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An Inauguration Invitation

by: Betsy L. Angert

Mon Jan 12, 2009 at 20:05:20 PM PST



YrTckt

copyright © 2009 Betsy L. Angert.  BeThink.org

I am asking you to believe, not just in my ability to bring about a real change in Washington, I'm asking you to believe in yours.
~ Barack Obama

The invitation arrived in an electronic mail.  As much as America wishes to be hopeful, I had none.  I saw the communiqué and thought it would not be possible.  I would never be selected to attend the inauguration.  Of all the millions who are moved by this historic occasion, while I am amongst these, my anecdote is and would be far less remarkable.  My personal reflection on the Obama election, would not be tragic.  Nor would any thought I might muse of move a reader to say, "Yes.  She should be seated at the swearing in ceremony."

Whatever I might communicate is certainly of little interest to most, if not all.  Surely, the saga of a grandson, or grand-daughter, of a slave, one who worked as their ancestors had, might mesmerize more, or at least a legend such as this would enthrall me.  Indeed, it did.  Only yesterday, I saw and heard a film essay on James "Little Man" Presley.  This steady man in Mississippi began his career when he was six [6.]  On camera, this glorious gent recounted his reality of fifty years of work in the cotton fields.  He shared his sorrow; as a Black man, he was barred from restaurants and royalties that might be awarded to a white man.  "Little Man" Presley also presented his pleasure.


Betsy L. Angert :: An Inauguration Invitation

As he spoke of his thirteen children, wife, employer, and the Journalist who has known him since the day of the Correspondent's birth, I cried.  When Mister Presley at the mention of the President Elect Obama, and said he voted for him, I knew what I, and everyone else must feel. That individual his family must be bequeathed entrance to the formal investiture.

Once again, as I stood blubbering, I bemoaned what I had faith I had no right to feel.  Regrettably, I would not be able to attend the official observance.  The installation of Barack Obama into the Oval Office would be one I would miss.  It was true; my yarn could not compare to the composition an elderly man or woman, coal in color, might submit.  Some of these individuals never felt their tally counted.  For many, it did not; not until the Voters Rights Act 1965 was passed into law.  Yes, a request for my narrative could not negate the truth of my tale; it was nothing in contrast to what others might tell.  My complexion had always made me more privileged and that is wrong.  

To my core I felt and continue to feel if the new Administration offers free transportation and tickets to the event, they should not be given to me.  

I had never, through my actions, given up on the country I love.  I had no reason to.  Granted, I frequently felt there was no hope for my homeland.  However, these moments were fleeting.  Prejudice did not permeate my very existence. Nor did bigotry shade my second-by-second experience.  Every thought I might express was not filtered through a truth I could never forget, for I was not dark as pitch.  I did not realize repercussions for nothing more than my race.

I am an activist.  My current age does not make my participation worthy of note, at least not in the year 2008, or 2009.  I am one of millions.  Four or perhaps more will readily appear in the Capital Mall in Washington, District of Columbia.  Almost all will reach the destination without assistance from the Obama Administration.  Why should I not do the same?

For me, without tickets, which I vigorously tried to obtain through conventional means, I would not truly be part of this momentous occasion.  I would be disengaged, detached from the essence that bonds me and helped me to believe.  I imagine as one in a crowd of countless, all I would see would be projected onto a screen.  I would feel separate, not equal to those more worthy of the honor of an invitation.  

Surely, the historic significance would be not be as I hoped.  Were I to go, as a one amongst the masses might, I would grapple with what has long haunted me.  I would not feel as connected to what means so much to me.

Hence,  each time the invitation appeared in my mailbox, the opportunity to pen my prose, to state why this inauguration was so very important to me, I submitted what I knew was not enough, not special, and not unique.

Each time, I did not request what I hoped for, in many ways, more so than accommodations to the services.  My dream was not to merely be welcomed to the Capitol.  I wanted to find what was, and still is lost to me.  The people I think of as parents, biological proxy to me.  My desire was the President Elect and his staff might make a personal dream come true.  Thus, I engraved and placed into the ethereal Internet for weeks.

Dearest Barack, Michelle, Malia, and Sasha, and all those who consider themselves part of the Obama Family . . .

I know not how to best express what this inauguration means to me.  Attendance at the investiture would be the fulfillment of a dream, a desire to return the love that was given to me.  Perchance, a bit of historical context might help to explain why this occasion moves me.  My beginnings were not humble.  Some might say that my childhood was filled with hurt.  However, for me, the circumstances were joyous.

My parents had been together for years.  They prospered financially.  Yet, as a family they were disconnected.  My birth was accidental and a source of anything but delight.  It was decided another person, and her family would raise me.  Mary [Hazel] Washington, and her husband, Arthur, thankfully took me into a world that was not my own.  I became the white child who was far more accepted in a Black world, than she was in her own Caucasian community.  My complexion was light as was my heart when with the persons who truly cared for me.

Later, at an age younger than Sasha Obama currently is, I witnessed an extraordinary event.  My natural mother and father were home, together, in my presence.  The two had grown farther apart in my five years on Earth.  As they spoke of the 1960 election, they argued.  The conversation was animated, more so than any I had heard in the past.  My Mom, the ultimate Progressive mentioned she would not vote for the Republican candidate, register in the Grand Old Party; nor would she lie to the man whose bloodline I share and say she had.  I was intrigued and remained so forever.

The two, Mommy, and her husband whose home I lived in, but rarely saw, and never really knew, divorced. However, sadly, the Washington's exited.  Much occurred in the time of transition.  Mary and Arthur had reason to believe they were no longer needed.  Oh, what they did not know was how wanted they were, how honored I was to be raised in their world.  

The people who did not reject me, taught me to trust.  Mary mentored me in empathy.  Arthur, her spouse, and their offspring, through their actions, helped me to understand the principle, love thy fellow man.

