I’m tired of suppressing myself to get along with white people. Truth!

kefta

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
In response to this post: http://www.bgol.us/board/showthread.php?t=862300

Let's see how many of us (black people) can relate to this sista. I can... :yes:

I’m tired of suppressing myself to get along with white people
I pocket my black rage, and swap "hey girl" for hello. But in making others comfortable, I'm making myself sick




I met my new roommates on Craigslist. Two white, one Chinese. Together we represented Portland, Florida, China and (with me) D.C., and as we moved into our apartment in Bed-Stuy last fall, I was excited for the potential of cross-cultural exchange.

We had a get-to-know you powwow on the rooftop. We talked about ourselves, what brought us to New York. It was a warm evening in September, a couple of weeks after Michael Brown was shot, and somewhere in the mix I brought up Ferguson, hoping to spark a “conscious conversation.” Then it happened. The nightmarish response.

“What’s happening in Ferguson?” one of my white roommates asked. “I heard some kid got shot or something like that.”

The words clamored in my ears. How could he not know? Weren’t his Twitter, Instagram and Facebook feeds flooded with opinions and hashtags? I’m sure he meant nothing by his statement. We’re all ill-informed from time to time. But as I stood there, awkwardly not saying a word — while hundreds of words ran through my head — it was a reminder of how much I would have to suppress in order to get along with my white male roommates in our tiny four-bedroom apartment. This place I would call my home for a year.

It hasn’t always been like this for me. I’m a girl with a fro, raised in the place once known as “Chocolate City.” I grew up part of a black nuclear family, was home-schooled, then became part of of the mini-Historic Black College Experience at Temple University. After arriving in New York, I became an intern at Essence, a magazine so safe I likened my boss to an aunt. Those settings were as comfortable as my grandma’s cooking on any given Sunday.

I longed to crawl back to my tiny black universe. A place where I could create a sense of peace, identity and acceptance, a place where I could sit there, trying to untangle my fro and make sense of what it means to be an African-American woman in this country, rehashing our history while facing present pain. But life happens, and most of us can’t stay in our own utopias forever.

Now I faced a new reality. The brief conversation on the roof that hot September night lasted much longer in my head. I sent myself into a 200-year-old tizzy, reckoning with outdated ideas on race, tampering with prejudice and stereotypes. I became enslaved by my emotions.

I started to worry about all the other things I might have to explain: My hair, the food I eat, why I like Miles Davis, Nina Simone and Marvin Gaye. Maybe I should have considered it a teaching opportunity. But I wasn’t feeling generous. I was all twisted up inside, ablaze over racial dynamics and anxious what other minefields my roommate might stumble upon. I hoped he wouldn’t say something really ignorant, causing me to just snap and go off on an angry rant. Then I’d have to make my living situation salvageable by pocketing my black rage, putting on my best smile and telling him, it’s all love.

I wanted my home to be a refuge, a place where I could be wretched when I wanted, walk around in my bonnet, fry chicken and sing real loud to Aretha Franklin’s R-E-S-P-E-C-T. Suppressing my blackness every day is exhausting. Back at Essence, we used “sister girl language,” but since then, I’d faced tougher environments. I briefly worked at a (now-defunct) women’s fashion website, where I was one of the only black people. I would pitch ideas that mattered to me, like how to do natural hair, only to see them ignored, shuffled to the side or diluted like apple juice in order to be made palatable to mainstream “whiteness.”

I was tired of catering to everyone else’s comforts. How much of my day-to-day experiences as a black woman do I have to filter? I replace “hey girl” with boring hellos. I eat my leftover fried chicken outside the office. In order to have some common point of identifiable communication, I pretend to care about Taylor Swift, or white movie stars on their I’ve-lost-count remarriages and those other white pop stars I could not care less about. “Oh yeah, she’s cute,” I tell them. “Yeah, that’s cool.”

