Go back to the quiz.
Answers available now.
Happy March!
Goodbye, Birthday month.
Till we meet again in 2010…
Go back to the quiz.
Answers available now.
Happy March!
Goodbye, Birthday month.
Till we meet again in 2010…
And in my annual tradition of writing a State of the Self, I wrote a long piece about my current state of life.
I will post that shortly, but as I wake up this beautiful morning, a tumultuously grey morning, I think to myself, “Birthdays are days of celebration. I want mine to be of thanksgiving.”
While my cohort of 29 year olds wish me well and I depart the alliance and move toward the grace of 30, I am reminded of all the goals and achievements I set out for myself. All the things I *said* I would have “by the time, I’m thirty.”
Thank God some of the them happened.
Thank God some of the them didn’t.
Without super thoughts of predestination, I do carry a certain acceptance that life, the Universe, a spirit co-authors this crazy life I have led. And at this very moment, at this view on the mountain, I am left with nothing but gratitude for the monstrous amounts of love and relationship in my life.
Nothing is sweeter than the connections I have been and all of the understanding, comfort, conflict, and lessons that come with that.
Several months ago, I made a bucket list for 30 and as I shared the idea of what I wanted to accomplish, some folks pushed the customary milestone activities like skydiving, traveling, doing risk things, walking the line between safe and dangerous…as if to prove something about turning thirty.
There’s nothing I have built in my thirty years that I am willing to jeopardize by doing something that is not supported by life-affirming, joy brimming, and champagne flavored love.
I don’t want to kiss someone random in a bar. I want to make sure that the one partner I have chosen feels the magnanimous truth of how much I adore him, how he has become, as Nathaniel Hawthorn wrote, the only thing that was ever necessary to me.
I don’t want to skydive because I already feel as if I’ve flown across the difficult terrain of my heart and survived.
There’s no greater pilgrimage to take than the one I just took to my parent’s homeland.
I’ve found, at 30, what I believe most people strive their entire existence for.
And I’m not done yet.
At the present moment, I am drafting a book proposal for an editor. Prepping for an interview with a documentary director whose work I admire. Packing for a wild woman’s retreat. Checking the calendar for a roadtrip to see a close circle of friends. Throwing away the tissue paper from packages I received from family. Nursing a sore foot that I injured during working out. Smell like lemon from the body massage oil used yesterday. Headed to mass in twenty five minutes. Listened to the birthday greetings left for me at midnight last night. Writing this list of richness.
Paradox is the state of thirty. There is nothing aging about my skin or hair. There is nothing I did not accomplish that I set out to do in my teens and there is everything left that I intend to build for the rest of my life.
Let me begin.
Over the weekend, I celebrated by 30th birthday even though my actual birthday is Friday, February 27.
In addition to the great community of friends we have here in Cleveland, my buds Heather and Mary Kay came from Cincinnati, Alexis DROVE from Boston, and Leanne drove from Chicago.
I feel extremely loved.
I wore a ridiculous and wonderfully large and charge birthday hat (pictures to come), and a had a grrrand time. I also gave everyone a 30 question quiz about the Queen Bee of Thirty (aka Moi), and the grand prize winner won two free movie tickets. The point of the quiz was to have people mingle and get the answers from other people at the party. So, in addition to making new friends, you got to learn more about the birthday girl. What a great idea!
The winner only had one wrong AND it was not Nick, nor my sister. Can you believe it?
Thirty Questions for Lisa’s Thirty Years
(the number after the question denotes how many people should be listed)
1. What is the real date of Lisa’s birthday? February 27
2. In what state was Lisa born and grew up in? New Jersey
3. Find all who attended Xavier University with Lisa? Nick, Books, Mary Kay, Pete
4. Fine all who accompanied Lisa to the Barack Obama rally in November? Nick, Jennifer B., Adam, Christina, Brian
5. Find the person who once came to visit Lisa during Grey’s Anatomy and was left outside until a commercial break: Alexis Melville
6. Other than the United States, what other two countries has Lisa lived in for at least two months? the Philippines and Nicaragua
