Angry

Linsanity.

by theresa on February 21, 2012

I don’t pay much mind to sports. I’m definitely better-versed in football and basketball since getting married, but even though Huz will watch football all weekend every weekend during the season and he’s got NBA games on every night, I still pretty much know jack squat.

But (and you had to know this was coming) Jeremy Lin makes Sportscenter so much more fun for me.

Okay, he’s not all that new to me. Being a blogger for Hyphen and kind of having a foot in the Asian American blogosphere, I know people have been following him since his Harvard days. But now that he’s winning and making waves in the NBA, ESPN is bringing all sorts of ethnic studies professors and Asian American analysts and commentators on SportsCenter to help people make sense of all this, and better yet, to help them talk about Asian American athletes (and hopefully non-athletes) in a normal and non-racist way. One analyst was on ESPN talking about the history of yellow peril and how it’s problematic to call Jeremy Lin “shifty” or “deceptively” athletic. Jeremy Lin is expanding the industry for Asian American studies folk!

There have been some bumps along the way, but like Soo said, people have mostly been respectful and professional.

Speaking of race, I think I’ve only mentioned this on Facebook in the past, but Yo, Is This Racist? has quickly become one of my favorite blogs. My only qualm with the blog was actually published as a comment the other day.

If you have never seen the blog before, the essential premise is that people send the guy questions about whether or not something is racist, and he usually answers something to the effect of “Yeah it’s racist, you racist dumbass.”

The problem is that he never explains why something might be racist, and while every POC hates having to play this role to their white friends, obviously these people writing in are looking for “why” explanations and they can’t be bothered to open a goddamn book.

I guess on the flip, some questions are so infuriatingly dumb that there is no way to explain why it’s racist. For example, people who claim that the best way to eradicate racism is to not talk about it and act like it doesn’t exist. Or people who try to justify racism by claiming that all POC’s hate white people. Also, why are white people (n/m, I forget Asian people do this too) so obsessed with getting a pass to say the n-word?

Ugh, I’m just making myself mad at this point and it’s way too early in the week for that. There’s a reason why Yo, Is This Racist? is run by someone else and not me.

{ 0 comments }

Very Special Conversations.

by theresa on January 24, 2012

I had a really weird conversation with a friend from back in CT the other day.

I have a hunch that every person of color who grew up in the suburbs has at least one white acquaintance (possibly several) who is so clueless about race that literally everything that comes out of their mouth turns into a possible teaching moment, where during every conversation, you have to think to yourself, “How am I supposed to steer this?” This person is that particular acquaintance for me.

I am generally a non-confrontational person who hates to fight, but I get especially squeamish whenever white people bring up race. It’s a truly, truly exhausting experience, not only because I get flashbacks of being shut down from defining my own self and my own boundaries and it takes so much energy to just stay sane during these exchanges, but also because I also have a sort of irrational (not really) fear that I’m risking being the token friend of color whenever I talk to a white person in CT. In general, I think this is what happens when you grow up in the suburbs and then go to college and take Asian American studies classes. I just don’t have the energy to talk to or teach white people about racism. If I did, I’d be a professor.

ANYWAY, we were catching up about our kids and I asked about her kid’s new experiences at preschool. The preschool is in a different city from where they live which, thankfully, means more diversity, but this friend mentioned her kid was kind of having a difficult time processing that there were children who looked different from him. She expressed some concern that he was starting to think all people who look a certain way will act a certain way, that he’s already begun to make this association. He is four years old.

I know I’m supposed to applaud this person for showing concern and for attempting to teach her child that “not all people who look like X are mean, just that one person.” BUT.

First off, I still know loads of people in CT who epitomize clueless-white-folk-syndrome but unless you live in a place that straight up has a population of, like, five, it is my genuine feeling that at 2012, your exposure to people of color can’t be that limited unless you deliberately make it so. Like, you really have to try hard at sheltering your kid if, by the time your child is four, he or she is surprised that people look different from him or her. And by the time you get to a certain age, you don’t get any more passes for simply being ignorant anymore. You’re just racist. You are complicit in your own ignorance, and it’s not anyone else’s job to educate you but your own.

It has actually just occurred to me why people this annoy and exhaust me so much more than run-of-the-mill outright racists. It is not just that they’re complicit in their own ignorance, but because they’re looking to me to feel good about trying. They want me to validate and co-sign that they can say racist shit and have racist feelings and still not be considered racist, and therefore not have to do any more. Because in many cases, calling a white person racist is like the worst possible thing you can say to them — it shuts down conversation, it puts you in an “Angry People We Can’t Talk To” camp, and it means they actually have to actively experience race like the rest of us. Rarely do people like this acknowledge or even realize that “racist” is not a permanent state they need to be in for the rest of their lives, and that they can easily fix this situation by reading a fucking book or checking their thinking once in a while or exercising the goddamn filter between their mouth and their brain. Yes, I have been accused of saying racist shit and misappropriating culture myself, but it has been a continual learning process and I’ve mostly taken these moments in my life, learned from them, and moved on (though not without the occasional cringe-oh-my-god-I-was-so-stupid-back-then).