As summer turned to fall and then winter, I continued to be dumbfounded at the way, for some white people, the killing of Michael Brown just didn’t resonate. They didn’t feel the need to pay attention. I guess some white people do act “real vanilla” and only understand the realities of their own universe. Like running around drunk in Santa costumes in the name of SantaCon while “The Millions March NYC” launches in response to the non-indictment verdicts. That’s real.

In December, when the Eric Garner verdict came out, I became loaded down with more emotional baggage than I could conceal. I couldn’t take it anymore. I didn’t care if I wasn’t mixing with others. I found my little black planet at work. I went over to my black boss and talked real low and real brief about how disturbing this all was. I grabbed one of my home girls I work with. We took to the streets to protest right outside my job. I hoped no one would see me and think something misguided.

Walking home that night, I unleashed all my tears. I wanted to reach out and hug a black man. Before I arrived at my apartment, I dried off my face as though nothing happened. My white male roommate asked me about the protest; I gave him a non-detailed response. I said something like, “I’m really upset, but it was a good way for me to get those feelings out.” I couldn’t handle revealing too much; I wanted to avoid a loaded conversation. I took a deep breath and exhaled, closed my bedroom door, picked up the phone, and spoke in whispers about how racist these non-indictments were to my parents, and to my socially conscious white and black friends.

These non-indictments reiterated what I’m up against every single day: the unintentional ignorance of white people. But I was also aware of my willingness to put away my justified “black rage” in order to ensure that my interactions with white people remain comfortable. And the more I hid it, the more crazed I became. By the time my birthday rolled around, in December, I was cooped up in my bed, without an appetite, my fro needing a good deep conditioner. I was making myself sick.

I know this needs to change. I understand that for my own growth, and in order to forge honest relationships with white people I meet — whether it’s my roommates, or my co-workers, or anyone else — I need to reveal myself more. I need to start sharing about my history and my culture and how it plays out in my everyday life as an African American woman. I don’t want this rage to fester into bitterness, or infect the very close white friendships I already have. I don’t want to ignore my rage, but I don’t want to be controlled by it either. Concealing my emotions has made me feel like a ticking time bomb just waiting to go off.

Things are calm right now at the apartment. I don’t bring up these sorts of conversations. I don’t talk about what happens every 28 hours — a black person is killed. My white male roommate and I, we just don’t go there. It makes things easier. Instead, our conversations shuffle between our day-to-day experiences at work, dating and the nuances of the city. I keep those “forbidden” conversations behind closed doors, and even when I’m alone I speak in code. I don’t say “white.” I use “they” instead.

But I want to stop tiptoeing around race. My blackness is not a secret I have to keep. I want to be able to publicly express my honest admiration for being black, outside of my little black planet. I don’t want to feel marginalized, like I can’t speak hard truths about myself. Having honest and challenging conversations with people of another race will hopefully disrupt other people’s ignorance. But it will also help me. I need to stop with my mental temper tantrums. I want to get free.

Priscilla Ward is a writer whose work has been featured on Health.com, AfroPunk.com, Youngist.org, as well as in Essence and Ammo magazine. She's obsessed with natural hair, bell hooks, sandwiches and really cool art shows.You can find her tweeting about running one moment and being black the next @Macaronifro.
MORE PRISCILLA WARD.
Source: http://www.salon.com/2015/01/20/im_tired_of_suppressing_myself_to_get_along_with_white_people/

Context of racism/white supremacy... :angry:
 
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She had/has a unique opportunity to confront white ignorance and racsim at it's source, but yet chooses to espouse her disappointment online where the only folks who will read this are black.

If you ain't standing up to it when it calls your card, STFU and move aside.
 
She had/has a unique opportunity to confront white ignorance and racsim at it's source, but yet chooses to espouse her disappointment online where the only folks who will read this are black.

If you ain't standing up to it when it calls your card, STFU and move aside.

I hear you.

Yet again, many black folks are caught in the same predicament. Scared to speak truth to power because they will no longer have white "friends". Truth be told.
 