7. Match the nickname to its originator:
“Babar” –> Carmen Factora
“Leek” –> Francis Factora
“Hammerhead” –> Nick Borchers
“Lisa Ma-*ucking-rie” –> Lisa’s Freshman Year Roommate
8. Choose the ONE statement that is NOT true. (C is the correct answer.)
On June 4, 2005, when she got married, Lisa
a) wore her running shoes all day
b) journaled before she walked down the aisle
c) mildly sprained her left ankle
d) fell asleep after the wedding mass
9. True or False: Lisa was a cheerleader for four years. TRUE
10. Find who went with Lisa to the New Kids on the Block concerts? Carmen
11. Nick and Lisa met: (B is the correct answer.)
a) during MANRESA, freshman orientation week
b) at GETAWAY, a retreat for first year students
c) as RESIDENT ASSISTANTS in Brockman Hall
d) at a Kuhlman Hall/Brockman Hall mixer
12. Choose the ONE that is NOT TRUE. (C is the correct answer.)
Lisa has worked as all but one of the following:
a) a ice-cream server at Honey’s Homemade
b) a caddy at Glenmore Country Club
c) a cashier at Whole Foods
d) a waitress at Chi-Chi’s
e) a sales associate at the Gap
13. True or False: Lisa was born cesarean. TRUE
14. In whose apartment did Lisa watch the Buckeyes demolish the Wolverines in the latest rivalry match? Sam and Laura
15. Write the full name of the person Lisa and Nick call, “The Baker.” TOM BAKER
16. Write the names of Lisa’s unofficial wine advisers.
Mary Kay Koehler & Heather Apple
17. It was primarily because of this person that Lisa and Nick moved to Cleveland.
Carmen
18. True or False: Lisa has three nephews and one niece. TRUE
19. True of False: Lisa is the youngest of four. TRUE
20. What Ohio university was Lisa originally supposed to attend before deciding three weeks before orientation to attend Xavier University? John Carroll University
21. Choose one. (A is the correct answer.)
If Lisa could dominate one sport she would choose:
a) tennis
b) golf
c) speed skating
d) raquetball
22. Lisa has lived in all but one of the following states: (D is the correct answer.)
a) New Jersey
b) California
c) Washington
d) Texas
23. Choose the ONE statement that is NOT true: (B is the correct answer.)
a) Lisa pretended to faint in the fifth grade during gym class.
b) Her favorite color is yellow.
c) In 2000, she met Martin Sheen.
d) In 1995, Patrick Ewing winked and smiled at her in an airport.
e) Lisa despises carrying a purse.
24. Find all of Lisa’s Facebook friends. (This one is stupid to answer now…)
25. Choose the ONE statement that is NOT true. (C is the correct answer.)
a) Lisa has talked her way out of two speeding tickets.
b) She has an extra bone in both her feet.
c) Prior to getting a nose stud, she had an eyebrow ring.
d) Lisa reached 5”2 in 4th grade and has not grown taller since.
26. Choose the pair of sport icons whom Lisa followed religiously growing up:
(A is the correct answer.)
a) Andre Agassi and Kim Zmeskal
b) Michael Jordan and Jennifer Capriotti
c) Shannon Miller and Magic Johnson
d) Stephi Graf and Kristi Yamaguchi
27. At age 11, Lisa seriously considered becoming: (A is the correct answer.)
a) a nun
b) a writer
c) a counselor
d) a lawyer
28. Lisa’s first home fitness instructor was (C is the correct answer.)
a) Billy Blanks from Tae Bo
b) Chenille Johnson from Turbo Jam
c) Jane Fonda from Step it Up
d) Richard Simmons from Sweatin’ to the Oldies
29. Choose the one statement that is NOT on ” Lisa’s Bucket List for 30.” (C is the correct answer.)
a) run a road race
b) get pregnant
c) skydive
d) become a saavy vegan cook
30. Correctly spell her entire name: ANA LISA FERNANDEZ FACTORA-BORCHERS
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
********************************************************************************************
I am also proposing a continuation of this thread/conversation at the
Allied Media Conference in Detroit, Michigan July 16 -1 19, 2009.
Let’s engage.
With as much love and directness as possible, can we come to the beginning of a series of conversations that our explore our differences and widen the table at which we all sit – as readers, writers, bloggers, and activists of color?
What does the word radical mean to you, either as a self-descriptor, or as a descriptor for others with whom you do not identify? What implications does it carry? How/has it been reclaimed?
What is media justice and media reform? What are their points of tension? Points of potential collaboration?
How does engagement with feminism divide us? Help us collaborate?
What do you envision when the word “collaborate” is used in reference to White feminists? What experiences shape your perspective?
The dream to someday look into your eyes is holding steady, it’s constant beat both calming and excruciating. I just finished my first cycle of ovulation medication, to stimulate the eggs, and it was not successful.
Dr. Liu, in his ever strange ways, seems cheery when I call him, asking him what our next step should be, “Well, just wait until day 35 of the cycle and take a pregnancy test. If you’re not pregnant, we’ll just up the dosage.”
