Category: I’m just sayin’.

  • A time to rant.

    Maybe it’s because I’m black. Maybe it’s because–no matter what others say–today’s homophobia smells a little too much like Civil Rights Era racism, but I’ve grown tired of not saying anything.


    Source

    Yesterday on the Huffington Post I found this article regarding evangelicals and homosexuality.

    Apparently the authors are bothered about the fact that some Christians’ actions/words are referred to as “hateful”.

    Did you read that entire post? If so, bless you. I couldn’t make it past the introduction. And believe me. I tried.*

    Via Twitter today, I discovered this article. Andrew Marin, proprietor of The Marin Foundation, wrote a response to the aforementioned piece.

    I started to check out the comments. And made one of my own.

    In fact, I said

    It has occurred to me that a lot of people’s resistance to gay marriage and gay rights comes down to a matter of ego and selfishness.

    I was inspired after reading another user’s words:

    If the likes of Focus on the Family came out and said something like, “We’ve said some horrible judgemental things about the LGBT communities in the past and we’re sorry for them – they were wrong”, would they then no longer be “haters” if they still opposed marriage equality on the religious basis that “marriage can only be between a man and a woman”? At that point would it itself be “hateful” to launch huge PR campaigns to demonise people and institutions just because individuals hold to traditional religious views and wished to see them enshrined in the laws of the land (in the same way that some wish to see non-religious perspectives become part of the State’s formal framework).

    Just wondering where the balance in all this lies.

    (emphasis added)

    Which were written in response to someone else…

    I’ll tell you one thing, friends…I am sick and tired.

    I am tired of the pointless blame and immature whining of Christian conservatives regarding homosexuality.

    A lot of folks want to blame gay people for ruining the definition of marriage.

    Well. Would you like to know what I think makes a mockery of marriage?

    1. Divorce. If you’re going to claim that heterosexual marriage is where it’s at, then what of that 50% divorce rate? I don’t believe that divorce should be banned outright. Yet some people give up on their relationships far too easily.

    2. People who think that marriage is a game. Let’s face it. Far too many folks take greater care in their vetting process when they decide to buy a car or a piece of cheese.

    I once heard of an instance where a man (an artist? a pro-gay-rights activist?) met a woman, went to (his city’s) city hall, and married her. Not out of love. Not even because he thought she was hot. But because, hey. She was the right gender. As was he. They fit the combination concerning what constitutes a “lawful” marriage in various states and provinces, so–what the fuss–why not make a go of it?

    He did it to prove a point, and I believe he made it.

    All that sarcasm to say this.

    Why do some Christians feel compelled to adopt a superiority complex concerning those who do not hold the same views as them?

    As for the commenter that I responded to above, I remember feeling angry as I wrote. And sad over what some people of faith have become. Many of those institutions who want to uphold “traditional” marriage are vilified. But is it without reason? They often use hyperbolic rhetoric, depicting homosexuals as inhuman.

    And for what?

    To make gay people feel like the odd persons out?

    Is it because the Word says so?

    As much as I love my Bible, there are A LOT of regulations within it that Today’s Good Christians do not follow.

    Goodness knows, if some literalists had their way, I wouldn’t have been seen in public this week.

    (For reasons that are…You know…Womanly.)

    But I digress.

    For now, I will close with remarks from the end of yet another comment that I made on that very same blog post:

    …people can believe what they want. I’m old enough to be used to folks being hard-hearted. However that shouldn’t stop them from treating their fellow human beings with respect…

    Knowing Jesus–or, rather, THINKING that one knows Jesus–does not make one person better than anyone else.

    *After I wrote this post, I went back and read the article in question. Its content was no different from what I expected.

  • Dearest Toronto

    You truly are a God-send. I look forward to growing and changing for the better.

    As I look ahead to what I may become, I can’t help having questions about my blog posts. The cheesy posts, the religious posts, the spiritual posts, the silly posts…

    Should I do some more editing? Perhaps some hiding…?

    For now, I say “No.”

    Life is a journey. For better or worse, all of the content herein is, in deed, representative of me.

  • Oh, Toronto. Why must you haunt me so?

    WHY?

    Even though I’m nowhere nearby, you keep calling my name.

  • Ralph Macchio is nearly 50. FIFTY!!

