I Was a [Black] Girl in a Crowd of White Girls in the Park

For the past decade, my default genre of music has been what my friend’s ex-boyfriend has labeled Sad Man with a Guitar Music.  At about 14, my first concert was The Fray (MuteMath as the opener), and possibly my biggest regret from high school was going to prom instead of a Dave Matthews show.

After those teenage years, my concert attendance continued down the same track as my preferences grew into themselves. Sometimes it was sad man with a banjo music. Sometimes sad man with a piano.

In Seoul back in 2014, I saw James Blake (sad man with a piano and synthesizer) as a part of Uniqlo’s concert series on the Han River. Also playing that series was Daughter (sad woman with a guitar), but as I’d be attending that concert alone, in a foreign country, on Valentine’s Day, I decided against it, predicting the show would produce too many feels.

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This summer in New York, when she found out she could no longer attend, a girl from my church gave me two floor tickets to see Daughter and The National at Forest Hills Stadium. Sweet, I think. Two of my favorite sad people with guitar bands! This will certainly make up for the show I skipped in Seoul. And under the stars? Yes! Give me life!

The concert was bizarrely early (6:30pm?), so I rushed straight to Queens from work. Walking into the stadium I acknowledged what I foreknew would be the truth: no other black people to be seen. Even in New York City — one of the most diverse metropoles on the planet, with most every show of this genre, I typically find myself to be the only person of color– and certainly the only black woman– at least within eyesight. [1]

Daughter stepped onstage to a sparse crowd, many attendees — like the friend who was meeting me there– still at work. In a sick twist of fate, my friend never showed, and I listened to the full sad woman with a guitar set on my own, just like I would have in Seoul, because life is sooo funny like that. The feels ensued.

Daughter

In the 45 minute transition between Daughter and The National, I frequently scanned the crowd, thinking I’d find my friend and we’d be united, but to no avail. In these scans, I definitively concluded, from what I could make out, in the venue that seated about 14,000, there was one other black person present and one Asian guy. (I’m sure we weren’t actually the only minorities there, but from what I could see…

Then, The National. The stadium, now packed, roared with the hollers of early-thirties, early forties, New York, glasses-wearing liberals. These were true fans. As the music pulsed, they sang every lyric. Onstage, guitars swung under the rad lighting design, and after the first couple songs, I remember thinking, I have to attend the next tour; this is wild.

The National

Frontman Matt Berninger was a real performer. Every now and then, he’d pause to make political remarks about how we needed to win back the country from the incompetent current administration. After one such comment, he said something about the president being “the d***” who stole Joey Ramone’s girlfriend and launched into a Ramones cover. A Ramones cover of “The KKK Took My Baby Away.”

The Ramones aren’t exactly sad man with a guitar music; they have a bit too much, shall we say, angst? So, I was unfamiliar with the lyrics of the song. I kind of just bobbed there in disbelief because, they couldn’t possibly be singing about the KKK in this tone, right? Cause it’s not a joke. Because there are countless other ways to sing “stick it to The Man” without dancing around to the name of an active domestic terrorist organization. Maybe?

“What a cover,” the woman behind me shouted. It was quite a performance, but as much as I didn’t want to believe it happened, I couldn’t lie to myself. I, a black person, just stood in a crowd of thousands of white people jumping around singing about the KKK. Did no one else find this strange? I was standing right there. You couldn’t miss me in my metallic solar system sweater– and my Blackness, but my existence was of no effect to anyone. You say, “But the song was dedicated to 45!” No matter.

It is difficult to let others see the full psychological meaning of caste segregation. It is as though one, looking out from a dark cave in a side of an impending mountain, sees the world passing and speaks to it; speaks courteously and persuasively, showing them how these entombed souls are hindered in their natural movement, expression, and development; and how their loosening from prison would be a matter not simply of courtesy, sympathy, and help to them, but aid to all the world. One talks on evenly and logically in this way, but notices that the passing throng does not even turn its head, or if it does, glances curiously and walks on. It gradually penetrates the minds of the prisoners that the people passing do not hear; that some thick sheet of invisible but horribly tangible plate glass is between them and the world.

Dusk of Dawn, W.E.B. Du Bois [2]

The concert cover immediately whisked me back to high school. I grew up extremely privileged (in a family that listened almost exclusively to Gospel, Alicia Keys, Sade, Seal, and U2). As the daughter of a “celebrity,” I was blind to many of the social constructs that influenced my identity because my father’s job dealt our family a cheat card of sorts, to an extent erasing racial bounds and maneuvering our black family to the top of society’s figurative, yet very real, mournful social hierarchy.