In other words, as he has said it before: quit worrying.
But I am worried.
The face I put on for others is a face of hope and optimism. The words come out of my mouth as I say that I will not be devastated if I cannot have biological children, but the truth is, my darling daughter unborn, I am afraid I will slip into a darkness that will shade me for the rest of my days if that happens. The reality is that life is given to you and there are portions of it which you can exercise control. Most parts, though, are handed to you, as is, and what you do with those parts, what you choose to create or act with it, is entirely up to you. I have trouble coping with that reality.
Someday, I hope, you will sit next to me and we will go over these letters together. I’m sure I will need some prompting about what I was thinking at 29 years of age, and I hope that these words will open a door of memories that will help guide you in your path of choices.
I want to include a picture with this letter. This is a picture of me, your old Mama at twenty years young, with another little girl. Her name is Veronica and she is the little girl you are named after. Taken in 2000, Veronica, now, is around fourteen years old and probably still in barrio Nueva Vida in Managua, Nicaragua.
Back in the old college days, I decided to live in Nicaragua for three months and work in areas that would challenge my ways of thinking. Nicaragua – Veronica – succeeded.
You see, darling, this child in the photo is a living breathing creature, beautiful in skin and hopelessly stubborn in manner. She insisted on sitting on my lap, not allowing any other child in the barrio to sit on her thrown, and when I coaxed embraces from other children, she growled at me and said, “No te hablo.” I’m not talking to you. Mhm! She had a temper.
And nearly every day, for years, I thought of her. Ways to help her, buy her a tricycle, give her family food, ensure her health. The problems, though, are too big for me, or any one person to handle. Today, on the cusp of turning thirty with almost a decade that has passed since I last held her, I don’t even know if she is alive. I think or hope or pray she is. I have to.
Your name, Veronica, is very special and someday I will tell you all the reasons why this name has burned its letters onto my heart. For now, though, this picture is all you need.
I want you to remember something, my child, in case you ever forget yourself: all children are created equal and therefore you will all grow into women that are equal. This world will tell you different. It will tell you that since you were born in a certain country with privileges, education, and industry, you are worth more. The world will tell you that your place in society is measured by the size of your wallet, the space of your house, the shine of your car, the interest rates of your stocks, the gleam of your hair, the smell of your breath, the shade of your skin, the mobility of your legs, the speed of your mind.
Remember this picture, dear, and remember that my desire for you came from a love of her. So, Veronica and you are, actually, sisters. You share a mother – me – who wants both of you to understand the world will attempt to define you or kill you. It will beat you to your knees with shame and labels.
I am here, living and writing, to tell you they are wrong and you are wrong if you believe them.
There is nothing greater in this world than the measure of what you will do for liberation and for how far you will go to bring a sense of peace to the places that will never know the quiet of stars because their skies are filled with the noise of bombs and bullets.
I make you sisters and gently remind you to care for one another, even if you never meet. Even if you are separated by everything and you find nothing in common, you are sisters. You are binded by my realization that I cannot sacrifice one without sacrificing the other. You need each other in every sense of the word survival.
You will be different in every way – sound, language, speech, and opportunity. But you both are precious in my eyes.
Veronica, my unborn daughter, someday I want you to charge into the world and question it as I did. I hope you turn in desperation, searching for some damn piece of truth that causes you to shake with disbelief and passion. I pray you will find another human being to whom you are accountable and holds you to a sense of humanity and humility far outreaching what you think you are capable. For you, I wish nothing but the most pure sense of life and experience.
That is what I searched for at twenty and that is when I found Veronica.
I found you.
Love,
Mom
Ugh, I’ve been the queen of blog neglect and I’m searching for the energy and perspective to write about the most wonderful weekend I’ve had in Cleveland. My birthday fiesta was on Saturday and I am still recovering this Monday morning.
That should tell you how good it was.
More to come.
Dedicated to Don Manual Montiello
My Nicaraguan father, who I had not seen in eight years, died this week. A man with a heart condition, he fell onto a street, his face purple, and died. He was walking the barrio, our home, Catorce de Junio, in Nicaragua where I used to live.
