On Anti-Asian Sentiments, Ingrained Anti-Blackness, Michelle, and Sandra

We can't talk about the horrific murders of Michelle Allysa Go and Sandra Shells without examining the ugliness at the intersections of the patriarchal white supremacist national sentiments around homelessness and housing insecurity. We also can't talk about what happened to Michelle and Sandra without examining mental health advocacy and the perceived and perpetuated value of Black and Asian women in the United States. And we definitely shouldn't be having conversations about Michelle and Sandra's murders without incorporating an ever-evolving understanding of the deeply ingrained passive acceptance of anti-Blackness and anti-Asian hate that has permeated this country's mindset for hundreds of years.

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Monday's Opening Thought: January 17, 2022

This week’s opening thought: some thoughts on performative white nonsense “in the name of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.” on MLK Day, with past and recent history and sentiments for additional context (not that it's needed).

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On Kyle, Crocodile Tears, and White Lives Losing Value When Defending Black Lives

Prepare yourself for Kyle Rittenhouse either getting off clean as a whistle or getting the most minimal time possible for murdering two WHITE people at a BLM protest that his mom dropped him off at in a state he didn’t even live in. It’s the American way, y’know.

See, if Kyle killed two white people “just ‘cause” he’d be deemed a monster, unstable. But he killed two white people trying to support BLACK people. And in the United States? White people like Kyle don’t do time for that. Once he turned on the crocodile tears it was a wrap.

White systems/institutions like the U.S. legal system will always protect white man-children like Kyle, especially when they kill people connected to Black bodies in any way. At that moment, the white men Kyle killed “forfeited their lives” as soon as they cared about Black folx.

Kyle wasn’t “in danger” that night. He went to that protest looking to harm someone. He just didn’t think he’d have to pay for it if he did.

And he likely won’t.

Truth be told, if he’d killed two Black men this case would’ve wrapped days ago.

On White Folx, Social Media Anti-Racism, Enthusiasm, Faux Liberalism, and the Good/Bad Binary

“White folks in 2020: How can we be better allies and help combat systemic racism? Teach us!

White folks in 2021: Stop talking about racism. Your “wokeness” is alienating everybody and causing us to lose elections.

Chile, I can’t keep up.”

Whew, chile, tea .

Last year, when white folx across the United States suddenly started “caring” about Black lives after witnessing a Black man’s police-initiated murder go viral, I couldn’t keep my thoughts to myself. I stated loudly on every platform I could that I wondered how long their enthusiasm would last before “liberal” white folx got exhausted with having to be present and grappling with the expectations of “allyship” and calling their fellow white folx in and out. I watched as so many white people swore they were engaged for the long haul that they would prove me wrong and stand with me and mine.

Fast forward a few months, and the enthusiasm became a light roar. Jump to now, and I haven’t heard or seen anything from any of these “good” white people for over a year. None of those folx have continued dismantling their white supremacy because the deeper self-work doesn’t make for dope Tik-Toks or IG posts. There were no cookies and gold stars for faux anti-racist mediocrity, so the bulk of the “good” white folx slowly returned to cat pics and hollow affirmations.

By the fall of 2020, most of them had moved on. Gone were the Black Lives Matter posts and the quoting of Black leaders and activists. I mean, they were distracted! It was pumpkin spice season! They also didn’t want to discuss the fact that white people, especially white women, overwhelmingly voted against Black lives in local elections across the country and the presidential election. Of course, white folx went back to trying to shift the responsibility and blame to Black folx, forgetting all about our lives mattering.

Over the past few months:

  • Black folx are back to being described as the scourge of the nation.

  • Black folx are being called divisive and evil for talking about the “dangers” of CRT.

  • Black folx are being constantly told that our asks for accountability and real work are “alienating allies.”

On top of all of that, like clockwork, we’re back to being criticized for somehow not bailing white politicians out in elections where once again white people, especially white women, overwhelmingly voted for hateful white people.

Guess Black lives only matter to whiteness when they are in servitude to them and keeping them comfortable in their good/bad binary paradox while supporting white supremacist ideology.

Sorry - not trying to “alienate everybody.”

A Shout-Out To My Homie, Therapy

I want to take a moment to give a huge shout-out to my homie and road dog, therapy. Good lookin' out, homie!

Real talk? I've been having a difficult last few months. A difficult 2021, to be honest. White supremacy and racism have been beating me down after years of doing the bare minimum to take care of myself mentally, emotionally, and physically. Working in white supremacist workplace cultures trying to push for meaningful and deep long-term work had taken its toll on me. By the summer of this year, I was drained. I found myself falling into old patterns of wanting to overdo it, fight harder, with no support system in place in the workplace in the face of white fragility and white violence. I saw my feelings of failure and blaming myself for why things aren't moving forward reacquaint themselves in my life as a familiar albatross on my neck after countless years of fighting it off. I felt like I wasn't of any help to anyone with melanated skin. It took some hard conversations with myself to realize that I had to stop thinking that I had all the answers and that I could "fix it on my own" and finally seek therapy from a Black therapist, someone who would understand me and the complexities of being Black. And honestly?

I cannot hammer home how essential the need for therapy for Black folx, for people of color, is y'all.

Therapy has helped me be firmer with my boundaries than ever before. It's allowed me the space to truly think about embracing joy and engaging in mindfulness and self-care in better ways. It's given me an increasingly important set of tools to center myself in the face of whiteness and oppression. Most importantly, I feel like the weights that have been on my ankles for years are finally unshackled. I feel more and more mentally and emotionally free with each passing session. I have a new focus on my personal and professional goals and now believe more than ever that I can attain those goals.

If you're Black, if you're a person of color, and you're struggling right now please know that you're not alone. If you are privileged to be able to do so, please use sites like Clinicians of Color to find a therapist of color in your area and get the support and validation you deserve. Prioritize yourself. You can't help anyone if you aren't willing to help yourself.

https://www.cliniciansofcolor.org/