How Do You Get Over Writer’s Block?

I’m in a major writing assignment; the kind that is not based on facts, but on how deep your perspective is and how clearly and well you are able to set it on paper.  It’s my favorite kind of writing.  It’s also the most difficult.

As G. Anzaldua wrote, “Put your shit on the paper,” I am having difficulty because more shit has come up than is required for this essay.  The question is, “What does your writing mean to you?”
I mean, how about asking how I feel about my right arm when I am right handed?   Or ask how I feel about my heart beating regularly and my lungs working properly?  That is the same kind of relationship – a mindless need.  And the thought of being without it is beyond crushing, beyond life altering.  Without writing, I’d be a foreign soul to myself.
But, the clock is literally ticking on my screen and I need to get my shit out ASAP for this deadline.  I hate that word, by the way.  DEAD  and LINE.   Who in the world thought to put those two words together to come up with a word that means BE READY BY THIS TIME.
DEAD.
LINE.
That’s not helping my block.
What gets you through a brick wall to your green pastures of brilliance?

Alligator Skin

I realized last night as I tried to muffle Nick’s snoring that I haven’t written much about culture lately. It’s a topic that surfaces in our household, mhm, twice a day or so. There are usually a lot of questions that rise between Nick and I – how to negotiate certain problems, differences, etc – as they do in all marriages. One of the things that I’ve found quite interesting in our marriage is how the topic of interracial marriage is raised – or not raised – by our peers.

Nick and I trade stories about race, ethnicity, and upbringing all the time. At our core, I think we’re quite similar in values (I mean, I wouldn’t have married someone who believes in porn and killing off polar bears), but our personalities couldn’t be more different. Among those differences is, obviously, race.

If you haven’t noticed, I’m Brown and Nick is White. We celebrate different parts of our identity, sometimes more mine because it is much more difficult to feel a sense of belonging when most pop culture, education, history, media – everything – is not reflective of my identity and sense of self. But we’re learning how to find balance in that as well. It most often comes up when we talk about having children.

One of the most odd and hilarious things that I get when we talk about having a family someday is when folks says, “I can’t wait to see what your kids look like.” Well, I hope they’re dead gorgeous, but I hope they’re a lot of other things first. We know the comments are just taglines to note an interest in bi/multiracial children, but it’s not like we’re a scientific experiment or something. I’m pretty hopeful the kid’s gonna come out with four limbs, a brain, and a soul.

In these current times when race seems to be the hottest button in conversation – from church homilies to CNN – I try to remind folks that understanding difference is a process, one that you should be intentional about pursuing. It is my personal belief that, yes, eventually, “what are you?” is going to be a question of the past and racial features that distinguish cultures and ancestry will be dusty artifacts that only historic pictures will reflect.

As for Nick and I, while we remain supremely confident in the good looks of our future children, we do make it a priority that s/he will understand the Filipino flag as much as the American flag. They’ll eat rice with Philippine cuisine, as they’ll hear stories about small town Russia and their dad being the valedictorian and prom king. Our kids will hear stories about the racism their mom and maternal grandparents endured and how immigration was a messy topic once upon a time. They’ll learn how to build faith in life, as well as death, and learn that kindness and grace begins in the family at home. They’ll be mixed, yes, but they’ll learn it’s a blessing and privilege, not a confusing misfortune that resulted when two Xavier students fell in love in Cincinnati.

So, to answer a question that came up in the car from a good friend, “So, does, like race come up for you guys, since, you know, you’re in, like, an interracial relationship?”

Simply stated, yes.

Untitled

I was there, compliments of my friend and loyal OSU alum, Christy who was kind enough to take me to her cushion-y amazing seats at the OSU/PENN State game. I was about 65 feet from Lebron on the sidelines and got peaks of Tressel working his magic.

There are certain rules I abide by at big games and the guy behind me broke #2:
Thou shall not annoy another fans who are trying to enjoy the sporting event in an energized and civilized manner.

If you’re going to be cursing up a storm, I’d rather you just blow f-bombs into the water instead of using the name of the person who, I happen to believe, is the savior of our planet.

STOP YELLING JESUS CHRIST INTO MY EAR CANALS followed by an expletive of how Tressel needs to move the safeties up. I know Maurice Wells has butter fingers, but STOP YELLING JESUS CHRIST at the top of your lungs. Not only does it massively annoy me, but I’m at the borderline of turning around and saying something along the lines of, “Shut up. Just shut up. You. Are. A. Disgrace.” But, Christy shook her head at me. So I bit my tongue and just yelled all the louder, “COME ON D, HOLD THEM!” along with the thunderous Ohio stadium.

I’m not an uptight person, but put the Jesus Christ AK47 away because it grates just a weetzy bit too much on my ears. Say hell, shit, or damn as much as you want. Go CRAZY with the f-bomb. Even an occasional g-damn is better than a 2 hour yelling spree of about JC.

The first OSU game I went to was against Texas a few years ago. They lost. I feel like I might be a curse to big OSU games. I very well may just stay at home in the name of my fanhood.