I don’t know where this piece is going. Like a storm, I sense something brewing. The signs are there: quiet moments (dark clouds), tears (rain), and fear (wind). A perfect writing storm. This time, though, I have no predictable end. Something is needing to come out and so I write. I write. There’s a lot that’s been thrown in the eye of my hurricane. I’m going to try and let it out…
* * *
In feminism, particularly the feminist blogosphere, the word “intersectionality,” is strewn around like a popular masthead. For those unfamiliar with this term, in a nutshell, it’s a nugget word of the third wave of feminism, a term to explain one’s ability/responsibility to see/understand the complex layers of oppression and severity. It is a theory by I don’t even know who that suggested we look at the varying intersecting locks of lived experience. To put it bluntly, it says that the middle of the wheel is braced together by several spokes. Look at the spokes, it suggests. Consider the spokes.
I’m not the best person to talk about intersectionality. I’m not the best person to talk about intersectionality because I was introduced to it in the feminist blogosphere and the way I have observed its lack of application – its sore failure – makes me a non-believer in the term. I just don’t see any difference “intersectionality” has made in the lives of womyn offline.
My momma raised me to see the soul, not spokes.
* * *
February 11, 2009
I am in a coffee shop. I see a sign: Imported from Nicaragua.
A small thump hits my gut.
* * *
March 2000
“Buenas dias, Dona Adelia! Como estas usted?” I called out to a neighbor while I was walking in the barrio. It is a hot morning in Managua.
My friend Julia who was walking beside me smiled as Dona Adelia opened her mouth and fired off a response so quick and urgent, I blinked in surprise.
Julia translated for me, “She said, ‘well, that depends. Do you want to know how I am doing economically, physically, emotionally, mentally, politically? It depends.’”
I’ve thought about Dona Adelia’s reply to my simple greeting for nine years. She is a woman, elderly in her seventies, who loves people with so much strength that I pray I am like her when I mature into my later years.
One moment. One response. To my face. And just like that. I understood “intersectionality,” or the multiple intricacies of being. Language, culture, soul. There are so many layers to people; so many things that affect how we perceive one another.
I didn’t need a theory. I needed a teacher.
* * *
The failure of intersectionality is not surprising. Most correlate the term as a method to measure oppression and study its affect on diverse individuals, as if there is a way to truly trace the insidious and camouflaged roots of societal and social demons.
What troubles me about this method is its obsession with oppression and lack of focus on liberation. From what I have observed, most feminists want to understand the surreptitious spreading and practice of oppression – they want to understand that justice is unevenly distributed because of skin color, race, ethnicity, physical and mental mobility, religion, citizenship, class, education, property, age, sexual orientation, gender, and sex – but they don’t want to listen when it comes to transforming the world for liberation.
If liberation means a radical, and by radical I am referring to the Latin origin of radical meaning ROOT, transformation of the world, we need feminists to become more visionary. And fast.
Intersectionality is useless if it merely raises your consciousness but does little else. Ok, so YOU’RE enlightened. Great!
Now what?
The life of intersectionality is brief. It’s a theory. Nothing more.
* * *
April 2000
Don Manual has a heart condition. Somewhere, in the maze of awkward translation, I learn his quiet demeanor cloaks a very gentle man. After a long trip to Bluefields, the eastern coast of Nicaragua, I return to my home in the barrio. Once in my room, exhausted, I begin unpacking.
Don Manual walks into my room.
Puzzled and a bit anxious because he has never entered my room before, I turn to face him.
Just a few pebbles of his words were caught in my translation. There are two things I remember, “Allegra. Muy allegra.”
He was happy to have you back home. He was relieved. Others translated the conversation for me later.
And then I remember that he covered his heart, his weakened and diseased heart, as he spoke. He softly tapped it as he told me he was glad I was home. Then he and his eyes smiled into me and turned away.
* * *
Thursday, February 12, 2009
I am nearing the end of my three month writing stint at Bitch magazine. The experience has taught me so much about writing and confidence, I find it difficult to translate it to those who do not engage in writing practice.
Recently, I wrote a piece about Nadya Suleman, the woman who recently birthed octuplets and is now a mother of fourteen. In my article, where I raised questions about the issue of choice outside the realm of abortion, I asked that we engage in critical and rich discussion but to do so without berating any one woman or a segment of population of women.
That didn’t go over well.
The feedback and comments ranged from, “I think this has nothing to do with race, I never even thought of the idea until people like you to inject race into the subject to cause controversy,” to suggesting that I “become a conservative,” to “What a goddamned shithead.”
Simultaneously, I received an email from Alex Blaze, the managing editor at The Bilerico Project, who let me know that there had been good news concerning a post I had written two months ago about Agnes Scott College, a private all woman’s college, allowing a degrading and anti-feminist movie film on its grounds. The update alerted me to heightened policies the college had adopted in response to the online noise generated by senior, Louisa Hill.
