Monday, February 28, 2011

Malcom X Extremism


To Malcolm X
            You are right America is preaching one thing doing the complete opposite.  America looks down on black people but says that we are equals. America has passed laws that have had no effect on the condition of black people in America. But with all of that being said we still live in America all of its wrongs we need to help make them right. I would like to say that I also agree with you that America does practice its own form of extremism. The government is spreading propaganda through the news to make them appear different than they really are. Black people are definitely being targeted for simply trying to attain the rights they deserve. The crimes against blacks that are committed by whites do go unpunished. These are all horrible injustices that no man should have to face. These are truths that should be truly false.
            Drastic times do not always cause for drastic measures. However that goes against the adage that two wrongs don’t make a right. All because America decides to violate the rights of others doesn’t mean we should do the same. There are people in power who want to fight against the cause of civil rights to make those laws null and void. There are southern politicians that want to keep blacks exactly where they are and never let them rise up or meet their full potential. But it is not right to go and start our own fights just because they have offended us. Extremism is understandable that we do need to show that we are tired of not having our needs meet. However if we use the same tactics that they use we are no better than they are. Your anger is just and you are tired of waiting on a change that seems like it will never come but don’t think out of anger think out of clarity and channel that into a calmer sense of protesting.  

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Four Women

I really liked the song Four Women. I'd heard of Nina Simone before this class but I never listened to one of her songs. I really liked the subject matter. I had to listen to it a few times to truly understand the lyrics but I like it. I like the beauty and the message she got across. I really liked the performance where their were four different women singing out the different parts. I felt and connected with them.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Cultural Self Portrait

