Growing up in Iowa in the seventies, I did not have much interaction with people who were not caucasian. When I graduated from high school, my parents moved to New Jersey and I eventually landed at Tulane University in New Orleans. When I think about it now, it seems as if going from a place that was at least three quarters white (Des Moines) to a place that was at least three quarters black (New Orleans) should have been a culture shock. But it wasn't. I had absolutely no preconceived ideas about what I would encounter. At all. New Orleans is dangerous. It can be rough. I did see a tamale vendor get stabbed outside of KB Drugs. I saw a few black chicks grab each other by the weaves and smash each others faces into the counter at Popeye's at five am one time. I saw a lot of poverty. But I had seen poverty before when I lived in southern Iowa as a child. White poverty. But poverty nonetheless. Beyond those few incidents, I never saw anything that was particularly shocking to me. I interacted with black people every day and I found them to be interested in the same things in which I was interested in at that time in my life. Music. Movies. Religion. The extreme weather. Politics. Family.
After college, I moved to Phoenix. There, I encountered a burgeoning Latino population. The culture of the West is noticeably different from that of the South. And different still from the Midwest. But again, no big surprises. When you don't have any particular expectation, you don't really get surprised. I had my purse stolen one time by a Hispanic kid. I saw a Mexican chick pull a blade on another one in a bar one time. But other than that, looking back over twenty years, I cannot think of even one negative encounter I ever had with a Latino person. Ever. Plus I had some white investment bankers try to steal my business and bankrupt me one time, so those aforementioned crimes seem pretty minor to me by comparison. I interacted with Latinos daily and, as I had in New Orleans, I found them to have the same basic interests that I had in my life.
Now, I live in California. I don't spend one second thinking about anyones race or ethnicity at this point. Nor sexual orientation. Los Angeles is so ethnically and sexually diverse, it seems like anything short of spotting two or three full burqas a day on the heels of overhearing a lunch conversation between a girl and her mother shopping for her quinceanera and then having to duck so that you don't photo bomb the picture that a Japanese family is taking on Sunset with a drag queen, would be abnormal. While it seems as if the experiences I have had in my adult life should have changed my mind in some way about these minority groups, they have not. I mean, there is a difference between hypothetically living among different groups of people and actually doing so. And I can honestly say that while there are certainly differences in lifestyle, values and culture, I don't feel that my life is in any way limited by the fact that the majority of people I see daily are different than I. If anything, this expansion of my world has enhanced my life by proving to me time and time again that people want the same things out of life. That we do not all have the same approach does not change the fact that we are all programmed to want peace, love and happiness.
When I see a Latina mother holding her biracial son, my mind registers the way they look physically. For about one second. Then I see how she bounces him on her knee and strokes his head to get him to stop crying. And she then becomes another mother, just like me. When I see two gay men holding hands, I recognize that they are both men. Briefly. Then that image gives way to the realization that they are supporting each other through the day the same way I do when I am in love with someone. When I see a two black girls laughing in the most animated way imaginable about something that I have no way of understanding in the moment, I see them as black. At first. Then I think about how I love to go out with my best girlfriend and make fun of things that no one else would ever think was funny. And that empathy creates the memory I carry of the encounter.
I am not going to lie. I struggle with the burqa.
That one is tough on me. Because I do not understand it. But I look more closely and see that the woman inside with the gorgeous almond shaped eyes is peering out at the world; taking in the beauty of a SoCal afternoon and experiencing the same languid energy that I feel in that moment. That I cannot see her does not need to diminish our shared experience. That is what I have decided.
We alone control our own ability to perceive and process life as it happens. I firmly believe that the reason I have never had any problems with people who are different than I am ethnically and with regards to their sexual orientation, is because I DID NOT EXPECT TO HAVE PROBLEMS BASED ON THOSE DIFFERENCES. I have never approached it in any other way. They have their way of doing things, and I have mine. Frankly, if you ever take a minute to ask someone who is different than you are about his or her life, you will usually get an answer which will illuminate something about your own choices. It's called PARTICIPATING IN THE HUMAN EXPERIENCE.