    Now look-y here!:

    Wax On, *Eff* Off

    Confession time: I’ve never seen The Karate Kid. (The original or the remix.)

    I ignored this clip when it first came out. But I’ve finally given it a go. It offers viewers a very interesting commentary on what it takes to be famous these days.

    I won’t go into a full blown rant. Yet it actually made me a little pensive, nostalgic, and sad.

    If nothing else, I dig the way Mr. Macchio rolls his eyes at the new KKid poster.

    Oh how the times have changed.

  • Got Chuck?

    I don’t, but I think it’s time I gave the program a peek.

    Ages ago, I thought “I should watch that show. The star seems like a cute nerdboy…”

    But alas. I have recently learned that Zachary Levi is a cute, Christian* nerdboy.


    Random image found via Fanpop.

    Favorite quote?:

    “If you’re looking for sex, drugs, rock ‘n’ roll, you’ll find it. I’m looking for ping pong and video games.”

    *link updated May 8, 2010 – All images are clickable–and readable. 😉

  • In teaching…And…Life.

    You will never reach your destination if you stop and throw stones at every dog that barks. ~ Winston Churchill

    HT: Wendi Lynn‘s twitter feed

  • Why am I jealous…

    …of this doll?

    Maybe ’cause I almost was her–hairwise–a few short months ago.

    Check out one of her friends.

    Gorgeous, eh?

    *sigh*

    *walks away* I can’t believe a doll–A DOLL, of all things!!!–is making me wistful.

    Have mercy.

    HT – Custom DREDS for your Fashion Doll

  • From elsewhere…

    I belong to a board that has a section where people post about random elements of their lives, relationships, and such.

    The other night I was checking things out. Someone had posted about a friend. From what I recall, said friend had a man who expected her to change–lose weight, etc.

    At the end of her post, the woman who wrote asked…

    …what are the limits you place on changing yourself, not just physically, maybe even personality wise or career choice in order to be with a man that you really do love? While in most cases, it’s ridiculous to even consider, I do believe there are some situations, especially when it’s beneficial to yourself as well, to make some changes. What do ya’ll think?

    There were plenty of common-sense responses that I agreed with. Yet I couldn’t resist offering my take on the issue…

    The only reason that I could conceive of for losing weight would be my health. And as noble of a reason as that may be, I would have to be my own motivator. Not the whining or demands of my partner.

    Here’s the thing that gets me…

    These days some people are so desperate to hook up, they will settle for someone who is kinda-sorta what they want (50-60%) and try to change them–or be changed by them–instead of looking for someone who is a better match. (Say 80-95% compatible. I’ve left 100% out of the picture–something in me isn’t yet sure of the likelihood of finding someone whose tastes match my own so completely. I also seriously doubt that I want to mate with a male version of myself.)

    Anyways…In the change process, people wind up extending themselves beyond the limits of who God wanted them to be.

    (That’s my theory. I hear about it often…Meanwhile, hooking up simply for the sake of curing loneliness just wastes time.)

    Yet who’s to say that if people just wait a little longer, they might come across someone who they were truly meant to be with. Someone who accepted them for their authentic selves…

    Look. I won’t deny it. I’m a growing girl woman. In fact, I strongly believe that the next couple of years of my life are going to be…Interesting. But I’m old enough to have certain likes and dislikes. And there are certain things that…If I did them…Just would not make me me.

    I had a recent epiphany which made me all the more comfortable with the idea of getting to know me as I am. OP, it seems like your friend could use a similar awakening.

    As a bit of an addendum, I wrote…

    Seriously, I am…ME!! 😀 These days when it comes to people-pleasing, I’m only willing to go so far.

    It’ll be interesting to see in the future whether or not I change my mind.

  • True that.

    From Heather B. Armstrong a few days ago, via Twitter:

    “Drive-thru” and “sushi” are words I do not want to see together when considering options for dinner.

  • Black Like Who?

    Note: This essay originally appeared as “Will the real Black girl please stand up?” in marlo, in 2003.

    Why is it that to certain black people, some of us don’t fit the code? Apparently, there’s a particular way we must dress, speak, and act – and if we should fall short of these standards, we‘re somehow not “the real thing”. It didn’t occur to me that I was an outsider until my last day with Tasha, an old roommate. It was quite a rude awakening.