I hear you.

Yet again, many black folks are caught in the same predicament. Scared to speak truth to power because they will no longer have white "friends". Truth be told.

Been there and they NEVER understand or even care.

It's always an argument with them and they do not listen to reason and logic.
 
She doesn't seem to have grasped the fact that white people see us as inferior and will never see us as equals. Looking for respect and/or understanding from them is a fools game. White male roommate, huh?
 
Sounds like she didn't know how to state her opinion and reasoning without getting emotionally riled up about it.

I understand sometime you have to pick and choose your battles everything isn't worth your energy.

But when its something you believe strongly in enough to give time to protest about it it shouldn't be a problem to express yourself informatively and with passion.

I understand our passion and emotion gets dismissed by white fragility but you have to find some ideals you won't compromise/hold your tongue for anybody. Stand for something. Fuck going a long to get along especially when the scenario is very real possibility that affects you.

I for one like a good argument you learn a lot about people you argue with. So rubbing people the wrong way about my politics doesn't bother me especially in my own home. But at the same time you can't talk politics and religion with everybody.
 
1. I rarely talk to white people about race
2. I don't talk to them about race, I school them
3. Stop wasting your precious resource i.e. energy


Some people are energy vampires.... they will suck the energy out of you.

Preserve your energy i.e. stop trying to throw pearls before swine



:cool:
 
I hear you.

Yet again, many black folks are caught in the same predicament. Scared to speak truth to power because they will no longer have white "friends". Truth be told.

WTF :confused:

You think you have white friends? :smh::lol:

Black never have white people as friends. Why the fuck would you befriend a devil or ever think that the devil is your friend? :smh:
 
Black folks suppress themselves everyday especially at work. All in fear of losing something or being viewed in a certain way.

Shits ridiculous. I've had whites tell me I had a bad attitude and hard to be around and work with because I was "militant" and over addressing myself. Whatever that mean.

Always playing victim. Fuck CACs all the way to hell and back. I long for the day we rebel, I'm shooting them motherfuckers right square in the face. Even the one's that were "cool" with me. :itsawrap:

Sent from my SM-N900T using Tapatalk
 
I understand what this girl is dealing with. As I've gotten older though I've simply stopped caring what peckerwoods think. They can either live with my blackness or get the fuck outta my face. For the record I don't have any white friends.
 
Sounds like she didn't know how to state her opinion and reasoning without getting emotionally riled up about it.

I understand sometime you have to pick and choose your battles everything isn't worth your energy.

But when its something you believe strongly in enough to give time to protest about it it shouldn't be a problem to express yourself informatively and with passion.

I understand our passion and emotion gets dismissed by white fragility but you have to find some ideals you won't compromise/hold your tongue for anybody. Stand for something. Fuck going a long to get along especially when the scenario is very real possibility that affects you.

It's hard to have a discussion about race with white people and not get riled up or emotionally involved, especially given the fact that many of them want to glide over disagreeing points with generalizations and faulty assumptions that support their closed point of view. Coupled with that, they seem to be pretty damn scared of anything outside of their realm of existence, which is, basically, blackness...

In today's times, though, it's important to not give a fuck about their feelings and speak up. They're comfortable with us staying quiet...we have to shake their comfort level and get them to understand things aren't just "black issues," but human issues...
 
wait, people have rooftop meetings with one another for a "get to know"? Shit, I'm really disconnected. I though you just pay your share when it's due and that's it.
 
I understand what this girl is dealing with. As I've gotten older though I've simply stopped caring what peckerwoods think. They can either live with my blackness or get the fuck outta my face. For the record I don't have any white friends.

you sound like me at work.



I use to try to fit in but now I'm like why the fuck am i walking on egg shells around these people. I just do my work talk to whoever I'm cool with briefly and go home.
 