I wasn’t divorced from my Blackness. In fact, my parents purposefully put me in scenarios trying to prevent that from happening. My father would regularly call us to family meetings to discuss the history we weren’t learning at school, and my mother would enroll my sister and I in organizations with black women as leaders just so we could be around them.  The term “oreo” was never a compliment to me, and I remember seething once after a family member told me I acted “like a white girl.” Not that there’s anything wrong with being white; it just wasn’t who I was.

I’m sure in 20 years, science will be able to map the exact environmental factors from my history that made me partial to Sad Man with a Guitar Music. I’m pretty sure that I can tell you now what it wasn’t. It wasn’t a desire to pass or please anyone other than myself with my preferences. Another strange thing about being the child of a celebrity: I never had to work for anyone’s acceptance. People automatically accepted me because of my father, so I was free to be whoever I wanted. I could be a black girl and listen to Sad Man with a Guitar Music because I felt like it. Unfortunately, such freedom is a privileged. 

Still, most of my time was spent at school, and I went to private school. Since class and race in America are largely interrelated because #history, that meant 98% of my classes were white, so I became very comfortable operating in predominantly white environments, a phenomena Trey Ellis once termed being a “cultural mulatto” in his essay on the New Black Aesthetic.

While portions of Ellis’s argument resonate with me, like his descriptions of having perceived strange interests, much of the essay sits ill, for I certainly am not a fan of the term “mulatto” [3] — a phrase Ellis too has since rescinded in part along with his youthful “bravado.” And so, I will rebrand Ellis’s term for being raised in a racial context apart from your own that of being a Racial Third Culture Kid.  In a country literally built on the structure of race, this can be a lonely space in which to exist.

Growing up, I never thought about race unless I was experiencing racism, and that really wasn’t until my family moved to North Carolina. [4] There I came into contact with what we now call microaggressions and racially coded language. Being young and naive, I did not know what to do when my peers would begin calling Obama the Antichrist or when I’d hang out at their homes and see confederate flags in pictures on the walls.

I didn’t think my friends or their families were racists. In fact, I was pretty sure they loved me as much as I loved them, which was a lot. But you don’t have to be “a racist” to harbor race prejudice (most people do) or privilege… like being able to have fun at a concert while singing about the KKK. If you can do this, you likely do not belong to the group of people who have nightmares about being terrorized by the KKK. That is not your lived terror. 

The National

In high school, whenever a questionable racial issue occurred, outnumbered, I never thought to say anything. If anything, some strange self-preservation kicked in and a flood of embarrassment would rush over me, urging me to stay quiet in order to persevere.

In the park, at The National concert, I didn’t feel embarrassed. Nor was I afraid. My inner monologue was screaming, What the f*******ck? With one simple incident, I felt like I was forced to chug a can of The American Experience Lite: “Hey, Other. You can have the blue and gold passport, but don’t get comfortable. You’re not really supposed to be here. This Dream is not for you.”

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On the train ride home, amongst all the other concertgoers headed back to Manhattan, I sat memorizing sides for an audition the next day: “sometimes I feel like I’m stifling — you don’t know — stifling… Sometimes on the train I feel like I’m going to die…” Life is soooo funny… I wanted to escape that train car and be far away from everyone at the show. How could all these people who are supposed to care about racism be so unaware. Or maybe they didn’t care.

When you yourself are not in Du Bois’s cave. When you’re not friends with anyone in the cave. When you don’t sincerely love anyone in the cave, it is difficult to see — or believe — the cave matters, that caves exist. [5]

It’s not like I’m wholly innocent here. Of course I too have offended friends from varying cultural backgrounds or orientations with my ignorance. How I still have friends at all is a mystery. But occasionally, when I did offend, a friend chose to call me out. And because I loved them, I took what they said to heart. Love is eternally powerful like that.

It is worth noting that calling someone out is risky. Especially doing so in an environment where something is at stake or you fear for your safety, such as when you’re “the only one.” Silence often feels like the safest option. Indeed safer than shouts falling on deaf or hostile ears.

The world is literally burning, and I’m sitting at a desk, working a job that permits me to finance acting training and the luxury of writing screenplays. I often think, why am I doing this? Art is such fluff. I should be in school, getting a law degree or studying education policy or something. Policy makes change. Policy is how you write/right liberty and justice for all.

In early September, I attended a show featuring Tank and the Bangas (real women with LUNGS music) at Le Poisson Rouge. As I did my regular crowd scan, there were EDM boys, NPR dads, Afropunk girls, anyone and everyone dancing into their lives, there under the influence of the same sounds. How powerful music can be, art can be. Uniting, somehow impacting souls.  