I never forgot how safe and sane I felt when with what felt to be my family, the persons who served as my surrogate parents.  I could not have had a better home, more love, or been as welcome as I was in the neighborhood where residents did not appear as I did.  At the age of eleven or twelve, I had an opportunity, the first of many, to stand up for the rights of the people who gave me more than a physical presence in the world.  I marched for equality, civil rights for all.  With Civil Rights leader Father Groppi, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, I was among the many who said and sung, "Set my people free."

As I aged, I searched for Mary [Hazel] and Arthur Washington.  While I never located the couple who bestowed upon me the freedom that comes with acceptance, as a politically active person, particularly in the 2008 election year, I saw them frequently.  The Washington's were within me each time I made a telephone call in support of Barack Obama.  My mother and father, brownish-purple in hue, were with me as I waved banners for a President Elect Obama.  Mary and Arthur drove to rallies, spoke to relatives.  The two were close at hand when I registered voters.

My hope is that if I am able to find my way to the inauguration, Mary [Hazel] and Arthur Washington will know that with thanks to them, "Yes, we can," and indeed, "We did achieve a dream!"


Mary [Hazel], Arthur, and sons, Arthur Junior and oh, how I wish I recalled the name of the younger, if you read this, please, please, please, get in touch with me.  For as long as I recall, I have, from time to time, searched telephone books, cyberspace communities, asked relatives, sought some clue of where you might be.  I wanted, I yearn for you to know what as a five and one half year old I could not, did not know how to share.  You, your kindness, commitment to my well-being, the care you bestowed upon me has forever meant more to me than mere words.

I speak of each of you, your family, even when my mouth is closed.  Who you are exudes from my every pore.  So much of what I think, say, do, feel, and am, at least all that I treasure of me, is with thanks to each of you.  Mary, I know my parents rejected what seemed the perfect reason to name me Hazel, your given name, as you requested.  Nonetheless, please trust that while you and I may not share a moniker, for me, we share sooooo much more.

I thank you for being my first and best teacher.  You are a mentor, one that money cannot buy.  If I have any hope in 2009, it is that perchance, one day, you and I will meet.  I wish to do more than merely greet you with a smile.  Even from afar, I will, as I have, embrace the being that is you, and express my sincere gratitude for the being you helped me to become.

The Washington family, this is my Inauguration Invitation to you.  May we begin to bring hope for a renewed future alive.

Hugs, kisses, and references for other realities . . .


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No tickets (8.50 / 2)
just tears, not only for the inauguration I will miss, but for who I have missed for most of my life.


It is only the giving that makes us what [who] we are. - Ian Anderson. Jethro Tull . . . Betsy
BeThink.org


Hmmm. I'm usually not one to log on (1.00 / 1)
just to say "hmmm" to things that make you go "hmmm", but something about this really rubs me the wrong way.

Maybe I'd get it if I knew who "Natasha Obama" was. Never heard of her. Crazy auntie in the attic?

At any rate, if they were handing out purple prose awards, the diarist may have actually been invited.

Ugh.  


I am sorry I offended you (7.00 / 1)
Dearest keefolderman  . . .

I am sorry I offended you, your sense of sanity and serenity.  Perhaps, you may wish to learn more of the Obama family.  Sasha is short for Natasha.  However, since it distracts you, I will change it to commonly known name.

Barack and Michelle have two daughters.
Malia Ann Obama: Born in 1999.
Natasha Obama: Born in 2001.



It is only the giving that makes us what [who] we are. - Ian Anderson. Jethro Tull . . . Betsy
BeThink.org


[ Parent ]
More commonly known as Sasha. (0.00 / 0)


--7.88, --6.56      If I can't rant, I don't want to be part of your revolution.

[ Parent ]
yes, dear. I have kids in my classes who (3.50 / 2)
are in the same class(room) as Sasha. And if you spoke to them about "NatashaObama", they too, would ask you, "who the fuck is that?"

(One of these kids recently piped in with the greatest quote: "What I hate most about the secret service is that they block my locker when they come to pick up Sasha.")

So I'm sitting here wondering what is the point of calling a girl that is known the world over by her given name? Is there a rhetorical point to that? A stylistic one?    Is the author attempting to convey some sense of "insider" info or personal intimacy that simply does not exist? -- I see a lot of folks attempting to do that with the Obamas, frankly. (While folks who actually do have that sense of "intimacy" or "proximity" just by virtue of living in the same community for decades just kinda shake their heads and go "hmmmm.")

Yeah, so I have kids in my classes who went to school with the Obama kids up until last month. Bfd. I know a lot of people--a lot--who worked with Obama directly, long before he and our little "neighborhood" here became the center of the world political universe. So fucking what! Bfd!

Now everyone who is no one in the world is going to go out scouring their own personal history to find some sort of remote fucking connection to the Obamas (and by proxy: to black folk in general) and turn this to account in any way possible?

Meh.

On some level, I guess, to me, the Obamas are still the folks who get their fucking pizza from the same place I do, who frequent the same restaurants I do, who vote at the polling place in the school where I sometimes teach, whose kids attend the school I've been in countless times-as educator, contractor, performer, wtfever, etc., etc.

political "Obamania" is one thing, I guess--but this attempt to dig up and drag out any kind of personal connection to the Obama family and its history....dunno, it's just a turnoff.



[ Parent ]
we are all just folks (0.00 / 0)
Dearest keefolderman . . .

I read your comment just before I went to sleep.  This morning, as I rushed to ready for my routine travel to the Peace Corner, I knew I could not compose a comment.  I did not wish to be late; the road to tranquility is a long one.  As I walked to the intersection, I listen to my ipod.  Each of Barack Obama's book are among my downloads.  Cosmically I heard the words.

"(T)he growth of an unabashedly partisan press: talk radio, Fox News, newspaper editorialists, the cable talk-show circuit, and most recently the bloggers, all of them trading insults, accusations, gossip, and innuendo twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.

"The constant vitriol can wear on the spirit . . . Oddly enough, the cruder broadsides you don't worry about too much; if Rush Limbaugh's listeners enjoy hearing him call me 'Osama Obama,' my attitude is, let them have their fun."