    I was scouring my room – you know, checking behind the dresser, under the bed, to make sure I wasn’t leaving anything behind. In the midst of a packing frenzy, there was a knock at my bedroom door. Slightly annoyed, I answered. It was Lee, one of my roommate’s friends who was visiting from the Caribbean.

    “Your mom’s on the phone,” he drawled.

    I followed him into the living room and picked up the receiver. On the other end, my mother’s tone was icy. “Do you know what Lee said?”

    “What?” I asked distractedly, trying to remember where I put my guitar pick.

    “I asked for you, and he said, ‘Who, the white girl?’” His words, straight from her mouth, were like a slap in the face.

    My first goal was to calm my mother down. She wanted to confront him, and I fought off the urge to shame Lee into the next century by reminding myself that after the next sunrise, I‘d never have to see him again. But in the aftermath of our farewell, my anger over the telephone incident hadn’t faded. It even evolved into a bit of curiosity. Why would someone who should know better – someone who is black like me – call me a “white girl”?

    Thinking back over the few times that I’d interacted with Lee, something he once said stood out. We were making small talk one day, and out of the blue he said to me, “You know, where I come from, you’d be considered white.” Immediately I wondered why he would say such a thing. I even asked, but he didn’t explain. I attempted to draw my own conclusions.

    Where he came from was Trinidad, the same island where my mother was born and raised. My complexion is brown; nobody who has ever seen me could deny that based on my physical features, I am Black. But apparently for some people looking the part isn’t enough.

    There are a few things I can think of that might set me apart from [some] Black people – mainly how I dress, and the way I speak and act. Few, if any of those things fit certain people’s ideas about what makes an “authentic” black person.

    Not too long ago, I laughed and shook my head in disbelief when my friend Lisa told me about an encounter she once had at a local mall. She had been shopping for her mother and stepped outside to call home and double-check a few items. According to Lisa, her mother became quite aggravated, and in turn Lisa’s frustration mounted. And after a series of “yes, mother,” “I don’t know, mother,” “I’m trying my hardest, mother” replies, she exploded and unleashed a few angry words before hanging up.

    Meanwhile, she noticed a young black man watching her, amused. Lisa smiled at him, and, with a great sigh was about to re-enter the mall when he approached her.

    “So, that was your mom, eh? You seem kind of upset, still.”

    She smiled wanly, and said, “You know how mothers can be sometimes, when they want you to do something for them? I swear mine thinks I’m an imbecile. Next time I’ll just let her run her own errands. ”

    His eyes widened, and then he laughed. “Listen to the way you talk! So proper! What kinda nigger are you? Har har…”

    “What kinda nigger are you?”

    Since when does speaking in a proper manner make one’s blackness questionable? In his observation, it was though the young man doubted Lisa’s authenticity. Obviously Lisa’s diction came as a shock. But why? Why should it be surprising to hear a black person use dignified language? It still seems that certain members of my community still associate such speech with those who are white. Perhaps it goes back to the notion that propriety was the purview of those who were despised or feared.

    I’m uncomfortable with the fact that the young man used the word nigger. Sure, you could replace the term with the words Black Person; that’s what he obviously meant. But for many Black people, nigger automatically connotes a battery of negative images. Sometimes I think that when someone refers to himself or others by the n-word, he might have a dangerous belief system that dictates Black people ought to adhere to the negative archetypes associated with the word. We deserve better than to aspire to the ideologies that nigger embodies.

    Oddly enough, I can almost tolerate it when people who aren’t Black think this way. It’s easy for me to point my finger and call such people bigots. But when I have to put up with such garbage from members of my own race, I want to scream. Don’t they realize what they’re doing when they adhere to stereotypes and ostracize those who don’t follow their example?

    The way I act and speak doesn’t change the fact that I’m Black. To use words that you might have to look up in a dictionary isn’t a whites-only privilege. Yes, Lee may have called me a white girl; I suppose he wanted to hurt me and deny my identity by saying that I’m “other”. While I was insulted by his words, he only revealed his ignorance and earned my pity.

    I don’t know which is sadder: the fact that this society continues to perpetuate lies concerning black people’s existence, or that those lies are believed and perpetuated by the very people they’re told about.