Tank and the Bangas

We could debate for days over the definition and purpose of art, but I think when art is done with intention, it helps us to truly see both ourselves and others, and when that happens, everyone gets to leave the cave and walk in the light. [6]

 

[1] I know other people of color exist with my shared taste in music. I’m just like, where they at?
[2] Full paragraph: It is difficult to let others see the full psychological meaning of caste segregation. It is as though one, looking out from a dark cave in a side of an impending mountain, sees the world passing and speaks to it; speaks courteously and persuasively, showing them how these entombed souls are hindered in their natural movement, expression, and development; and how their loosening from prison would be a matter not simply of courtesy, sympathy, and help to them, but aid to all the world. One talks on evenly and logically in this way, but notices that the passing throng does not even turn its head, or if it does, glances curiously and walks on. It gradually penetrates the minds of the prisoners that the people passing do not heat; that some thick sheet of invisible but horribly tangible plate glass is between them and the world. They get exciter; they talk louder; they gesticulate. Some of the passing world stop in curiosity; these gesticulations seem so pointless; they laugh and pass on. They still either do not hear at all, or hear but dimly, and even what they hear, they do not understand. Then the people within may become hysterical. They may scream and hurl themselves against the barriers, hardly realizing in their bewilderment that they are screaming in a vacuum unheard and that their antics may actually seem funny to those outside looking in. They may even here and there, break through in blood and disfigurement, and find themselves faced by a horrified, implacable, and quite overwhelming mob of people frightened for their own very existence.
[3] Using “What are you mixed with?” as a pick up line is a surefire way to ensure you will not get my phone number.
[4] I feel like a lot of race relations in the Carolinas can be summed up by this song.
[5] An example outside of race. Until one is intimately connected to someone inside a cave, they may be oblivious to the fact that anyone else is in there, or as Jay Z said, “Took for my child to be born, to see through a woman’s eyes…”
[6] I wanted to end on a positive note, buuuut, I don’t know… I really just think we all need Jesus, and not in a cop out way. In a way that says we need to be transformed by a mindset that radical (start at 10:24, or the main story at 13:10).

Thoughts: MLK, Jr. Day 2014

This past summer, I remember sitting on the floor of my parents basement watching the Zimmerman trial. When the verdict was announced, I was numb. I just sat on my bed and thought for a while. It wasn’t a “race case,” but clearly racial implications were woven throughout the dialogue of the trial from the jump. That night it was like the Justice System was looking me in the face, looking my brother, my cousins, my father in the face and saying, “You don’t matter. We will not protect you. We don’t care.” That’s what it felt like, and that night I cried myself to sleep. It was the first time in a while I’d done that.  A few hours later, I awoke from a nightmare about someone trying to kill my brother, and the police doing nothing to stop them. It was a rough night for dreamers.

A couple nights ago, I was at this foreigners’ bar where they were having a trivia competition. A question was asked concerning the year Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his “I Dreamed a Dream Speech,” to which one of the bar patrons corrected the guy at the mic, saying, “It’s ‘I Have a Dream.’” With a “same difference” type attitude, the guy at the mic dismissed the patron. I thought, As life-changing as Les Mis was for me, they’re not the same. Give respect where respect is due.

Monday is MLK, Jr. Day. Being a US holiday, it’s not observed in South Korea.

Korea is by far the least diverse place I’ve ever lived, but I haven’t experienced any problems with racism. In fact, there’s only been one instance when someone’s even been borderline rude to me at all. For the most part, everyone’s gone out of their way to be hospitable, even speaking to me in English when, for goodness sake, it’s their country; they don’t need to speak my language. Granted, I don’t speak Korean, so people could be talking about me behind my back, but let’s give everyone the benefit of the doubt.

It’s funny though because at least once a month, my students ask about my skin and comment about how I’m from Africa (…My ancestors, but I’m a US citizen.). “Teacher, are you black or white or yellow?” (I had to laugh at that one. No one in the US would ever ask if I was white…) I answer their questions politely, like any other question. The kids probably haven’t seen too many black people and, I mean, they’re kids. They’re curious. They ask those kinds of questions.

Sometimes though, I am a bit taken aback. “Teacher, why is your skin black? Is it because you’re so dirty?” Pause.

Another time, we had an African substitute teacher for a day. After he left a classroom, one of my students ran up to me, eyes wide exclaiming, “Teacher, his skin is so dark! I thought he was a slave!” Pause. You’re ten. Where would you even get that?

Remarks like those are not innate; they’re learned, and unfortunately go to show how deeply bogus racial constructs have penetrated our global society.