Barack Obama continued in the text.  He shared a truth that resonates for me.  On pages 120-124, President Elect Obama wrote more on the power of media.  The soon-to-be President Obama recounted a story.  Reagan Speechwriter, Peggy Noon determined how or why Barack Obama might pen a speech as he did.  The Republican who was part of the Reagan Revolution, stated with certainty, Obama thought too much of himself.  He lacked of fame and restrain. The lady's language prompted President Elect Obama to say, "Ouch!"  He offered, as do I . . .
It's the more sophisticated practitioners (rather than Limbaugh types) who can sting you, in part because they have more credibility with the general public, in part because of the skill with which they can pounce on your words and make you seem like a jerk. (i.e. Peggy Noonan re Time article) . . . .

There was another lesson to be learned: As soon as Ms. Noonan's column hit, it went racing across the Internet. . . . In that sense, the episode hinted at a more subtle and corrosive aspect of modern media--how a particular narrative, repeated over and over again and hurled through cyberspace at the speed of light, eventually becomes a hard particle of reality; how political caricatures and nuggets of conventional wisdom lodge themselves in our brain without us ever taking the time to examine them.


While I am not a Barack Obama, I am a believer in careful, complete, communication.  Thus, I share . . .
So I'm sitting here wondering what is the point of calling a girl that is known the world over by her given name?

Ah, keefolderman, had you only asked rather than assumed, I would have been quite happy to explain. Indeed, I will.  My Mom observed when she was very young, parents tend to give babies long beautiful names. Then, they never use them, except when they are upset with the child.  Little ones, she reflected, learn to hate their given name, since they are only referred to in times of trouble.  My Mom gave each of her children short names.  Mine is the longest, five letters.  Mommy theorized; if a child has a long and lovely name, parents and others may wish to use it  as a show of reverence.  Hence, I did.
Now everyone who is no one in the world is going to go out scouring their own personal history to find some sort of remote

As I mentioned in my response to durrati, I do not believe people scour for a connection.  As Donna Brazil noted hours ago, Americans relate to Barack Obama and his family.  Each person she has spoken with, as they describe what the inauguration means to them, begins with the words, "When I was a child . . ."

The Obama's story, your tale, or mine, are as Shakespearean plays; each speaks of the human experience.  Macbeth, Julius Caesar, Hamlet, name your manuscript, evokes emotions common to us all.

I may not have been as fortunate as you are.  I did not and have not had an acquaintance with the Obama's on a more personal level.  While I am in Chicago often, and grew up less than one hundred miles away, I only met Michelle and Barack in passing.  I am grateful for the minutes each shared with me.  The two personify what many might imagine is the American Dream.  

As the family takes the stage on Tuesday, every man, woman, and child will know, they, we, I can trust that the impossible is possible.




It is only the giving that makes us what [who] we are. - Ian Anderson. Jethro Tull . . . Betsy
BeThink.org


[ Parent ]
Ah, keefolderman, had you only asked rather than assumed, (0.00 / 0)
um, unless I'm really going blind, the text you placed in blockquotes does end in a question mark, no?

I asked. You answered.

But you missed the main thrust of my critique of your writing style. To wit: see purple prose. That, imnsho, is a legitimate critique, and while it may not be a nice thing to say or to hear, it's fair game for writing on a political blog, and need not be framed as a personal attack. That this prose is flamingly purple (flashing neon even) cannot be denied. The proof is in the puddin, as it were.

The underlying message--the idea that this moment in history means different things to different people, depending on their skin color--is part of a larger phenomenon and a thread that runs through an awful lot of commentary at the moment. OK, it's great for white folk to acknowledge that their own personal history somehow denies them a certain element of experience in this moment.

Frank Rich's "White Like Me" is a pretty good example of the phenomenon.

But this business of "my mama was a black nanny", therefore I have some distant emotional tie to black people and therefore I relinquish my sense of entitlement--though only after having used every shred of connection and entitlement I possess to secure my rightful place in the ceremonies, right alongside Donna Brazille?,....that's what turns me off.

And no, you're not alone. Suddenly now, after all these years, being connected to black folk--in whatever remote circumstance or happenstance may apply--is somehow something that can be turned to account, and used as a projection screen to deal with decades of white liberal guilt and centuries of entitlement. I don't have any more specific examples for you, but the shit's all over the internets--and the print media.

Mostly, it's just standard whitebread fare. Here, dressed in flaming purple-- it just stands out a bit more.  

And it just keeps getting worse:

I only met Michelle and Barack in passing.  I am grateful for the minutes each shared with me.  The two personify what many might imagine is the American Dream.

Yeah. Could be. And there are millions more just like them who are not moving into the white house and who probably don't aspire to.

Really, in some way all you folks who are engaging in this stuff are subscribing to a "Barack the Magic Negro" kind of mentality--and it must be excruciating to the Obamas to witness this, and to know that this is part of the fallout of their success. Is this why they keep trying to shift people's focus toward community service? Could be.

You want some connection to black folk and to this moment in history? Go out and establish some real relationships with the many millions of them in your midst. Course, you may end up having to experience a good measure of the American Nightmare for every taste of the American Dream you get in the process.

It's a lot "nicer" to establish some vicarious connection to those larger-than-life "magic negroes" on the TV screen, I suppose.  

 


[ Parent ]
I am forever fascinated (0.00 / 0)
Dearest keefolderman . . .

I am forever fascinated.  How interesting that you chose to reply to one of my responses and not the other.  Perhaps, you missed the offering.  Perchance, you may wish to peruse, "Yes, we can!"

I learned long ago, that all we truly know is ourselves, if that.  Mary was not my nanny.  Were it not for the forum, I might have shared more of the circumstances of my birth, life, and lack of a relationship with my parents in those early years.  

However, I have faith that you would not have trusted my reflections.  From what was shared it seems, apparently, you know well my associations, preferences, and history.  You are able to read between the lines.  Yet, you missed much, even the comment that addressed your assessment of My Left Wing, when and why I first spoke of Mary at this site.