I learned about Agnes Scott debacle from Jess Hoffman, a visionary friend and co-founder of make/shift magazine, where I am a section editor. It was through her that I heard about it, connected with The Bilerico Project, and helped create some online shaking.
The result: not perfect, but improved policies.
While the situation at Agnes Scott College is not the most ground breaking news or the most inspiring story, it gave credence to the power of blogging and communities working together. As Blaze wrote in his email, “Blogging can improve the world!”
Indeed.
It can also destroy.
These are the opportunities before some of us. And there are many sides to align yourself with. What do you choose?
Do you align yourself with the offense, berating women like Nadya Suleman, defining what is right and good for a woman of controversy and poor decision, but nonetheless a women in the name of feminism and “liberalism”? Or the side that tries to outreach and make one corner of the universe slightly better than it was yesterday?
It’s not that simple, I know, and the situation calls for reflection.
But is calling her a “shithead” how we move forward?
* * *
Thursday, February 12
A friend is driving me through Cedar Lee, an area of independent theaters and coffee shops. A wide sidewalk is cleared for winter, but in the summer, Christina says, the restaurants have great outdoor seating.
Out of nowhere, a thought slips through my window
I haven’t talked to my Nicaraguan family in years.
And here is where they have five dollar theater tickets with all you can eat popcorn.
I haven’t even thought about them in months. What happened to when I used to think of them everyday?
You’ll love it here, Lisa.
Raquel would be…my G*d, twenty-one years old now. They wouldn’t want to hear from me. What would I say anyway? My Spanish has depleted so much. Let it go.
* * *
Both on and offline, it’s not our race, class, ethnicity, sexual orientation or any other spoke on the wheel of “intersectionality” that divides us. It’s our objectives. It’s how we measure liberation and what we are willing to do with our privileged lives in the name of transformation. The differences in our objectives are as transparent as our URLs. Some are here for fun and professional advancement. Those of us who are here for more than business are here to question the systems that contort liberation.
Is there any wonder that there is a divide?
For me, there is only one question: what are you willing to do for liberation?
If it begins and ends with blogging, then don’t bother reading the rest of this piece.
If you say you want a world without rape, what are you doing to transform binary definitions of sexuality, relationships, and love?
If you say you want a country of peace, what cost is paid by other countries?
If you say you don’t know the answers, what are you doing to rectify that?
These are the questions before us. What are you doing?
* * *
The face of G*d for me is the liberation of those in pain, myself included. My definition of feminism is not a worded explanation, limited by my westernized and elitist tongue. It is a drive, dare I write spiritual drive, to do what I can, when I can, and make one thing, or as many things, better for another human being born in my lifetime, on our planet, this place we all call home. With all the mystery and fear in my body, soaked in ethnocentric alcohol, I sober my life by sitting on the edge of my bathroom sink and pulling the bathroom mirror into my face.
I look up.
* * *
February 16, 2009
I open an email letting me know about a post raising questions about feminism and digital colonialism.
* * *
For the most part, generation X has been the largest population which the digital age has watered. We’re the first generation of this “new media” and its shifted the way we think, communicate, and organize. It’s even changed our dreams.
As little girls, I would bet those who journaled and dreamed about writing imagined hard cover books or putting pen to physical paper; their name in print.
Blogging has ushered in a new alternative to traditional publishing and while it has created this avenue for information exchange and sharing, it has also created a monster. We, privileged activists and writers with the most immediate form of communi/gratifi/cation at our disposal, gladly reap the surface benefits of new media and, I fear, are satiated by that. We’ve yet to fully incorporate a feminist energy and discourse to digital media. Bloggers, writers, web-users have yet to fully embrace the power and responsibility to transform knowledge, journalism, and expression and bring it to a feminist standard of acceptability and practice.
We’re working on that. We’re still debating and defending privilege.
There has been no sustainable on-going and consistent effort to confront the communication patterns of womyn/gender-centered/feminist blogs or dialogue ethos. Who has time to create that analysis, to write about it? To try and put a lasso on a thousand bucks gone wild?
We’re either too busy feeding our children, finding sustainable employment, caring for our ourselves and loved ones, and making ends meet to commit to dismantling the ways blogging and new media perpetuate the existing kyriarchal systems. It is, after all, a flick of a hand to turn off our screens or we can simply walk away.
Or we’re too busy maximizing our latest idea to utilize blogging as a means to further our professional careers.