It is also my feeling (supported pretty much only by my personal experience) that at preschool age, kids don’t naturally distinguish people by race. Hugga has been in preschool for a year and a half, is about the same age, and as much as I talk about race and racism and privilege at home, she still doesn’t really understand what race is. Granted, this may have been the experience in our family because we are non-white, have many (possibly mostly) non-white friends, and live in an ethnically diverse and super liberal city where we interact with mostly non-white people (and white people who also interact with mostly non-white people), but certainly when Hugga first started preschool, she more naturally distinguished people by girl or boy, mean or nice, big or small, or by who’s her friend and who isn’t. This is still her natural inclination, and whenever I don’t know who she’s talking about, she gives other indicators like, “Quinn who lives in my neighborhood” or “Mia who has a brother in the Jungle Room” or “Not my cousin Kayla, but Ocean Room Kayla.” She doesn’t even talk about hair color.

She has only the vaguest understanding about being Korean and Filipino, and she really only understands it from a language standpoint — that her grandmothers speak different languages. She repeats that she is Korean or Filipino when we’re actually talking about it, but I still don’t think she understands what “being Korean” or “being Filipino” or “being mixed” means. The only indication I have ever gotten that she even notices race or skin color happened a few months ago when we were having lunch at a restaurant with my mom — our waitress was strikingly beautiful, was probably more bubbly than anyone Hugga had ever met, and she also had really dark skin, and Hugga was so intent on telling her how pretty and nice she was that she yelled across the restaurant, “I LIKE YOUR SKIN.” I would’ve died of embarassment if the waitress wasn’t so charmed by Hugga’s verbal diarrhea.

(Side note: I really didn’t know how to handle that moment — the waitress was clearly not offended, the restaurant was Hooters where I guess women are voluntarily objectified but gotdamn those wings are delicious, and at four, Hugga doesn’t even know the meaning of exoticizing, but if she said the same thing at middle school age, I’d have to have the “Why this comment is problematic” talk with her. Yeah, I’m gonna be that mom.)

I should make something clear — I don’t advocate for “colorblindness.” I think it’s important to teach kids that people are different races, and that racism and privilege are real. This is the only hope we have of actually combating racism — talking about it rather than pretending it no longer exists — and I try to talk about this with Hugga as much as I can in terms she can understand which, at four years old, aren’t many. I tried giving her the MLK Jr. lesson on her day off from school but I could tell she had just a basic grasp. Even when she uses the word “discrimination,” she really only associates that with when I try to tell her that the Oriental Trading catalog was made for teachers and not kids, even though it has all sorts of toys and candy in it.

But admittedly, we don’t regularly have reasons to talk about the otherness of the people we know. I used to have a weird inclination to ask Huz the ethnicity of every person he’d bring up in conversation, but after being asked “Does it matter?” every single time, I don’t even allow myself to go there anymore, cause it doesn’t matter and the answer always surprised me anyhow (unless he’s talking about a client with an entitlement complex, in which case I don’t need to ask — jokes, people!). The only “Very Special Conversation” Hugga really gets is that she has some uncles who like men and some aunts who like women, and that boys can wear makeup if they want to, and that some boys are born with girl parts and some girls are born with boy parts, and that there’s no such thing as boy favorite colors or girl favorite colors — and this only comes up in conversation because her friends are just wrapping their minds around gender right now and she’s kind of obsessed with this idea of “getting married” (which only means being really good friends with a person and maybe kissing).

Thus, I cannot wrap my mind around a four year old having the cognizance to make racist assumptions about people on their own, UNLESS this is something that is regularly practiced and talked about at home. Not that the practice is something I’d put past this acquaintance, but I guess I’m just exhausted to know people like her and to have these kinds of conversations with her 75% of the time we talk. It just reminds me of being in high school and it brings out the passive in me. I’m a nice person and I don’t like having to be a bitchy asshole about stuff.