I also invite you to consider the many missives in which I question Barack Obama's position.  I share but a few.
Myths Move On
Farewell To Privacy. Hello To Arms
Wars Will Win
An Open Letter to Barack Obama on Iran
Clean Coal and the Clause
Oh [Ed] Henry!
No, he and his family are not my prophets.  They are but people as are we all.  Any of us might personify America's destitution and dreams.

Sadly, particularly for those of color, miseries are more, which is why I write of the disparity so often.
Black America
Black History
Immigration

Indeed, the only reason I spoke with Barack Obama was a point of interest.  In a country, that remains racist, colormute and not colorblind, I was very distressed by the notion that Senators Obama and Clinton might propose a truce.  

You may recall the decision not to speak of race relations.  A month or more before he delivered his now famous speech on the topic, a good friend of mine, who lives in Illinois and lobbies for education in Washington, walked an essay of mine into each of the then Senator's offices.  I was curious; had he read the tome before he spoke.
Race Relations in America; Colormute, Not Colorblind

I understand that for you, I will always be white.  It fascinates me; our color clearly defines us.  People prefer not to look past the pale, the purple, the prose, or the prominence of a President Elect.  It seems it is a challenge for us to change.  Rarely, do we look at people as individuals.  I wonder when that transformation, in America, will come.


It is only the giving that makes us what [who] we are. - Ian Anderson. Jethro Tull . . . Betsy
BeThink.org


[ Parent ]
Oy. If perchance the moment should (0.00 / 0)
e'er arrive in which I deign to tarry long, long, long through the moidering missives you cite, 'twould be in a fit of OCD-inspired distraction from the shackles of this mortal coil, seeking to discern, at which point in your voluminous wisdom, you stumbled upon and discovered your undying fondness for this archaic gem: perchance.

Ay, but there's the rub. Yes, Betsy, you will always be white. It's a biological thing.

And my point is just that: yep, you're white (for all practical intent and purpose, so am I, for that matter). Deal with that--as uncomfortable a fact of life as it may be.

"Yes, I'm white.....

but some of my best friends are black."
but my parents didn't own any slaves."
but
but
but my mama was a black nanny."
but...FILL IN THE BLANK."

It's an uncomfortable time to be white in this country.  It's been uncomfortable to me for as long as I can remember and, to some extent, probably always will be.

We're all going to have to find ways of being comfortable in our own skin--and that challenge is likely to be greatest for those of us with white skin. Because all the protestations in the world aren't going to change the fact that when you walk down the street--esp in a Black neighborhood (you've been to Chicago often enough to know: yes, we do still live in a clearly segregated country)--you will be seen as white because you ARE white.

It's not something you can squirm out of. And what I see, not only in your writing, but in a lot of the commentary I mention above, is a helluvalot of squirming.



[ Parent ]
"uncomfortable"? (0.00 / 0)
It's been uncomfortable to me for as long as I can remember and, to some extent, probably always will be.

Sorry keefolderman; I have never been uncomfortable in my skin.  It seems you are ill at ease with my complexion and what you think is my truth.  Squirm, as you will.  I have not and will not, not even to gratify you.

I wish I could say it has been a pleasure.  For me, your presumptions are a fascinating puzzle.  May you enjoy your play.


It is only the giving that makes us what [who] we are. - Ian Anderson. Jethro Tull . . . Betsy
BeThink.org


[ Parent ]
Maybe it's your social environment (0.00 / 0)
that  affords you the "luxury".

The primary reason most people feel "uncomfortable" in their skin: it comes when they are in the absolute minority in their environment. Takes a little getting used to.

Most people who grow up in the African American sectors of our segregated cities, if they ever hope to "succeed" (by the standard measure), accept as a given  that they will have to spend their lives as a minority among whites.

African Americans who wish to live in a "majority" population usually have to take a certain loss of "amenities" in stride if they wish to live their lives in a "majority" population: that is, they'll probably have to deal with all the ails of living on the "black" side of town if they wish to count among the majority where they live (and for most, it is utterly inconceivable that they might also work in a majority environment. (Though the number of black middle and upper (middle) class communities is growing  ).

I think it's actually a good thing to experience "feeling uncomfortable in your own skin"--especially for people whose skin color is of the mainstream/dominant culture. It is when you live as a minority in a group of other-colored people that you begin to glimpse an understanding of the experience of Black people who have "succeeded" and thus spend most of their lives in predominately white social, professional and educational circles. Often times, they are the only black person in the room or group. And that is not always comfortable--neither at work, nor at play, nor in the grocery store or Sax 5th.

I don't know of many black folk who have not experienced, at some point or another, a strong sense of discomfort in the presence of a majority white gathering of people (be it professional, social, educational, political)--based solely on the color of their skin (and the differences in cultural experience this brings with it).

I would be skeptical of any white person who has not experienced that same sense of discomfort in the presence of a majority black population.

I'd even be skeptical of any white person who does not often experience discomfort in being white skinned (therefore privileged, as you readily concede;  therefore necessarily burdened with a sense of entitlement--real or perceived)--regardless the color of the company they keep.

I have spent most of my life the first 15 or so, and the past 15+-as a "white", minority in communities of color. I have lived, worked, socialized, etc. in an otherwise all-Black environment for most of my life: now, on the south side of Chicago, more than ever. My in-laws are black, my nieces and nephews are, as are my colleagues and most of my friends. None of these people make me feel uncomfortable--most of them never have. My own family: deceased, and never together from the start.

But, whether I am with my family visiting my now deceased MIL's former home in Macon, GA, or simply going about my business on the streets of my neighborhood, I do stand out as the only non-Black person around--it would be foolish to deny that.

I challenge any white person who does not actually live, work or do business in the neighborhood to walk--let's say from 70th and Yale, the place where Jennifer Hudson's relatives were murdered--and somewhere around 60th and Halsted (let's say the new Kennedy King College campus). That's about a country mile. Come back and tell me that you felt 100% comfortable taking that walk as a person with white skin. (OK. Let's be fair: don't walk that stretch, just drive it.)