There’s a pull in two legitimate different directions that leaves the middle empty. What’s left? The space of blogging. THIS space that we say is the resting pulse of the “women’s movement.” All of it goes unchecked, with no accountability, no rules. We can call each other out, but in the end, if you think it, you can write it. We obviously don’t want a hierarchy or limitations on our speech, right? It’s as if we have lost the capacity to freely explore options and conversation, we don’t know how to dictate basic premises of decency on how to relate to one another over lines of difference.
And so the cyclic, vicious feminist problems continue. The conferences are divided, the blog wars are revisited, the colonialism/racism/classism/capitalism/ everything-ism continues in its original score. Actually, I think this screenplay was written decades ago by our ancestors. We’re all just assuming their roles.
(Who wants to play Sojournor Truth?)
* * *
February 16, 2009
I receive an email telling me of Don Manual’s death just hours after he had passed. I read the words and am confused.
My emails are usually about the latest happenings in the activist world, listserves I love, writers I follow, blogs I cherish, and updates from friends. This message was nestled in the midst of RSVPs to my 30th birthday party. Requests from writers to blog about a spreading story. The message startled me, but not more than my own reaction.
My heart continues to audibly break with each letter I type to admit this: momentarily, I didn’t even recognize Don Manual’s name.
That is how removed I have been.
For a moment, I did not recognize the name of someone with whom I lived, had spoken, formed some of my brightest moments of life, embraced, and breathed.
* * *
That night I muster every strength I could to get over my own guilt and self-consciousness.
I call my family in Nicaragua.
With no fallback of translators, my mind rewinds itself to its rusted Spanish files, long put away.
I speak first with my sister, Lynette, who now has three children. When I lived with her, she only had one son. She is mopping and I can hear her smile into the phone.
Her father just died and she smiles at me.
“Necessitas, Lisa, regressar a Nicaragua pronto.”
You need to return to Nicaragua, soon.
Yo se.
I know.
I sputter out my condolences, whatever is left in my vocabulary and try to twist it, try to offer whatever G*d-awful limiting words that remain and tell her how much I miss her and will always miss her father. How grateful I am for all that they gave me.
All I can make out from her response is “triste.”
Sad.
She asks if I want to talk to her mother.
Dona Marta.
I remember why I was so afraid to speak to my host mother. She was soft spoken and that made translation even more difficult. I am shaking inside.
Unearthing itself after nine years, my intense desire to articulate the depth of my emotions runs again into the language barrier and I feel ashamed at my lack of Spanish practice.
It’s not just about language. Language, as once famously stated, is the house of being. It is a bridge of culture, a valor of heartfelt effort and humility. It’s not just about communication; it’s about respect and offering.
Her voice is barely audible and I want to weep in her arms. Or have her weep in mine.
Neither would happen.
I tell her that she and her entire family is always in my heart.
We have deep pauses of silence. I let them rest between us knowing the loss of her lifelong spouse cannot be explained in language.
We communicate what we can. We communicate love.
* * *
There comes a time to revisit our promises and commitments. We are forever in need of smoothing them over, enhancing the details for better fits.
I remember promising to write my Nicaraguan family. I said those words. In English. They understood.
I promise.
But I broke that promise, repeatedly.
I broke that promise to write when I decided to put it off and write about what I knew – feminism – instead of a what I needed to write, letter to my family. For every post on this blog, now past seven hundred, I allowed myself to slip away into what I knew was so dangerously easy about life in the United States: living individualistically.
Oh, I’ve learned how to be a married activist, a warrior poet salivating after Audre Lorde. I’ve written letters to lovers, biological family, posts, articles, and even begun book projects. I’ve collaborated with strangers who became confidants and healed broken relationship.
“Individualism” is no longer about singularity, it’s about living in a disconnected state, where we are accountable only to those who are like us, agree with, nod with us. Nuanced individualism is serving not just ourselves but only those we choose to be in our communities, those whom we deem supportive and relative, staunchly defining who we want and gives us what we need.
Gifts of baking pans, trinkets, and money mean nothing without connection and in some realms of life, attempted communication trumps clarity. I wanted to communicate safely, with a translator so they knew precisely what I meant and they understood me. I forgot that tapping one’s heart in gesture can convey more about concern and relief than words.
I waited for perfect communication. That day never comes.
In my subconscious fear of not wanting to be uncomfortable or reminded that I lazily let my Spanish subside, I never wrote a letter. Not one. I didn’t want to be reminded of my helplessness, the nightmarish panic I had of not being able to connect transnational experiences with my own damn life. I didn’t want to look at the clock and see that I had allowed so much time to pass.