But of course groups cannot have people thinking in these terms. They cannot have you experiencing your own life in an individual, personal way and then using that experience to better understand your place in this world. Groups need people to be weak. They need you to be compliant. They need you to lack compassion and fail to access your empathy for others. They NEED to constantly point out our differences and exploit them for the sake of their own objectives. They WANT you to see the guy who cut you off in traffic as a Chinese guy instead of just a bad driver. They REQUIRE you to second guess your own instincts, which tell you that when you stop and think about it, there is much more that the human race has in common than it does not have in common. And this kind of power struggle for your individuality that exists in life makes it difficult for us to remain human. We begin to see ourselves in terms of categories. Black. White. Male. Female. Gay. Straight. American. Muslim. And these labels, while accurate in defining certain aspects of our lives, become an anvil around our collective neck; pulling us downward and anchoring us to the idea that the process of life is somehow more important than life itself. We begin to believe that somehow, life is not as important if we aren't identified properly as part of these various groups. And then, de facto, anyone who is NOT in our group is marginalized. Their lives and experiences become less important to us as individuals. And that mindset is what lends itself to the idea of racism. When you stop to remember that a Latino person is a PERSON; when you remove that label, then it becomes much easier to relate to his experience. And that is the LAST thing that the mainstream media and elected officials want you to do. They want you to remember at all times who you are in their terms. They want you to need them to tell you who you are. If you reject their premise, and see yourself as an individual, they lose all their power.
It is difficult to remain mentally vigilant when we are constantly inundated with so many reasons to become part of the group. For me, it always comes down to this one question. How does it make me feel empowered to believe that other people do not have access to the same things to which I have access? It doesn't. I mean, can the best things in life really only be achieved by a limited portion of the population? Why would that belief system ever serve me? It doesn't. What makes me feel connected to humanity, is the realization that we are more alike than we are different. All of the man made constructs which divide us are easy to dismantle. It simply requires each of us to reject the idea that the sum is greater than its parts.
BB
Typically, I do not make New Years resolutions. I am not much for long range planning, particularly when I feel like the concept is being forced on me. But this year, I thought about what I most needed to do, and I settled on extending some compassion in my own direction by learning to be more emotionally present. This is no easy task for me. But one thing that I have had to come to grips with in the past five or so years, is that life is not, in any way, linear. This reality hurts my brain. Because I love order. I love reason. I love for things to make sense. And for a long time, in my life, things did make sense to me.
Then, one day, they didn't.
I remember pushing forty with a newly broken marriage thinking to myself...I don't want to start over at age forty. Start over. That's how I saw my life. Because the artifice of it had been decimated. The house I had built, furnished and lived in was gone. The marriage I had participated in was in tatters. The company we owned was embattled. And I was, in many ways, consumed by the idea that all of this discord was impeding my progress in this life. Not to mention the chaos it was causing my daughters. I simply could not keep up with the daily changes. I couldn't find my footing. I struggled every day to figure out what my "new" identity would be, given that the old one was, for all intents and purposes, gone. I felt like I was falling further and further behind with every passing moment.
Now that some time has gone by, availing me the benefit of hindsight, I can see very clearly that the mistake I was making initially was in believing that the only form of progress in life is perceived forward motion. This is all I had ever known. Get good grades. Go to college. Get married. Have a family. Start a business. Build a house. All these benchmarks of success in American life that I had been hitting in a timely fashion had molded my self image without my even realizing it. And then, out of nowhere, came a curve ball that knocked me right off my game. Or, to be more specific, several curve balls. And I had to stop and rethink my entire approach.