Sometimes--especially when I am being introduced for the first time to individuals or groups, yeah, it does feel mighty fucking odd to be the only white person in the room.

And I'm damn glad it does! Because I have learned more from those moments of "discomfort" than words can convey.

It's not that way with my family, or my place of work, or my friends--of course it isn't: in that context, I'm probably the only one now who is ever even conscious of my skin color, and I rarely if ever feel uncomfortable as someone who is not Black with them. We have all been together far too long for that.

But with strangers, with new groups or individuals, or just being out on the street--yeah, it can be uncomfortable--and oftentimes, I know damn well some of these people are hell bent on making me feel uncomfortable in my white skin, and sometimes not with the best intentions. I understand that--understand where it's coming from, don't condone or applaud it, but it is what it is-- so I take it as the cost of doing business, as it were.

Even after 15 years as a white minority (most often, as a minority of one), I would worry if I didn't still sometimes feel uncomfortable in my white skin.

I also fully accept the idea that there are certain parts of my family's experience, my friends' experience, my colleagues'  and neighbors' experience that I simply cannot know.

Their experience of this moment in history is one of those things--one among many--that are theirs alone.



[ Parent ]
Regardless of skin color (0.00 / 0)
Dearest keefolderman . . .

Regardless of skin color, countless are extremely comfortable in their skin.  Still, they feel separate.  They do not fit in; which is fine with them.  They are happy being who they are.


It is only the giving that makes us what [who] we are. - Ian Anderson. Jethro Tull . . . Betsy
BeThink.org


[ Parent ]
My point, again: (0.00 / 0)
many more (most of them not white) are made to feel uncomfortable in their skin, simply by virtue of being minorities in a white majority. (Most of them have gotten so USED to that that they don't bother to articulate it.)

Very few white people share this experience--that of being the only white or a minority white in an otherwise "colored" environment. If you are white and are surrounded by whites, your whiteness is likely to remain "invisible"--both to you and to everyone around you.

When you venture into environments in which you are no longer in the majority in terms of skin color, I think it makes you more aware of how it must feel to be a person of color in a predominately white environment.

And yeah, there are moments of discomfort.

And I think most white people know this on some level, which is why there are so few of them who actually DO spend a lot of time in Black/Brown/Red communities. Very few people are willing to actually risk any pre-programmed discomfort. Look at it this way: at least white people have the choice. As long as money, privilege and all the trappings of "success" still rest firmly in the hands of a white majority, Black/Red/Brown people who wish to enjoy those things really don't have the choice--you either learn to cavort with the white folk or you can forget about the trappings.

Don't get me wrong, Betsy. I'm quite happy being who I am. Quite happy to count myself among the few who has risked those moments of "discomfort", to my enrichment and to the benefit of my personal and professional development.

These days, I'm generally most uncomfortable in majority white environments. Like most of my Black friends and family, I've learned to cover that very well and not be bothered by it, for the most part.

Never let em see you sweat, as they say--very often precisely in regard to this phenomenon.  


[ Parent ]
I'm curious, assholes... (6.67 / 3)


What is it about Betsy that makes you people feel free to openly insult her? is it her very openness and vulnerability?

What the fuck IS it about the internets that makes people behave like such total fucking douchebags? The total lack of accountability, I guess.

Betsy, on behalf of all the total fucking douchebags out there who will never have to FACE you and account for their douchebaggery, for their TOTAL fucking rudeness, I apologise.

I know you to be a gentle soul, who has never been rude to ANYONE here, who has NEVER said an unkind word to ANYONE here. And I am sorry that people feel so very free to just lash out at you and be so GODDAMNED FUCKING MEAN TO YOU FOR NO REASON THAN THAT THEY KNOW THEY WIL L NEVER HAVE TO STAND FACE TO FACE WITH YOU AND ACCOUNT FOR IT.

I am so very sorry for that.

--7.88, --6.56      If I can't rant, I don't want to be part of your revolution.


She is one of the nicest souls (5.67 / 3)
on this site. It makes me sad when people are mean to her.

-deano

[ Parent ]
Oh good fucking gawd. Is this is social networking site (1.00 / 2)
or a political blog?

If you really think that little pissy assed comment was the epitome of meanness or "douchebaggery", I suggest that you need to get out more (and yes, that basic suggestion does seem to be part of the problem here--though as far as "meanness" goes, you really don't have to get out more to find more stellar examples of that).

I knew this guy once who was a really nice guy. Really nice. No one could deny it: he was just a really nice guy.

But he was a sorry excuse for  a writer. And no one ever dared tell him that because, after all, he was just such a really nice guy....and no one wanted to be the one to tell him: Look, bud, you're a really nice guy. Really, you are. But as writers go, well, you're mediocre at best. To be quite honest: you're a fucking bore. (But, since you're such a nice guy.....etc., etc., etc.).

I'm not interested in the personalities here. I'm interested in words on a page: whether they move or don't--and these words, well, like most of what comes from that same author's pen--just don't "do it" for me. (Kinda like seeing John Kerry on Olbermann the other day and thinking, Gawd  what a fucking bore!--yo, Jon Stewart picked up on that, too, big time!--and finding, in a twisted way, some sort of "silver lining" in the Bush presidency--like thank god Kerry lost! The American people wouldn't have voted for another Dem in 100 years!)

I usually don't even bother slogging through the prose, and skip instead to the links, which are generally very good. But in this case, there was something worse than ennui written between the lines, and I couldn't help but break that old "if you can't say something nice"-rule.

Far be it from me to expect anything more than tripe on the front page of this blog (guess I've been lurking here long enough to remember the good old days when people actually came here to read exciting writing--and found it!.)

Just this much: if you are brazen enough or self-absorbed enough or whatever the fuck enough to put yourself and your words out there on what is (nominally at least) a political blog, then you've got to be bold enough to take the heat when someone comes in and asks "wtf is this"? (or skips that step and just says "Gawd,is this fucking bullshit or what?").

Goes with the territory. And I say: if you can't stand the heat, go back to the kitchen.