And in the customary selfish rape of wandering foreign lands merely for one’s own enlightenment, I took my “enlightenment” and applied it to my own life.
I never wrote one letter.
I’ll set up a feeble social network online and write flip responses on the digital walls of high school acquaintances who have taught me nothing, but I won’t confront my own fear of inadequacy and contact a community, a family who gave me shelter and food.
Gringa.
And for those who do not understand the significance letters hold, paper that’s traveled the winds of ocean, just know that it delivers more than anything that can be conveyed in language. It conveys that they, the recipients of the letter, are remembered in a walled country that makes you forget.
* * *
Feminism is not about self-flagellation or “saving” the world, or even piping ourselves up by saying we have the capacity to do so. But I do believe it is about living an authentic existence that challenges our comforts, our talents, and agenda. I believe that we, those with unspeakable luxuries that we cannot put in context because few other nations can even compare to our excessiveness, must be held accountable to our neighbors. Not out of obligation, but out of love.
We are accountable. In our lives. In our letters. In our writings. In our blogs.
As I repeatedly learn in painfully elementary ways, “Not everything is about you.”
Your guilt. Your discomfort. Your understanding. Your. Your. Your.
“I don’t feel like engaging.”
“I don’t want to be attacked or misunderstood.”
“I don’t want to risk.”
“I don’t want to put myself out there.”
“I’ve earned this.”
“I already explained myself.”
“I need to defend myself.”
“I don’t know what you expect me to do.”
I. I. I.
If you can, unstick yourself.
Move beyond your self-consciousness.
We are accountable. To someone.
Without accountability, without liberating practices for all, there is no “Movement.”
Only noise.
Find someone to whom you are accountable.
Spell insomnia.
L-I-S-A.
No caffeine. No uppers. Nothing to keep me awake.
But I can’t sleep.
N-I-C-K, on the other hand is snoring louder than our beloved space heater in our bedroom.
Happy Valentine’s Day! And instead of getting a nice rest and putting Friday the 13th to bed, I am up, writing, blogging, brainstorming possible article topics because I can’t sleep. I think the culprits are the two pieces of Ghirarhdelli chocolate I had five hours ago. For those that don’t know, I rarely eat chocolate. (I heart vanilla.) I don’t drink caffeine. And so, when I take a moment or two to indulge, my heart goes a little something like, “HEY! WHAT’S THIS? LET’S SEE HOW FAST I CAN PUMP BLOOD AND KEEP HER AWAKE!”
And my mind follows suit with, “HEY! LET’S THINK ABOUT WHAT I WANT TO GET DONE TOMORROW, WHAT I DIDN’T GET TO DO TODAY, WHAT I WANT FOR MY BIRTHDAY, HOW I WILL GET TO THE POST OFFICE BEFORE NOON, DON’T FORGET TO BUY GOAT CHEESE AT FRESH MARKET.”
And I waaaant to sleep, but can’t.
Nick and I returned home at – grab the sides of your computer screens – 1:30am.
GET OUT! I’m not lying.
It’s like 2001 without college drama.
We met up with Books (aka Matt Thomas), his leading lady Janet, and our two friends Sam and Laura at a wine bar about 20 minutes from our house. It was one of those situations where you have no idea who everyone else is at the table (there were at least 8 other folks all crowded with us) for someone’s birthday, but you don’t have the capacity/energy/motivation to talk, so you just smile and mooch off their cheese plate.
Well, that’s what I did anyway.
Afterward, we got all kick ass crazy and went to Panini’s, a bar with 89% John Carroll students and I felt like the only female within 15 miles not wearing a black top (aka typical bar attire). So much opportunity for people watching. Why wish to go back to college days when you have the real thing right in front of you?
“I don’t think I have to relive anything from college. I can just walk into the bathroom of any bar and find a drunk, crying, grasping her cell phone 20s something gal who is going through exactly what I went through eight years ago.” – my comment to Nick at approximately 12:30am
“Do you remember in college when you saw that it was 12:30am and thought, ‘Maybe it’s time to head out to Dana’s?’ and now it’s like, ‘Get me out of this place. I want to go to bed.'” – Nick’s comment to me at 12:31am
Regardless, it was a marvelous time and it was good to show that we’re not completely old and gray and still kicking it.