Nick was at a dinner party (oh la la, we’re moving up in the world) with coworkers, their significant others, his boss and pastor, and a lovely couple hosting them for dinner, where he confessed to me later he was surreptitiously watching the game. His cover was blown when he peaked and saw Pryor fumble the ohsoimportant ball that spurred Nick’s rare outbursts, “Are you freaking kidding me?”

He then apologized for his outburst that interrupted the conversation.

When I thought of the potty mouth sitting behind me and the string of Jesus Christs he hurled out onto the field, it only made me love the “Are you freaking kidding me,” all the more.

Nick if far too easy to fall in love with.

It’s So Not 2001

Morgan is our niece. Two days ago, she just turned ten years old. I called to wish her a happy birthday and then passed the phone to Nick so he could greet her as well. This is what I heard:

Nick: Hi Morgan!

pause (obviously, I can’t hear Morgan.)

Nick: Happy Birthday!

pause

Nick: That’s great! What’d you do at school?….You passed out kit-kats? I be your classmates were loving that one.

pause pause pause

NIck: So, ten years old huh? You’re getting old! What’d you get today?

long pauses, Nick is walking around the living room. My eyes (and ears) follow.

Nick: You got a bike? That’s pretty freaking cool.

short pause

Nick explodes, “You got a cell phone?”

I hear giggling from Morgan.

“You got a cell phone? Of your own? …Man, I didn’t get a cell phone till I was out of college.”

There you have it. It’s official. When you compare the timeline between yourself and someone who is a decade old when you got your first cell phone, it’s over. We. Are. Old. Farts.

Peering Over America’s Reading Shoulder

There are only a few things I genuinely care about in this world and books are one of them. Books, not articles, are a true test of endurance and intelligence.  Books reveal personality, aspiration, values.  To borrow a yoga term, they reveal your core.  They can provide testament into the interests – however playful, however serious – of the reader.

Today I was looking at New York Times Bestseller list and I found two interesting books on the much coveted list of creative non-fiction.  At #8, right in the dear company of Christian Lander’s Stuff White People Like (yes, the website turned book deal) and presidential possibility Barack Obama, is I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell by Tucker Max and is described by the New York Times as  “life as a self-absorbed, drunken womanizer.” (Let me guess, the cover is black – yep.) All of that with a cover for $12.95.  To balance Tucker, we have (at #26) My Horizontal Life by Chelsea Handler which is described as “a memoir of one night stands.”   (Let me guess, there’s pink on the cover – yep.)
Now I haven’t read Handler’s book.  I read a chapter of Max’s potty mouth when I was sick with the flu in my brother in law’s apartment and it was laying next to me on the couch with his promise it was an old Christmas present.  It was every bit as disgusting and riveting as one can imagine an author described as a “womanizer” could be. 
I heard Jessica Valenti has a new book coming out entitled, “The Purity Myth: How America’s Obsession with Virginity is Hurting Young Woman.”  I thought the title was interesting, but my reaction to Valenti’s title is the same reaction when I see these two other books about casual (at best) and destructive sex (at worst) hitting the top of the NY Bestseller List.  Three words: failed sexual exploration (America’s – not necessarily yours).
Let me explain.
I believe it’s more America’s stigma against healthy sexual expression and exploration that tie BOTH women and men to sexual polarized poles.  Once people hear “sexual expression” they think nudity, experimentation, or sexual orientation.  That’s part of it, but there’s so much intimacy with the sexual self that I believe gets lost in the study and literature of sex.  Sometimes I feel like now matter how many books are published in women studies or queer studies about expanding thought around sexuality, in the end, most people still think of a hetero couple having sex in a bed, in a bedroom, lights out, curtains drawn.  For as sexualized our nation is, our creativity tends to run dry.
Enter: creative non-fiction paperbacks about one night stands and a drunken womanizer and they soar like rockets.  The fact that these books are being proclaimed as exciting is a bit concerning.  What’s going on between the sheets should definitely be more exciting than what’s between the pages of #8 and #26.  What is it with our obsession, not with purity, but with the lives of out-sexing-truthtelling-nonapologetic heterosexuals?
I’d love to read about the uncertain, the moments of experimenting with one’s self, or a first time you had REAL love making (which, rumor has it,  doesn’t happen till women are in their 30s) and shirked old conceptions, similar to Jennifer Jason Leigh in Fast Times at Ridgemont High.
I’m not saying I don’t think there shouldn’t be dirty stories and ridiculous memories retold of taking a picture of your parents doing the naked samba, I’m just saying that the glorified sleepover stories turned NY Times Bestsellers are saying something about America in the bedroom.  I just hope that our cheapening sexual stories aren’t indicative of a cheapening of sexuality. 
I wish that at, say, #4 (or, dammit, let’s get ambitious – #3), there was a creative, non-fiction truth telling nonapologetic witty book that talked about the crazy tales of getting lost in your own sexual self before you try and “have sex with a black man…from ChocolateSingles.com”
(anyone else smell racist sexualization of the black male here?) and get lost in someone else.  It’s funny, I would have thought that in this day and age, the Molly Ringwald lessons would be ringing true for Gen-X: you won’t find yourself in someone else; let alone your sexual satisfaction.
Quests for sexual intimacy, knowledge, confidence, artistry…mhm, now THAT’s entertainment.  Short stories about blow jobs, hangovers in Austin, Texas, and midgets are old news.  I’m waiting for America to write a new chapter on sexual exploration.