Life ain't a popularity contest, and if it were, at least I know one thing: I would lose. There are a lot of "really nice" people out there--and a lot of them bore me to death. Nice-i-ness is next to truth-i-ness.

And MSOC, as to the rest of your assumptions: you're way off. I'd have no problem , none whatsoever, saying the same thing to this author's face:"what are you trying to say here? And am I supposed to be moved by this? Well, sorry, girlfriend, but I'm not. You bore me."

And just for reassurance to the diarist: darling, if you really think my "sense of sanity and serenity" was shaken by your words, sheesh, you're further out there in la-la-land than I assumed. Sure, I found myself shaking my head, going "Wtf?", but it wasn't like I just found an infant drowned in a toilet by some despairing teen mom or anything.

Don't worry, I'm not losing sleep over it. Hope you aren't either.

Win some, lose some.

In this case, imnsho, epic fail.



[ Parent ]
yeah, and (3.50 / 2)
despite her protestations, she was whining about not getting her ticket punched to the inauguration....

such utter pathetic bullshit.





"Fascism is attracting the dregs of humanity- people with a slovenly biography - sadists, mental freaks, traitors." - ILYA EHRENBURG


[ Parent ]
Peace, no protests, or whine (0.00 / 0)
Dearest durrati  . . .

Indeed.  Perspective is reality.  I actually had made arrangements, air, and hotel.  I had free options that I rejected.  My hope was I could acquire tickets.  I contacted three Congresspersons immediately after the election!  In truth, I looked into attending any of the balls.  I was happy and prepared to pay.

My best friend lives in Chicago and works with many closely connected to Barack Obama.  We hoped, as do millions of Americans.  We tried many avenues, even up until two days ago.

I thought it silly to respond to the request for a statement; "What does the inauguration mean to me."  Yet, I realized this means soooooooooo much to me.  As much as Barack Obama is more cautious and conservative than I, as a person, I truly admire him.  You could have read the whys and wherefores in many a missive.  However, from much that you have said of me, I think you have chosen to avoid my work or read it through an unfavorable filter.

Nonetheless, had you perused with an open mind, or had a desire to empathetically consider, you may have realized, I write on race relations often.  I speak of how, when in Middle School I began to work for Civil Rights.  The explanation is, as I often state, my history.  

I have spent my entire adult life in search of Mary or information that might lead her to me.  I never give up the dream that I might find her, her family . . .

A child bonds with the person or persons who truly cares for them, and about them.  The stories I do not tell for I realize people might think I share for reasons that are not real for me . . .

Whining is not my way.  I am the one that decided not to go.  As Donna Brazil expressed moments ago, if I could not be there fully, be truly apart, then, I might be as anyone who is miles away in mind, heart, body, and soul.  I am not a party person.  I am not a groupie.  I crave genuine connections.  So too does Donna Brazil, especially on such an occasion.  

Ms Brazil said to report on the ceremony was not an option for her.  She wanted a seat up front.  She will sit very near the podium.  The active Progressive, Brazil observed how many, if not all, when they speak of Barack Obama, begin by saying, "When I was a child . . ."

I recall the keynote speech in 2004, and the discussion of the President Elect's name.  Barack spoke of the meaning, "blessed."  I smiled.  When I was very, very, very young and throughout my life, my Mom shared the history of my name, how and why she chose it.  My name also means, "Blessed one."  I am too blessed to whine.

I was born with hope.  I believe in the cosmic coincidences that occur in this universe.  I penned the tome for I thought, maybe, Mary, Arthur, and her sons might learn of how much they live within me . . . how deeply I love them, how often I think of them, thank them.  I wondered; might a trip to Washington District of Columbia, an event that brings the races together, be the means that would return me to my roots.

I am sorry that this does not make sense to you.  Perchance, our exchange explains why there is war.  People presume to know one another, one they have never seen, touched, spent tender time with, or one they judge no matter what the other might say, do, feel, or be.

Battle on durrati.  I will not join you in combat.  Peace.


It is only the giving that makes us what [who] we are. - Ian Anderson. Jethro Tull . . . Betsy
BeThink.org


[ Parent ]
"As much as Barack Obama (0.00 / 0)
is more cautious and conservative than I, as a person, I truly admire him."

Sheesh, Betsy. Ya think?

Pick a side of yer mouth to speak out of is all I'm sayin'.

Peace to you...until next time.





"Fascism is attracting the dregs of humanity- people with a slovenly biography - sadists, mental freaks, traitors." - ILYA EHRENBURG


[ Parent ]
For me, there are no sides (3.00 / 1)
Dearest durrati . . .

I inquire, are there not people in your life whose politics are not exactly as yours; yet, you think, as people they are admirable . . . you appreciate them hugely!  Do you truly only love and like those who mirror you?  Wow!  That baffles me.

In my whole life, I have never met someone who thinks exactly as I do, not even Dennis Kucinich, who you seem to believe is the man I hoped would "win."  I laughed when you mentioned what you thought was my desire.  I do not choose a winner, or respect a victor.  Perhaps, therein lies the confusion you express.

Pick a side of yer mouth to speak out of is all I'm sayin'.

For me, there are no sides.  There is a balanced totality.  I trust you have missed my discussions on the notion of a triumph.  For me, if anyone wins, we all lose.  I disdain competitive contests.  


It is only the giving that makes us what [who] we are. - Ian Anderson. Jethro Tull . . . Betsy
BeThink.org


[ Parent ]
I believe we are similar, never the same (0.00 / 0)
Dearest durrati . . .

I saw your respectfully, I disagree rating and I continue to marvel.  Please allow me to share my own experience and belief.  

I trust we are similar, never the same.

I, as Barack Obama, believe there are not red states or blue.  There is the United States.  As humans, we are one.  United we stand.  We learn from differences.  My associations, while not a team of rivals, are all extremely different.  

I have faith that every being is unique; yet, we are all similar.

I offer an illustration of what has been real for me.  One of my very closest friends of near three decades appears to be the exact opposite of me, physically, and in her preferences.