I Can Do Whatever I put My Mind To.
            If I had to pick a title for my culture or a theme it would be you can do whatever you put your mind to. My mother used to say that to me when I would say that I couldn’t do something. It was her way motivating and encouraging me to do the things that I thought were impossible. That saying is something that still resonates with me today. Although some of the challenges that I have faced are a lot harder to overcome than algebra homework those words still motivate me to try as hard as I can.
            I give all the credit to my Mother and my Grandmother when it comes to my upbringing as they would have called it. There were other relatives that had an influence but nothing like those two women. They taught me by example how to have faith in God, and what it meant to be a Christian. I went to a church that my Grandmother’s father started himself. It was and is a family oriented church all the members are family and we held meeting every first and third Sunday. There was a Sunday morning routine we woke up ate breakfast if my Mom had time to cook, got dressed and headed straight to my Grandmother’s house were my Mom would get yelled at for being late as she helped my Grandmother finish getting ready. If there was a program or a special event that was happening after the first service my Mom would also have to load the car with the food my Grandmother made for the occasion. Me, my little sister Chelsey, and my Grandmother all road together in my Mother’s car to attend service I don’t believe we missed a service my whole childhood. Those Sunday meetings were a big part of my life for years. The car ride to and from church were fun although most of the time I was asleep during one of the rides, but it was fun to have conversations about different family members those who I never knew along with the new happenings in the lives of the ones I did. Sunday services were definitely a huge part of my culture growing up it wasn’t only the service that was important it was the interaction with the people in my family.
Faith in God isn’t the only lesson that I learned from my Mother and Grandmother they also taught me right from wrong as well as how to treat other people especially my elders. There were two things that I knew were against the rules disrespecting anyone older than me “yes mam” and “no mam” were the only correct responses to most statements as well as any question. The other thing that could get you in more trouble than that would be lying and stealing. Those are rules that seem to escape parental lessons along with manners. “please” ,“thank you” , “excuse me” Simple phases that I am shocked to hear come out of a small child’s mouth these days, I would have been disciplined after forgetting a few to many times.   
            My Mother and my Grandmother were the masons that laid the foundation that my faith, beliefs, values, goals and traditions stand on. An important concept they taught me was that I should have respect for myself and that I should never allow anything to compromise that. They are responsible for teaching me to be strong and know that I always have someone greater than myself looking out for me no matter what. Along with that they taught me how to persevere and not to ever let anyone or anything stand in my way. They instilled the importance of being independent and never to depend on any man other than the one above. Both my Mom and my Grandmother were single mothers however they always had food on the table and a roof over their heads. That is one of the things that I admire about both of them although I want a dad for my children if he leaves or something happens I don’t want my children to know the difference as far as their standard of living is concerned.
            In addition to providing me with a strong foundation and in some ways teaching me to figure out how to deal with all of hardships and obstacles that have come along with those that I know are yet to come it also reminds me that I am stronger than I think I am.  I need that encouragement mainly because life is good but it is somewhat cyclical in that good vs. bad and easy times vs. hard times always seem alternate in an amazing balance. I believe that happens because life without problems isn’t life it’s a fantasy that would be extremely boring to live through. That might sound odd however I believe that the glass is always half full those problems are there to teach lessons that help you to grow, and that everything happens for a reason no matter how hurtful it may be. 
            My optimism and outlook on everything happing for a reason has been tested and to some degree it still is. The life I described where I was a happy child with all of my loved ones healthy and doing well of course couldn’t last forever. If it had I am sure I wouldn’t be writing this paper right now because I wouldn’t I be attending George Mason I also don’t think I would have ever move to Virginia at all.   
With most natural disasters there is a warning system, or something that might alert you that something is wrong. The only naturally occurring disaster that I can think of that really doesn’t give you any warning at all before it hits is an earthquake. They just start all of a sudden your whole house is shaking and you have no idea when it will stop or how bad it’s going to be. A serious of earthquakes that differed in severity would be the way I would describe what ended the life I had known. The first major earthquake hit when my Grandmother fell ill and passed away February 15, 2005. That was devastating to my mother especially, although my Mother is the youngest of five she was the child that assumed the role of making sure my Grandmother got to doctor’s appointments, church, the grocery store every Friday and taking here wherever she needed to go. They were very close which might be why her siblings were little to no help when their mother fell ill. Their lake of assistance caused a mini-quake. I lost a lot of respect for my aunts and uncles. I wouldn’t talk to them for months after Grandma passed, the only reason I reconciled my anger is because my Mother did. She taught me how to forgive although there is one uncle who I honestly have no respect for at all the only rationale I have for the small amount of anything is that my Grandma and Mother cared for him so anything that I will ever do for him would be because of the two people he hurt the most. That’s a whole different paper to talk about him.
The passing of my Grandma left me heartbroken she was the first person in my immediate family to pass way I didn’t realize how much that would hurt. I was fifteen and was in my freshman year of high school to say it was a ruff transition would be an understatement. While in middle school I had a large group of friends, by the end of eighth grade I knew everybody in my grade as well as a few people from the lower grade levels as well. High school was completely different I chose to go to the school where higher achievers go which apparently eliminated the whole eighth grade class. So I was alone with a different variety of students who came from the other middle school none of whom I knew so I was alone. In addition to that my parents were getting divorced which shouldn’t have mattered because Lonnie never lived with us it was upsetting due to the fact that he really didn’t seem to want any form of interaction with Chelsey or me. I would later realize that was for the best and should have stayed that way. All of these traumatic events happening at the same time triggered the defective gene Lonnie gave me to emerge. By the end of my freshman year I was diagnosed with a mental illness that will require medication to manage the symptoms it is a chronic problem so I will deal with it the rest of my life. Freshman year was awful, but my senior year was worse much worse.
July 2007 was the onset of the earthquake that shattered everything I knew it finished were the first left off. A simple stomach ache that lasted a little too long is what my Mother went to the doctor for. They said something was wrong and admitted her to the hospital for test, they then sent her to a specialist for examination of those result then to run a few more test. Her final diagnoses the terminal in most to all cases pancreatic cancer it gets the label terminal because there are no test to detect it early before it becomes stage four. It is also inoperable in most cases and due to the late diagnoses chemo therapy really has little to no effect. However I thought my Mommy would be different I hoped, prayed wished on a freaking star anything I could think of I just knew she would get better.