Dear Nick, Blame it on the Rain

Surprisingly (or perhaps, not surprisingly) references to Milli Vanilli frequently come up in our talks. Whenever we have a difference of opinion, Nick will squint his eyes, scrunch his features so his head looks wrinkled, put it two inches from my face and sings, “GIRL YOU KNOW IT’S TRUE! YES YOU KNOW YOU IT, GIRL YOU KNOW IT, YES YOU KNOW IT’S TRUE!”

The other day I off-handedly said, “…blame it on the rain,” having no idea where that come from.

Nick thoughtfully repeated, “Mhm. Blame it on the rain. What do you think that means?”

“It means blame it on the rain.” For once, I was the factually based one.

“No, the song. What does it mean? I think this is the first time I’ve ever thought of those lyrics.”

Well, my darling wonder of the peanut butter sky, here are the lyrics. This is what I think it’s about: a fool breaks up with his girlie; knows it’s his fault; isn’t man enough to apologize because of his pride; and blames everything but himself.

BLAME IT ON THE RAIN LYRICS by Milli Vanilli
You said you didn’t need her
You told her good-bye (good-bye)
You sacrificed a good love
To satisfy your pride
Now you wished
That you should have her (have her)
And you feel like such a fool
You let her walk away
Now it just don’t feel the same
Gotta blame it on something
Gotta blame it on something

Blame it on the rain (rain)
Blame it on the stars (stars)
Whatever you do don’t put the blame on you
Blame it on the rain yeah yeah
You can blame it on the rain
Get
Ooh, ooh (ooh)
I can’t, I can’t. I can’t, can’t stand the rain
I can’t, I can’t. I can’t, can’t stand the rain
Yeah, yeah
Should’ve told her you were sorry (sorry) huh
Could have said you were wrong
But no you couldn’t do that. No, no
You had to prove you were strong ooh
If you hadn’t been so blinded (blinded)
She might still be there with you
You want her back again
But she just don’t feel the same
Gotta blame it on something
Gotta blame it on something

Blame it on the rain that was falling, falling
Blame it on the stars that did shine at night
Whatever you do don’t put the blame on you
Blame it on the rain yeah yeah

You can blame it on the rain
Cos the rain don’t mind
And the rain don’t care
You got to blame it on something
(Blame it on the rain)
(Blame it on the stars)
Whatever you do don’t put the blame on you
Blame it on the rain yeah, yeah
You can blame it on the rain
Girl

Ooh, ooh (ooh)
Girl
I can’t, I can’t. I can’t, can’t stand the rain
I can’t, I can’t. I can’t, can’t stand the rain

Get
Girl
(Whatever you do…)
(Blame it on the rain yeah, yeah) x 3
You can blame it on the rain, blame it on the rain,
blame it on the rain baby
(Blame it on the rain yeah yeah)
Blame it on the stars that did shine that night
(Blame it on the rain yeah yeah)
Blame it, blame it on the rain
woo
I’m walking
I’m walking

Walking in the rain
Walking in the rain

(Rain, rain)
(Stars, stars)
Whatever you do don’t put the blame on you
(Blame it on the rain)
yeah yeah
(Blame it on the rain)
that keeps falling, falling
(Blame it on the stars)
that did shine that night
Whatever you do don’t put the blame on you
Blame it on the rain yeah yeah
Blame it on the rain (rain, rain)

Ouch, Rejection Hurts

Sometimes I feel like rejection doesn’t just take your breath away.  

It feels like a full swing axe wedged in your lungs and vinegar bathed onions in your eyes.
Media.  How do you find your place in the world?
Where does one find a home for one’s writer’s voice?  How exactly does a “full scale background in heavy journalism and resume of accomplishments” (as a newspaper editor just emailed me) fit for a young womyn of color like myself who doesn’t have the finance to go back to school, has a passion for journalism, but can’t seem to find a way to make headway.
I’m not asking or looking for an easy way, I’m looking for a chance.
Perhaps this why I admire make/shift, Colorlines, Left Turn, and Utne so much.  They not only feature, but RELY upon independent voices and fresh blood.  Perhaps this is why I need to wake up and stop hoping that big media is going to change and, rather, change MY expectations and look elsewhere for my work, my voice, my trembling tree of reason.
I understand that in any discipline – media, counseling, health – one must acquire experience and trust in a field before she is relied upon to exercise independent judgement and open wings.  That’s not what I have a problem with though:  what happens when those experiences are not available to you?  Where do you go when doors are shut at the entry level?  What happens to young women who change their minds and want to be heard but are told they are too late?  Too late at 29 years old.
I am too late, apparently.