She loves fiction and fantasy; I loathe each.  Jennifer adores Disney.  Even as a child, I rejected the Wonderful World of Walt.  Jenn wears clothing that I would never look at.  The holiday sweaters . . . Jennifer has zillions, and all the paraphernalia that goes with such garments.

We were raised and practice different religions, or for me, philosophies.  What entertains Jenn does not me.  She has another friend that does what she does.  They have known each other longer.

Yet, Jennifer and I are closer than the person she hangs with.  We live similar lives and envision people, policy, the profound, and philosophical, pretty much all in virtually indistinguishable ways.

Were I to speak of Barack Obama and Dennis Kucinich, in a zillion ways Barack Obama is as I am.  No drama?  I could not even consider a Clinton appointment. Apparently, President Elect Obama can tolerate far more drama than I would wish too.   I too have been known as "No drama and No trauma."  Many in my life marvel at my mellow manner.  I, as Barack love to be productive.  I would never wish to procrastinate.  In truth, my life is extremely conservative and I am exceedingly cautious.

Dennis Kucinich for me, while we share, policy beliefs, it seems, as people, we are extremely different.  He is more "out there" than I would ever be.  He risks in ways I would not.  In his youth, Dennis Kucinich was temperamental.  I have never been.  Even as a child, I was beyond calm.

Do I admire one and not the other, no.  People are a myriad.  Our similarities and differences are complex.  I may admire the man, the temperament, the history, the preferred polices, the way one practices life, the manner in which one moves through mental gymnastics . . . there is sooooooooo much to every being.  


It is only the giving that makes us what [who] we are. - Ian Anderson. Jethro Tull . . . Betsy
BeThink.org


[ Parent ]
"Practical!" (0.00 / 0)
Dearest durrati . . .

Soon after I penned my last comment, I listened to correspondents speak of Barack Obama. I realized, that I had neglected to share one of the other ways he and I are  alike.  "Practical!"  

The profundity of this affects every aspect of my life.  Examples are endless.  Perhaps, that is why I chose to explain.  For me, without calm, caring communication, there is combat.  I believe flame-wars, or battles in fields, are not beneficial.

People may make choices.  They may choose what we would not.  If an individual purposely hurts another, we can and must address what occurred.  Silence secures the likelihood that the damage will be done again.  However, I believe if we harm a being in-kind, no one learns.  Empathy, I experience, evolves when we honor and embrace differences.

I believe we must ask to understand the history of those who did what we think wrong.  If they chose to engage in a manner that is intentionally injurious, we need not kill them with words or weapons.  Deadly drama does not teach, practically speaking.


It is only the giving that makes us what [who] we are. - Ian Anderson. Jethro Tull . . . Betsy
BeThink.org


[ Parent ]
You know that really, really nice guy? (2.00 / 1)
You should hang out with him more, perhaps some of that niceness will rub off on you.

The funniest part for me is when you talk about being bored to death ... lol, excuse me, oh dear god I can't stop, wait just a sec ... wow, now THAT was some hard stuff there, stopping that laughter from squirting out and landing squarely all over your drivel, and about that drivel, BORING, GOD AWFUL BORING, on that part, let me find it, oh yeah, this part that has a big ole' loogie on it, this part right here coming up.

You know what, I just went back up to copy and paste the part I was going to put here, but it's just so goddamned boring I've thrown up a little in my mouth thinking all the while I never run into YOUR words again.

Good god, I'm spinning in a land of boredom, is the fuckingass Super Nanny fuckingass on yet?   :)  

I will not die an unlived life. Fuck em, I will not live in fear, I will live out loud and on the record.  

Domestic Violence Hotline 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) 1-800-787-3224 (TTY)  


[ Parent ]
"Yes, we can!" (0.00 / 0)
Dearest keefolderman . . .

My missives may be but a bore.  For me, your comment is reason to marvel.  I smile at your statement . . .

I usually don't even bother slogging through the prose, and skip instead to the links, which are generally very good. But in this case, there was something worse than ennui written between the lines, and I couldn't help but break that old "if you can't say something nice"-rule.

Far be it from me to expect anything more than tripe on the front page of this blog (guess I've been lurking here long enough to remember the good old days when people actually came here to read exciting writing--and found it!.)


On July 13, 2005, Maryscott gave us all a glorious site.  You, dear keefoldermann, apparently recall "the good old days" when My Left Wing was exhilarating.  [I find that thought fascinating, for I think the site still an infinite source for stimulation.]  Excellent prose appeared everywhere way back when [as they do today . . . or so I believe.]  Maryscott O'Connor, in her infinite wisdom electrified readers, as did authors who appeared on the front page.   Eons ago,  actually four-twenty-four hour-periods after My Left Wing was born, another blogger at Daily Kos, sent me an invitation to this glorious site.  Then, I had no right or reason to appear on the front-page, and no permission to place an essay where more might see it.  I, as you, merely loved what occurred here.  I was happy to join.

Three weeks after I arrived, in 2005, long before Barack Obama's February 10, 2007 announcement of a Presidential bid, I received an unexpected honor.  I had written of Mary [Hazel] Washington and her husband Arthur.  You may have missed my missive, for all those years ago, I did not offer a separate bibliography.  Nonetheless, there it was . . .
Voters Rights Act Provisions Sunset 2007. Still Separate and Unequal. By Betsy L. Angert.  My Left Wing. August 7, 2005
I trust it to be true as you stated of yourself  . . .

I usually don't even bother slogging through the prose, and skip instead to the links, which are generally very good.

Perchance, that is why I am confused, besides being boring.  I wish to thank you for the note of appreciation  for my references.  Yet, I must also ask, why did you read more than the resources when you saw my name attached to this particular essay, An Inauguration Invitation.  I understand. . .
I'm not interested in the personalities here. I'm interested in words on a page: whether they move or don't--and these words, well, like most of what comes from that same author's pen--just don't "do it" for me

Still, you thought, just this time, you would wander into a world of failure?  Will wonders never cease. This enigma alone gives me hope.  I believe.  Change can come.  Possibly, as a nation, as a people, the fierce urgency of now beckons us all.  If you could peruse my prose, then perhaps, "Yes, we can!"