J.E.T.S;15728147[COLOR="Red" said:
]Black folks suppress themselves everyday especially at work. All in fear of losing something or being viewed in a certain way.[/COLOR]

Shits ridiculous. I've had whites tell me I had a bad attitude and hard to be around and work with because I was "militant" and over addressing myself. Whatever that mean.

Always playing victim. Fuck CACs all the way to hell and back. I long for the day we rebel, I'm shooting them motherfuckers right square in the face. Even the one's that were "cool" with me. :itsawrap:

Sent from my SM-N900T using Tapatalk

so true and you can't win for losing.

Like i don't talk to anybody so its like they always asking me whats wrong. I told my boss as long as my work on point i don't care to socialize with people.

Its work not a damn Day party.
 
It's hard to have a discussion about race with white people and not get riled up or emotionally involved, especially given the fact that many of them want to glide over disagreeing points with generalizations and faulty assumptions that support their closed point of view. Coupled with that, they seem to be pretty damn scared of anything outside of their realm of existence, which is, basically, blackness...

In today's times, though, it's important to not give a fuck about their feelings and speak up. They're comfortable with us staying quiet...we have to shake their comfort level and get them to understand things aren't just "black issues," but human issues...

Real spill there. I agree. That's exactly what it's all about. Fuck comfort. Shaking people out of their comfort zone that everything is la di da di is what we all should be on.

That's why I say you gotta pick and choose your battles because sometime your up against intellectual cowardice, stubborn denial, other times it's childish naivety and some is just plain ignorance. Now depending on which type you are dealing with a discussion may not be necessary, you just might have to make a statement and close the conversation. Leave it at that. You'll never change some minds because most have their minds made up.

Also I found the better informed you are about the issues that affect you, the issues that you are passionate about the less emotional I have to be in arguments and discussions.
 
1. I rarely talk to white people about race
2. I don't talk to them about race, I school them
3. Stop wasting your precious resource i.e. energy


Some people are energy vampires.... they will suck the energy out of you.

Preserve your energy i.e. stop trying to throw pearls before swine



:cool:

:yes::yes::yes:
 
Black folks suppress themselves everyday especially at work. All in fear of losing something or being viewed in a certain way.

Shits ridiculous. I've had whites tell me I had a bad attitude and hard to be around and work with because I was "militant" and over addressing myself. Whatever that mean.

Always playing victim. Fuck CACs all the way to hell and back. I long for the day we rebel, I'm shooting them motherfuckers right square in the face. Even the one's that were "cool" with me. :itsawrap:

Sent from my SM-N900T using Tapatalk

100% Truth!
 
then stop suppressing yourself...live your truth unashamed and the anger & rage will dissipate. be u, do u, c u, speak u, heal u. don't let white consciousness be your constant reference... be courageous.

"the Negro is a sort of seventh son, born with a veil, and gifted with second-sight in this American world,—a world which yields him no true self-consciousness, but only lets him see himself through the revelation of the other world. It is a peculiar sensation, this double-consciousness, this sense of always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others, of measuring one by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity. One ever feels his two-ness,—an American, a Negro... two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder.

The history of the American Negro is the history of this strife, — this longing to attain self-conscious manhood, to merge his double self into a better and truer self.”
― W.E.B. Du Bois, The Souls of Black Folk
 
She doesn't seem to have grasped the fact that white people see us as inferior and will never see us as equals. Looking for respect and/or understanding from them is a fools game. White male roommate, huh?

1. I rarely talk to white people about race
2. I don't talk to them about race, I school them
3. Stop wasting your precious resource i.e. energy


Some people are energy vampires.... they will suck the energy out of you.

Preserve your energy i.e. stop trying to throw pearls before swine



:cool:

It's hard to have a discussion about race with white people and not get riled up or emotionally involved, especially given the fact that many of them want to glide over disagreeing points with generalizations and faulty assumptions that support their closed point of view. Coupled with that, they seem to be pretty damn scared of anything outside of their realm of existence, which is, basically, blackness...