Her last week I just prayed for her to go in peace and to not suffer, she wasn’t really consciences by that time, but they had her on morphine to make her comfortable. Six months is what the specialist gave her. She was diagnosed in August although the original hospital visit was in July she passed away December 14, 2007. I graduated high school without my Mother, I started college without her, I will get married without her. Having to accept that she is gone is a excruciating pain that will never leave. My only comfort is that I know she would be proud of me I am doing exactly what she wanted me to do with my life. I also think she would be proud of the way I took care of Chelsey we are five years apart, I feel bad that she didn’t have Mom there for her as long as I did. I also know that my Mom wouldn’t want me to feel bad about the things I can’t change so I do my best not to although it is hard. I have no mother which means I am an orphan because Lonnie is a sorry excuse for a person let alone a parent.
Lonnie is my biological father. This is where most people would say that the sentence that statement about him being a sorry excuse for a person is harsh and that he’s my father as if that excuses his behavior. If doesn’t and if you think it does by all means you can claim him as your father is what I am tempted to tell people, but that the rule about respecting elders keeps my mouth shut. Its only older people who tell me that I know that I need to deal with the feelings I have in regards to him I mean he could have committed a crime that would make the other inmates beat him senseless of that’s what I’ve heard they do the sex offenders. Also there is this belief that him allowing us to move to Tennessee was some saintly act the belief is that he could have just abandoned us. That argument is flawed because he had alter motives and our aunt along with her husband wanted us to stay there with them. The problem with staying was that Columbus was our home and everywhere we turned there were memories of our Mother and Grandma so Tennessee seemed like it would be a new start. The question in hindsight is a new start to what?
  Lonnie started setting off alarms that I refused to listen to. The day after the funeral service for my Mother we meet his girlfriend plus her three kids. The meeting might have been fine if we’d know the woman existed prior to walking into Outback. Oh and maybe not the day after our Mothers funeral, but that’s how we meet her. Shortly after meeting her Lonnie began to insert benefits of them all living in a house together as in my sister, the girlfriend plus the three children all of whom my sister. I wanted to live independently in my own townhouse, I was exhausted from taking care of my sister. In addition to getting myself ready for school I had to make sure Chelsey was ready and that my Uncle picked her up to take her to school. Then I was responsible for picking Chelsey up in the afternoon, feeding her and myself, doing laundry for the both of us, making sure all homework was done and driving to our daily visit to see Mom. That was a lot in addition to an ongoing Project which had to be completed in intervals throughout my senior year it determined whether or not I walked at graduation as well as if I got the college prep diploma I worked four years to get. I just wanted a break to be a normal eighteen year old, but that’s not what I got in Tennessee.
If my life wasn’t already a mess Lonnie added his version of the Real World, the premise of the show was that seven strangers were picked to live in a house and they filmed the drama that came from roommate’s new living situation. MTV hired people to screen the participants to make sure the show was going to be entertaining. Lonnie could have worked for them because he created his own blended family version. I did live independently for like a month maybe two before the reality drama started just as it would on the television show.
The main problem is that my Lonnie’s woman was a complete one eighty from anything that was acceptable in as he put it “our world”. She was thirty with three kids however she acted and dressed younger than me, she wore her ten year old daughter’s clothes. She also still went out scantly clade to clubs with three kids and she was supposed to be dating Lonnie. I don’t know but that just seems wrong especially since she has a daughter she who immolated her every move. That’s just my opinion that I still refuse to change she too old for that. In addition to that clash of moral values there was the fact that I stressed to Lonnie every time he talked about the living situation. Chelsey strongly dislikes children she is the youngest child however that was in our family in this one she was the eldest. It was an epic saga of he said she said they did she did, I was accused of corrupting my sister and sabotaging what could have been a peaceful arrangement. Our half-sister, Nicole was also blamed and charged with the same offense.
Everyone was eventually blamed in some way then they were redeemed or condemned depending on what he wanted to come out of the conversation. He manipulated me until I got tired and began to put the course of events along with the conversations that surrounded them in to perspective. I realized rather quickly that Lonnie was living above his means and that the insurance money plus the social security money allowed him to do so with the added bonus of keeping the woman along with her kid’s happy. My sister was a check and I was a complication because I expected her to matter that her feelings be taken into account. Soon after my epiphany I planned my escape first because I had to be sane to execute the safe yet telling rescue of my sister.
To facilitate my plan I got a job which would free me of any forced fake family events, that way my sanity could be protected. I also played somewhat nice to the fake family I entertained Lonnie’s claims of my sisters evil deeds which were mere survival techniques. I applied to colleges in VA which is where I wanted to live after visiting on a Smithsonian trip that summer. I also decided to have cosmetic surgery there because I would have time to heal before I started school. It was a great that it was covered by insurance the results have made a major impact on my confidence level as well as eliminated all my back pain. When the time came to load up that budget truck I was so happy that was a proud moment I realized how smart and strong I really was because I carried out my own escape from that world of crazy.
Once I was far enough away I had to rescue my sister which was easy all we did was visit our aunt and uncle show them pictures as well as clear up some lies Lonnie had told. The truth always makes more sense than the lies he tells. My sister was rescued this summer. She is in her sophomore year at Columbus High School.
 Our contact with Lonnie is limited mostly in this economy you can’t afford to live that far above your means. He is currently working in Saudi Arabia I think without my sister’s check every month plus that all that debt he has he needed a paying job. Once I am done needed his taxes for the FAFSA form I am done with Lonnie it will be easier to forgive with some distance as well as limited to no contact. For the sake of length I left out a lot of the details but that the gest of it.
      Everything happens for a reason. Tennessee had its purpose I learned a lot about myself there. I now realize that it was the place where I fell down, got kicked, picked myself up, figured out how to keep myself up without help from anyone else but God, prepared myself to leave to make me happy, meet people who challenged my views on certain issues, and it now provides me with prospective any time I want to complain. Tennessee is a place I never want to see again but I do have respect for the events that took place there.    
  