It is only the giving that makes us what [who] we are. - Ian Anderson. Jethro Tull . . . Betsy
BeThink.org


[ Parent ]
Oh, fuck it. (5.00 / 2)


I think it behooves people to have some basic fucking kindness in this goddamned world. And I don't see what the fuck it gets you to be goddamned mean to someone about how they write on a goddamned blog. This isn't the New Yorker. I'm not looking to expand our readership; if it doubles, I'll be thrilled -- if it doesn't, I won't care.

Be kind; would it fucking kill you?

--7.88, --6.56      If I can't rant, I don't want to be part of your revolution.


You're not asking for "kindness," you're asking (3.50 / 2)
for "charity"--and believe me, I'm hardly parsimonious when it comes to being charitable, in real life, and for the most part, on the blogs as well.

Maybe you missed the part about generally not making any comments to this author's posts because, in the main, I rarely have anything good to say.

In this case, however--I think Durrati really nailed it--it's a very dishonest piece of writing.

I simply have zero patience for dishonesty (intellectual, emotional)--especially when it's framed in something the reader is supposed to believe is just the opposite.

Nopity. This reader ain't buyin' it.



[ Parent ]
Oh, god, just whatthefuckever. (0.00 / 0)


I don't know if you've been reading any of the OTHER shit I've been posting around this blog, dude, but I am on INCREDIBLY thin psychological ice. Maybe you might want to consider NOT pushing EVERY fucking button I have just now???

--7.88, --6.56      If I can't rant, I don't want to be part of your revolution.

[ Parent ]
YAWN ...... n/t (0.00 / 0)


I will not die an unlived life. Fuck em, I will not live in fear, I will live out loud and on the record.  

Domestic Violence Hotline 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) 1-800-787-3224 (TTY)  


[ Parent ]
caliberal: See that giant thing flying over their heads? (8.00 / 1)


It's my point, copulating with yours. I've seen it in the insect world -- but here it is, in the rhetorical kingdom... how very, very odd, yet beautiful and miraculous.

Someone take a picture.

--7.88, --6.56      If I can't rant, I don't want to be part of your revolution.


[ Parent ]
Hate to beat a dead horse here, (6.00 / 1)
but I just read an article in most recent issue of The Atlantic that places my "discomfort" with this essay in context.

Given the nature of this forum, it seems folks  like to squeeze every word of criticism or objection into some framework of personal attack or not nice-i-ness. That wasn't what my objections to this piece of writing were about. Aside from the "literary critique" of the purple prose, there was something very disturbing about it that I couldn't quite put my finger on.

The author of the Atlantic article does a nice job identifying precisely what I found and find so disturbing about this piece:

He writes:

In fact, for the legions of black people who grew up like Michelle Obama-in a functioning, self-contained African American world-racial identity recedes in the consciousness. You know you're black, but in much the same way that white people know they are white. Since everyone else around you looks like you, you just take it as the norm, the standard, the unremarkable. Objectively, you know you're in the minority, but that status hits home only when you walk out into the wider world and realize that, out there, you really are different.

I came up in segregated West Baltimore. I understood black as a culture-as Etta James, jumping the broom, the Electric Slide. I understood the history and the politics, the debilitating effects of racism. But I did not understand blackness as a minority until I was an "only," until I was a young man walking into rooms filled with people who did not look like me. In many ways, segregation protected me-to this day, I've never been called a nigger by a white person, and although I know that racism is part of why I define myself as black, I don't feel that way, any more than I feel that the two oceans define me as American. But in other ways, segregation left me unprepared for the discovery that my world was not the world. In her book Michelle: A Biography, Liza Mundy quotes another South Sider explaining the predicament:

"When you grow up in a black community with a warm black family, you are aware of the fact that you are black, but you don't feel it ... After a certain point you do just kind of think you're in your own world, and you become very comfortable in that world, and to this day there are African Americans who feel very uncomfortable when they step out of it ... This is a society that never lets you forget that you are black."

and further

In most black people, there is a South Side, a sense of home, that never leaves, and yet to compete in the world, we have to go forth. So we learn to code-switch and become bilingual. We save our Timberlands for the weekend, and our jokes for the cats in the mail room. Some of us give ourselves up completely and become the mask, while others overcompensate and turn every dustup into the Montgomery bus boycott.

This "code-switching" and "bi-lingualism" is something most white people never have to learn--to their detriment. This is a society that never lets you forget you are black, but one that encourages you to forget that you are white. In this context "colorblindness" is a luxury only white people can afford.

The article also addresses one other point: the business of what I call the "Barack the Magic Negro"-phenomenon, that is, white liberals making Obama out to be their own personal Black signifier (savior, messiah). This phenomenon can only emerge from a segregated environment: one in which most white people spend all of their lives in a white majority and have very little real-world contact with Black people, and then usually as individuals, very rarely in a Black majority (where the white person is the exception and not allowed to forget that s/he is, which--as I've stated--is and has been my situation for most of my life).

Here's what Marian Robinson had to say about that:

"I keep saying this: Michelle, Barack, and my son are not abnormal," Marian Robinson said. "All my relatives, all my friends, all their friends, all their parents, almost all of them have the same story. It's just that their families aren't running for president. It bothers me that people see [Michelle and Barack] as so phenomenal, because there's so much of that in the black neighborhood. They went to the same schools we all did. They went through the same struggles."

Yep, yep and yep again. I know many "Obamas".  The sad part is, most Americans don't. I wish more people would work on recognizing that to be a huge deficit in their lives and then work on changing that part of their own lives. It would be a greater contribution to eliminating racism and racial inequality than all the prose in the world--be it pink, purple, or just plain black on white.

That "self-contained African American world" the author references still does exist. It's not functioning so well these days--but it still does exist, and it functions better than many people outside that world might think: obviously, or we wouldn't even be having this discussion, right?.





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