I haven’t posted in awhile. But not because I haven’t had anything to say. I have had so much to say and yet nothing to say that’s worth reading. I’m a white woman with time on my hands and a loud voice, and I have struggled with what to do with these two (dare I say three) things in the weeks after the murder of George Floyd. I have spent the last two weeks raging. Crying. Praying. If you know me, you know I’m a talker, and for once in my life I’ve been quiet. I’ve been listening. And I’ve been reading. Among the many things I read was the opinion piece by CNN’s Christy Oglesby https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/28/opinions/george-floyd-cry-for-mama-hits-home-oglesby/index.html, where she writes, “I’m tired of being scared for him (her son). I’m tired of reading about Ahmaud, Travis, George and so many others. The list never stops. I need to the white mamas to share this burden. I need my white friends to love me and mine enough to come running, too.”
“I’M HERE!!!!!” I scream, scrambling to put my mom shoes on, and I’m halfway out the door to my mom mobile…and then I stop. Because shame. Shame over how I’ve handled situations of racism in my past that make me wonder if someone who failed to be part of the solution then is really worthy of leading the charge now. I have cried “white women’s tears”, and that makes me feel so gross, I can’t even tell you. And so I ask—-Is there a place for imperfect white people who carry with them the guilt of past mishandlings and unintended micro-aggressions? And if there is, what is it?
Many, many years ago, I found myself in a circumstance where I failed to do the right thing. I heard someone say a terrible, terrible thing, and I just stood there, silent. I was paralyzed with fear and powerlessness. I was horrified that seemingly “good” people could say such things, yet I was unable to open my mouth against it.
I’m glad I had this experience, as ugly as it was. It taught me early on that standing as witness to racism and not calling it out is complicity. It’s not enough to not join in, because evil doesn’t need enthusiastic sycophants to thrive. Evil, and its ever present cohort fear, will interpret any lack of resistance as tacit agreement. There is, in fact, malignancy in our silence, and every time we don’t challenge racism we actually foster an environment that allows it to metastasize. We are telling people it’s ok by not saying anything. Calling out the person who said those terrible things, on that person’s turf, in front of a group of people who felt as they did, would have taken courage, as I was wildly outnumbered in my outrage, and I’m embarrassed that I didn’t have that kind of courage until much later in life. But the thing is…., maybe I wouldn’t have been outnumbered at all. Maybe God would have protected me in that moment if I had spoken against their hate and ignorance. Maybe he would have been like “Oh hallelujah, Coletta is going to shut this nonsense down. Good girl.” I’ll never know.
I’m a lot older now. And a lot has happened since that day in 1994. I have become a mother, and I think that alone has bought me more courage than any other life event could. I don’t know, guys. Maybe there’s something about growing a human in your body for 9 months and then launching it into the world that makes a person not give a fuck anymore what anyone thinks. Maybe it’s the knowledge that 25 years of shame and regret is really hard to live with. I have made it a priority in my life to be teachable, to accept when I’m not perfect and to be grateful when people love me enough to tell me when I’m wrong or misguided. (You know who you are). There have been times when that’s been hard to hear. There are times when trying to be “cool”, I said the wrong thing. But I am grateful that braver people than me were willing to tell me so that I could grow and do better. I believe that my super power is my massive, bleeding, dare I say hemophiliac, heart. But if I don’t use it for change because I’m ashamed that my racial justice record isn’t perfect, then that’s one more white mama who isn’t out there screaming and marching and writing and talking and learning. We need everyone in this effort. And perfect is the enemy of the good. Acknowledge that you have much to learn. And for God’s sake, don’t try to enlist your Black friends as tutors. That’s like asking a robbery victim to teach you how to stop breaking and entering. There’s a ton of resources out there. Books, podcasts, essays. Find them. Ingest them. The syllabus has been made available. Forgive yourself for not being braver in the past and commit to being smarter in the future.
I will end with this…I had a great talk with Henry last night, my 14 year old son. He was sharing with me his thoughts on the Black Lives Matter movement. “I don’t understand how people can talk about having to respect differences of opinion in this case, (referring to people who assert that “all lives matter”). This is a case of simple right versus wrong. I shouldn’t have to respect your right to be a racist”. When I was his age, I lived in a world where we couldn’t talk about race. And we couldn’t live out loud if we were gay. Sam had a friend come out as trans last week, shared with their whole friend group in a group message, and everyone was like “ok, cool”. And then they resumed playing their online video game together. No big deal. When I was that age, we couldn’t speak our truth. We couldn’t even whisper it. I think about the soil in which my children are growing versus the dirt from which I grew, and I have so much hope. The kids today are already miles ahead of where we were then, loving on their friends who couldn’t have even whispered their truth 30 years ago and begging their parents to take them to BLM protests. Thank God. I don’t mind this getting older business when I see how worth it is to have change in the world. And even with all the technology that we fear is rotting their brains, they are already so much more thoughtful and more compassionate than we were. And brave, so much more brave.
Excuse me, but I’m off to talk with some mamas (some white, some not) about how we can support racial justice and what our role might be going forward. What are you going to do?
Note: An earlier version of this post told the specifics of the incident that happened 25 years ago. While everything about the story was true, I regret that I hurt someone I care about by sharing it in such detail. The viewpoints expressed by the offending person were theirs and theirs alone, not condoned by any one else I was with in the original story, and certainly not condoned by my family members who were present. Sometimes our stories are not just ours, but shared by others as well, and I realize now that I need to do a better job of respecting the privacy and truth of those I care about. I wasn’t as sensitive to that as I should have been. As someone who is new to this, I am learning as I go, and the overshare was an inevitable part of that process. My initial plan was just to pour myself out into this blog and see what materialized. It was my truth, after all. But with that comes some responsibility to honor and respect the privacy of the other people in my life, and I am sorry that I neglected to do that. I know now that this space is for my story and my story only. And I guess that only further supports the title of this post. When we know better, we do better.