My last semester of college, I took two of the most influential classes of my life, “The History of Racialization in America” and “Introduction to African American Studies.” I wish I’d known about courses like those when I was a freshman. In the classes, I learned how in 1776, a guy named J.F. Blumenbach thought it would be a good idea to hierarchize the peoples of the world based on their aesthetic beauty, the fair skinned people of the Caucuses Mountains being at the top of the pyramid and the Ethiopian people of sub-Saharan Africa at the bottom. And from that was born decades of slavery, human rights violations, and self-hate. From a stupid human construct.

But being man-made, it should bring hope to know that the ills of racism can be deconstructed. How? I’d be lying if I said I knew. This thing is a mess. An absolute mess. I actually had a long conversation about this with a friend of mine over the summer, and the only answer I could provide after lots of thought and introspection was Love, which is essentially the message of Christ, the Gospel.

In Suwon, the most diverse place I’ve been is my church, which is kind of cool. For the longest time, it was also the only place I’d ever seen interracial children, which is also cool. The congregation is made up of Koreans, Indians, Americans, Canadians, Nigerians, Kenyans, Egyptians, South Africans, and the list goes on. If anyone should be demonstrating how to break down the walls of racial separation, it should be the church.

***

I often wonder, had I been living in the 60s, would I have participated in the Civil Rights Movement? It’s a scary thought. I pray that I would have been/will be brave enough to stand up against injustice, be able to discern causes worth fighting for, and forever be disagreeable enough to shun the apathy and comfort that prevent me from doing so.

Happy MLK, Jr. Day.

The Sound of Life

Senior year of college, pretty much every meal I did not eat in the company of my friends was shared with SportsCenter and House Hunters. In Korea, I don’t even have an operating  TV,  and you can’t watch much from the US online.

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The worst though was when Spotify stopped working. Goodbye music.

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However, what I missed the most, after my family and friends — and American grocery stores and ovens and shower curtains — was the noise.

I loved Sundays in New York. They were pretty routine for me and full of sound. Around 5:15pm, I’d take the subway from the UWS down to church in Chelsea. The train would arrive, screeching to a stop on the tracks. I’d get on and ride, usually entertained at some point by a mariachi band or a group of “Iiiiit’s showtime!” kids. 

At 23rd Street, I’d climb back above ground, welcomed by cars honking and laughter spilling out of bars onto the sidewalks. Once, I arrived at St. Paul’s, I’d immediately be lost in melodies being lifted to the heavens as the bass drum rattled the ancient floorboards and the setting sun illuminated the pastel stained glass windows on cue.

Afterwards, I’d stop by Donut Plant with friends or else walk on clouds back to the 23rd Street station where there’d always be this guy singing “How Great is Our God” with his guitar. His presence was always a great “bye, see you next week.” 

And I’d get back on the train feeling alive.

And I’d know that the city was alive because of the noise. Constant, like a heartbeat, letting you know it was still in this thing. Because of the shouting, the talking, the singing, the laughing, the swearing, the clinking of glasses, the barking of dogs, the trumpeting of horns, the noise. 

Here, where I am in Korea, it can be so quiet. 

Some nights when I’m walking home, I feel really vulnerable. Not unsafe, just exposed, like the whole world knows where I am because the heels of my boots send out sonar signals, piercing the silence with nothing around to muffle the sound. There aren’t even any buzzing cicadas like in Charlotte to accompany my footsteps, only these rabid behind looking raccoon dogs and a few nasty alley cats.

When in the main part of town, occasionally I hear the faint sounds of middle aged men belting “Dancing Queen” from karaoke rooms on the upper floors of high rises, or I’ll see a pack of drunk teenage boys slurring jokes amongst each other. But that’s about it. It’s quiet.

Comparatively, one might say there’s no life here, but as long as it’s not silencing the voice of truth and justice, perhaps the quiet isn’t so bad. It’s just a different way of living, and if we’re measuring noise like vital signs, looking at the extremes, my town in Korea may be comatose, but it’s quite possible New York’s going into cardiac arrest, plagued by some sort of arrhythmia where it’s simply doing too much, trying to prove it’s alive.

In the Bible, a lot of the big characters — Jesus, David, Moses… — spent a substantial portion of time alone in “the wilderness,” where it’s quiet, where there are no distractions, where you can hear yourself think, where you can hear God and remember whose you are.

But as a human, you can’t stay alone in the wilderness forever. Right? You’d go Castaway.

So, what decibel should we be living in? I don’t know, but hopefully while I’m walking here in the quiet, I’ll be able to hear something good, some whispers of life that the noise would otherwise drown out. We’ll see…