according to Everett Rodgers' Diffusion Theory, most people are Late Adopters anyway and your accomplishments might end up only getting posthumous recognition. #alotOfGoodThatWillDoYou


Wednesday, January 08, 2020

Poetry: Reflect


When I was perhaps twenty-two 
I went out on a date.
He intertwined our fingers 
as we hurried through the gate.
And in that moment there was love...
or 'like' at any rate.
Too bad it wasn't me he picked to wed and be his mate.