In today's times, though, it's important to not give a fuck about their feelings and speak up. They're comfortable with us staying quiet...we have to shake their comfort level and get them to understand things aren't just "black issues," but human issues...

tumblr_mntqwpuku71qlgr6qo2_250.gif
 
I hear you.

Yet again, many black folks are caught in the same predicament. Scared to speak truth to power because they will no longer have white "friends". Truth be told.
I learned a long time ago white people will judge you any type of way no matter what so why hide your feelings. If they ask I give them the raw honest truth and don't give two fucks about their feelings.

Sent from my Nexus 7
 
If black folks helped each other out more, I'm willing I bet a lot of this suppression would cease to exist.

The problem is white people own and are a major factor to becoming successful.

Burn that bridge and what's left?
 
I learned a long time ago white people will judge you any type of way no matter what so why hide your feelings. If they ask I give them the raw honest truth and don't give two fucks about their feelings.

Sent from my Nexus 7

I hear you. Even at the work place?

Do you talk politics/racism/white supremacy at work with white folks? Just asking. Maybe you are self employed, then its much easier. But if your boss is white and the majority of work mates are white, it's quite hard. I think...

Personally, out of the work environment, I do not give a fuck. I tell it to them as I see it. :yes:
 
If black folks helped each other out more, I'm willing I bet a lot of this suppression would cease to exist.

The problem is white people own and are a major factor to becoming successful.

Burn that bridge and what's left?

Never heard/read this much honesty on this board. Folks might call you weak but I respect your honest opinion.

Exactly what I was thinking.

Respect!
 
1. I rarely talk to white people about race
2. I don't talk to them about race, I school them
3. Stop wasting your precious resource i.e. energy


Some people are energy vampires.... they will suck the energy out of you.

Preserve your energy i.e. stop trying to throw pearls before swine



:cool:
Yes. Why just bring up an issue based on racism against black people only to shy away when cacs don't get it. They'll never get it. School them when there's an opportunity.

Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk
 
It's a majority white country and learning to navigate it can be difficult. Insisting on talking racial issues with white people will drive a person batshit. In general, I'm not talking about politics or race around them. And that's if I talk to them. Simple 'hi' and 'bye' is enough for me unless I see them as tools.

I stick to sports, fitness, weather, and IT shit and don't have any fucking problems with my sanity.
 
Black folks suppress themselves everyday especially at work. All in fear of losing something or being viewed in a certain way.

Shits ridiculous. I've had whites tell me I had a bad attitude and hard to be around and work with because I was "militant" and over addressing myself. Whatever that mean.

Always playing victim. Fuck CACs all the way to hell and back. I long for the day we rebel, I'm shooting them motherfuckers right square in the face. Even the one's that were "cool" with me. :itsawrap:

Sent from my SM-N900T using Tapatalk

This is the BLACK MANS SCRIPTURE right here.
Until we take this attitude aint shit gonna change.
Fuck 'em
Victim Excuse abuse mother fuckers.
 
I'm sure this is going to piss off a lot of people on this board, but here it goes.

When she brought up Ferguson her white roommate's response was not negative, it was clueless. She could have used this as an opportunity to explain what happened and why it was important. Her roommates could have been racist assholes, but what can they really do? They can't evict her. They still live together in a tiny space so they can't fuck with her too much. At worst they could have said some negative shit and agreed to disagree. Even then she would have at least been able to be herself in her own home.

Or maybe it would have opened their eyes. The "unintentional ignorance of white people" could have been replaced by a genuine understanding. They cared enough to ask about the Eric Garner protest and she completely shut them down. If she had been up front in the first place they might have gone with her.

It's not her job to educate white people, but if you're truly interested in a cultural exchange you have to be willing to share yours as well. You have to risk people not liking certain parts of your culture just as you probably won't like certain parts of theirs.

Now before I get a bunch of "ban this cac"'s and "stay the fuck out of this threads"'s can somebody please explain what's wrong with this?
 
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