Tuesday, February 15, 2011

The Conundrum of Hip-Hop

 I just got done with the reading for this week and I am glad I can blog an immediate response so that I don't have time to sugar coat or over think my feelings.
  Alright I can't stand the majority of hip-hop,rap,gangster rap, rap you do in yo momma's basement I don't care what you call it or how you define it I am sick of it all. The issue I have with rap is that there is way to much debate and valid points being made to justify its existence or to condemn it to Hell. Personally both arguments are pointless in the end. There is no way to get ride of it, and good luck on cleaning it up because both of the readings are right that that's the image that blacks and whites alike buy monetarily as well as mentally. 
  However I am going to play devils advocate on my own opinion. The only redeeming quality that I see with rap is the fact that it has to be written, and to write it you have to have some knowledge of vocabulary and be literate. Therefore its only saving grace for me is that maybe those requirements are enough to motivate the demographic (Aka intercity youth, or children who grow up in the ghetto for a lack of a better word. )that it effects the most to learn how to do these basic task. It might have better favor at least in my eyes if the dream of becoming the next Jay-z didn't detract from the dreams of being an actual Dr.Jay the kind with a PHD. 
   I plan on working in low income areas and those touched by gang violence because I really hate to see the state of younger black children they deserve more that what they are given. I really wish someone would tell them they are smart enough to get that PHD and that there is more to you than whatever physical talent or skill you may have. That your mind is actually important and that it may take awhile to earn a degree but  its worth the work and the wait. So they know there is  more out there for black boys than a record deal or a sports scholarship there is possibility of being the next Obama. They hear that I am sure because there is some school counselor there telling them that but there has got to be a better way of helping them to succeed other than a pep talk.
    Oh and to be fair I am ill with the critics and defenders of rap. Everything that I have ever read including the readings for this week make the same arguments for and against rap. There is agreement on the fact that it is violent, sexist, and vulgar there is also consensus on the fact that it does give the demographic something to relate too along with the fact that not all hip-hop artist are bad. So I think its time to move on for those who say it has a negative effect work on that negative effect go start an after school program because its not going to change your wasting your breath. As for the advocates who also see more good but can admit the bad go help the critics change the things that you all agree on. I know I have just wasted my brain writing that last sentence because as Americans we will complain all day and never do a freaking thing but keep wallowing in our sorrows.
  I personally hate the majority of hip hop because of the imagines it portrays along with the life style it glorifies. I also hate the tone that most of the artist while they rap and the content is also horrible. But all I can do is get my degree and certifications so that I can have the book knowledge to hopefully change the street knowledge of the youth in front of me. 

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Salsa,Soul and Spirit

 Oreo:black on the outside white on the inside. I first heard that little descriptive when I was in middle school. I was an Oreo because I liked Pop, Country, Alternative, and just about anything else but rap or gangster rap I think there's a distinction. I also didn't follow the "black" fashion trends. At the time I preferred Aeropostal, American Eagle or anything that wasn't FUBU, Apple Bottom, or South Pole. It wasn't just what I liked and didn't like that was an issue it was also the fact that I spoke differently than my classmates. My mother was a language arts teacher and had a masters degree so Ebonics is something that wasn't allowed unless it was being made fun of. So I was singled out by the other "Black" kids and left to play with the non-"black" kids. Truth be told it bothered me a little bit that the children my race would not play/hang out with me. But once I took a second to think about it I realized that I felt sorry for them that they would conform to what society and there other peers expected them to act like. I on the other hand liked what I liked and it would be too hard to figure out who they wanted me to be. I actually tried that once in elementary school and hated it.    
      But reading the first principle made me think back on my reaction to my classmates mindset and where it came from. I thought about the things that my classmates believed, bought or liked and how I thought of them as conforming. I also thought about a conversation I had with my cuisine about history influencing cultural norms. He went to a H.B.C.U and desperately wanted me to attend a similar college. He cited that I would learn so much about my history as an African American that I would meet a lot of distinguished and well know African Americans. He also told me that the experiences, environment, and the guidance I would receive no other colleges would be able to compare. I obviously didn't go with that option eithor time that I searched for a University to attend. I had the same view point both times. I agree that the experiance has to be unique but to me somewhat issolated and unrealistic after awhile. I know if you went to a H.B.C.U I am going to fail this class because of that statement alone.
   However I can't just have African Americans alone when there are so many other kinds of people in the world. I need to at least see a diverse blend of people which is why I choose Mason. I like to think its a compromise. Truthfully I know that black people were suppressed and still are to an extent "Katrina". I also realize there is probably a lot of black history that I don't know and have no clue even exist and sadly I am okay with that right now. I am not one of those people who are ashamed of being black I love it actually but I refuse to ever let that define me. If I am going to delve into history I not only want to know the history of  my own race but that of every race. And I don't like history like that so for now I will stick with present information. The reason I have decided to stay ignorant of the information that I have not been taught or looked up in reference to something else is because why I am I going to single myself out when I want everyone to be on the same page. Knowing where I come from is important and I like the Sankofa's ideals but I know I can't walk forward and look back at the same time. I would get hurt myself within the first few steps. It is very important to remember who you are; what you stand for, and  where you came from, however you have to bring those things with you and know how to use them to change your tomorrow.