Although, if you need further proof that we have graduated from young sprigs to oaks and cypresses, here is my newest thought:
The biggest evidence that I am old is that when I was out and about in college and decided not to didn’t drink, my friends would pat me on the back and say, “Pretty bad hangover, huh?” Now when I go out, someone will glance at my water and say out of the corner of their mouth, “Probably pregnant.“
It’s Friday the 13th and I tend to get excited for this stupid day.
There’s really no reason for the excitement. It’s kind of like when New York City had a huge blackout back in 2003 (?). I am intrigued by how people react to random, rather large scale phenomenons.
It’s all the little stories of superstition, full moons, and random fears that attract me. It’s fun, funny, and somewhat entertaining to hear what people do or refuse to do on days like today. Personally, I have no superstitions because I’m too scared to believe in them (if that makes any sense), I just like the fun of talking about it. But if someone offers me a black cat, you can be sure I’m more than likely get in my car and drive away from it. Perhaps even consider running over the cat, but am too scared about what might unleash from that act as well.
So, it’s safe to say, I like the fun spookiness of it all, similar to Halloween. I just regret I don’t get to dress like a bee. (My new costume for Halloween 09.)
(And this is a personal shout out to Pat Ryan, aka Goatee, I hope you have a great and normal day with no complications whatsoever.)
Nadya Suleman, the mother who recently gave birth to Octuplets, has recently launched her own website. The website which says, “We thank you for the love and good wishes sent to us from around the world. The octuplets arrived on 1/26/09. They are all healthy and growing stronger by the day.”
Of course, as indicated by the previous post about this issue, there are many issues to debate and discuss in this woman’s choice to undergo invitro fertilization as a single parent with a mother who describes her as a little crazy and “not capable” of taking care of fourteen children.
And so the debate continue, I realized yesterday when I ordered a hot chocolate yesterday at a local Panera Bread and couldn’t help but hear an outburst at a nearby table, “And how about that women with fourteen kids? What is she thinking?” It’s clear the issue of responsible parenting, class, and race aren’t going away. The debates are even going into an Angelina Jolie look-alike frenzy. (Suleman denies this.)
As healthy as it is to debate, I’ve found the comment sections of sites intriguing. Nadya Suleman is (unconfirmed) a woman a color, possibly of Latino background, without a partner or suffucient resources to raise the kids. Is that the reason why people are “hating?” Becuase they don’t see her being able to do this?
But when we see entertainment like (old school) Just the Ten of Us, or reality shows like John and Kate Plus Eight, or Cheaper By the Dozen, as Kenny Darter points out, we think it’s pretty hilarious when White families, who have the means, have a busload of kids. But if a person without a reality show or partner chooses to, it’s deemed everything but good.
It is entirely understandable to oppose this woman’s decision. There are clear reasons why and the safety and well-being of the children are priority. However, without sufficient information, except reports from gossip magazines as to how she is going to move forward, I am hesitant to predict that these children are doomed or are going to undergo profound trauma. I certainly hope she gets on her feet to do the best she can and live beyond her own decision to have fourteen children. She has a mountain to climb, fourteen to be exact, but she has legs.
What I find interesting, though, is that throughout history and the world, there are women exactly like Suleman who raise their multitude of children with much less media and attention than Nadya Suleman. There are women who are neither scorned or criticized for the number of children they have. They are ignored. The reaction our country has had to Nadya Suleman confounds me. On one hand, it’s portrayed as a medical miracle, but the backlash is calling her crazy and irresponsible. The majority of those reports came out after her financial and marital status were leaked. When we see “single” and “bankrupt,” she’s selfish. Focusing soley on Suleman and not the children, would we call her crazy, would we criticize her CHOICE if we found out that she had a millionaire’s bank account? Or if she had a husband who was a CEO? Probably not, or at least, the criticism wouldn’t be so severe.
So what does that say about who gets to have large families? You can and have the freedom, only if you are financially capable? Is and should there be a parallel relationship between resources (house, job, daycare, health care, partner, family support, etc) and number of offspring? Because if there is some sort of invisible rule about class and birthing, then we need to examine it, not just in context to Nadya Suleman, but how that invisible rule extends to all women and families, including those outside our country’s lines. Do we have the same reaction to an unmarried Nicaraguan woman who naturally gave birth to seven? How is your reaction different? How is it similar?
The number of children a woman has – either intentional or not – is a layered issue, and often ethnocentric toward western ideals of a two parent unit with resources and health care. It is an opportunity to delve into your own perceptions of the relationship between freedom, choice, resources, and parenting. I just hope that there remains a space to richly discuss the issues that have surfaced without berating another woman or a population of women in the process.
Cross-posted at Bitch Magazine.