I love the people I kept in touch with since high school, but the entire experience of growing up in the suburbs of CT was basically day in and day out of white people telling me how I was different, what my people were like, how my family was weird, etc. If my friends had any questions about my family or my culture or generally about being Asian, these questions weren’t asked out of curiosity. Instead these questions were asked like accusations. “Is it true that they eat dogs in the Philippines?” or “What do you guys eat that smells so bad?” or “What the fuck was your dad saying just now? Was he speaking English?” It was eighteen years of other people defining who I was, and as I got older, the truly racist dipshits would feel okay just saying racist shit in my presence because I wasn’t black or Puerto Rican. I’d only have the balls to just walk away from those types of people.

I can’t lie — obviously if you catch me in the right mood, I can still be mad bitter about it.

{ 3 comments }

How Am I Not Myself?

by theresa on January 12, 2012

I’m starting to feel it…

My birthday is still ten months away, but I’m already feeling the weight of it. Thirty. THIRTY. I know it’s not a big deal, and in a decade I’ll read this post and want to punch myself in the face or something. And it isn’t necessarily the number I’m freaking out about (is it ever really about the number?), but my place in life.

I am aware that I have everything. I swear I’m not trying to come off a smug asshole about it, but I’m probably where many new 30 year olds are trying to get to: married, kids, career, raising my family and living my life in a great city. I just think I’m having my mid-life crisis ahead of the curve. I am SCRAPBOOKING now. Goddamn, I’m square.

I am having serious issues about this. It is a hobby that brings me joy, but is also the first completely uncool thing I’ve decided to do with my time. I’ve been lurking all the popular scrapping boards to learn new techniques and all I see are super religious housewives who listen to country music or soft rock and have a thousand kids which they homeschool. And I know this happened five years ago, but I just read about this controversy and how the scrapping community got into such an uproar, and I’m like, is this pathetic bullshit the kind of life I’m headed for? Can I do something I enjoy in my own way and not become… well, that?

Granted, religious right will never be my steez. I will eat the shit out of Girl Scout cookies (moreso than usual, anyway) to support their inclusion of transgendered kids, I plan to give my girls continuous lessons on kyriarchy and racism and sexism and other forms of oppression to supplement their public school education, and I hope to one day take my family to some hippie ass protests. And I doubt I’ll ever get so into the scrapping community that I’ll actually give a shit about who wins whatever contest.

But clearly this is about more than scrapbooking; this has become an existential crisis for me.

Will there ever come a point in my life where I’m not me anymore? I’ve never really had reason to seriously ponder this question — I’m happy with my life, after all, and I think I’ve grown out of all that young, reckless shit with some grace (no more clubbing every weekend, no more getting sloppy drunk, no more attempting to get close to Hollywood circles with a bunch of LA weirdos, no more dating DJs — and I can honestly say I don’t miss any of it). I know that I will continue to grow and evolve, and what I like today won’t necessarily be what I like in ten or fifteen years. But what I’m concerned about is losing myself in the backdrop of the rest of my life. I just don’t want to wake up at any point all surprised and wondering what the fuck happened.

At 35, 40, or 50 years old, I want to have a distinct style and voice. While I fully intend to continue giving my all to the things and the people I love, I still want to be able to comfortably exist as a separate entity outside of my career, my hobbies, my marriage, my family. At 30, I still don’t know what that style or separate entity looks like. I still don’t feel like I’ve come into my own or given myself enough definition. I don’t know if this makes any sense, but I’m afraid that if I don’t lay claim to certain things right now, I’ll lose the room to claim them in the future.

Like if I don’t do a zine soon, I’m suddenly gonna be too damn old to make one. If I don’t catch up on all those backpacker hip hop artists I used to love so much, I’m going to pass a threshold where I’m too uncool to even listen to the latest Common joint. If I don’t get my body back soon enough after I give birth, I dunno, maybe I’ll just become this shapeless mass in service to my children but too unsexy for my husband to, you know…

And the mundane. Am I too happy? Are Huz and I too content and comfortable in our marriage? Will he one day start thinking he needs more excitement and drama in his life and decide to step out on me with a hot, young Miller Lite girl with curly hair and a big ass who starts the kind of fights we used to have and gets obsessive and has no concept of boundaries?

Have I already become too boring? I don’t even know what this feeling is — am I not engaged enough in my daily life? (I’m not.) Do need to make some friends and feel more out in the world? (Yes.)

The questions… I know I’m in a real emotionally tenuous moment of my life right now — about to give birth to my second child, on the verge of my thirtieth birthday, and feeling isolated and shut-in because I work from home and I hate driving. I’m also surrounded by friends in wildly different phases of their own lives looking for answers to the same questions in whatever fucked up way they need to (some of those ways aren’t really fucked up at all, my bad).

Maybe I need some resolutions in my life. I’d definitely like to resolve this. (Also, please forgive me for my excessive use of I Heart Huckabees references today.)

{ 5 comments }