What I know now, is that it was foolish for me to think of my life in such limited terms. People say that age is just a number, and that seems trite. But it is true. Your life does not unfold in any kind of orderly fashion simply because you are a certain age at a specific moment. It COULD unfold that way. Sometimes it does. But its usually more a constantly changing flow of events that are out of ones control. What I learned from my recent difficulties is that it was arrogant for me to even have the thought that I was too advanced to "start over". Because, in reality, we are all starting over, every day. And that is exciting. Because no matter how great yesterday was, (and a lot of my yesterdays were pretty great), if you are reading this right now, it is no longer yesterday. It is today. You bring the knowledge and experience of your past with you at all times, but the challenge is to remain present. To look at what is immediately before you and find the meaning in that moment rather than allowing either nostalgia about the past or fear of what may happen in the future to rob you of the joy of awareness of each day as it comes.
This is not an excuse for laziness, nor a reason to abandon goals. It simply means that the process by which you get yourself to whatever level you seek is the magic of your life. If you get thrown off your linear path, you are forced to become creative and blaze a new trail. No one can take those great yesterdays from you. They are yours always. The trick is to figure out how to weave them into the larger fabric of your life. Because not every day will be great. Not every day will appear, on its face, to be moving you forward. People call these things obstacles and set backs, but in reality, they are opportunities to think about problems in a new way. A chance to expand your mind. A chance to share your burden and give someone else his opportunity to extend you compassion. A chance to be humbled by the universe and awed by the fact that you do not have all (or any) of the answers.
Resolving yourself to THAT reality is probably a pretty good place to start.
BB
Then, one day, they didn't.
I remember pushing forty with a newly broken marriage thinking to myself...I don't want to start over at age forty. Start over. That's how I saw my life. Because the artifice of it had been decimated. The house I had built, furnished and lived in was gone. The marriage I had participated in was in tatters. The company we owned was embattled. And I was, in many ways, consumed by the idea that all of this discord was impeding my progress in this life. Not to mention the chaos it was causing my daughters. I simply could not keep up with the daily changes. I couldn't find my footing. I struggled every day to figure out what my "new" identity would be, given that the old one was, for all intents and purposes, gone. I felt like I was falling further and further behind with every passing moment.
Now that some time has gone by, availing me the benefit of hindsight, I can see very clearly that the mistake I was making initially was in believing that the only form of progress in life is perceived forward motion. This is all I had ever known. Get good grades. Go to college. Get married. Have a family. Start a business. Build a house. All these benchmarks of success in American life that I had been hitting in a timely fashion had molded my self image without my even realizing it. And then, out of nowhere, came a curve ball that knocked me right off my game. Or, to be more specific, several curve balls. And I had to stop and rethink my entire approach.
What I know now, is that it was foolish for me to think of my life in such limited terms. People say that age is just a number, and that seems trite. But it is true. Your life does not unfold in any kind of orderly fashion simply because you are a certain age at a specific moment. It COULD unfold that way. Sometimes it does. But its usually more a constantly changing flow of events that are out of ones control. What I learned from my recent difficulties is that it was arrogant for me to even have the thought that I was too advanced to "start over". Because, in reality, we are all starting over, every day. And that is exciting. Because no matter how great yesterday was, (and a lot of my yesterdays were pretty great), if you are reading this right now, it is no longer yesterday. It is today. You bring the knowledge and experience of your past with you at all times, but the challenge is to remain present. To look at what is immediately before you and find the meaning in that moment rather than allowing either nostalgia about the past or fear of what may happen in the future to rob you of the joy of awareness of each day as it comes.
This is not an excuse for laziness, nor a reason to abandon goals. It simply means that the process by which you get yourself to whatever level you seek is the magic of your life. If you get thrown off your linear path, you are forced to become creative and blaze a new trail. No one can take those great yesterdays from you. They are yours always. The trick is to figure out how to weave them into the larger fabric of your life. Because not every day will be great. Not every day will appear, on its face, to be moving you forward. People call these things obstacles and set backs, but in reality, they are opportunities to think about problems in a new way. A chance to expand your mind. A chance to share your burden and give someone else his opportunity to extend you compassion. A chance to be humbled by the universe and awed by the fact that you do not have all (or any) of the answers.
Resolving yourself to THAT reality is probably a pretty good place to start.
BB