MLK Day 2021

This isn’t easy. But it needs to be said. This is not going to be one of my lighter posts and you may be uncomfortable. I am sure that I will be uncomfortable writing it. But the irony of the country pausing to celebrate Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr’s birthday, of federal buildings being closed following the recent attempt by domestic White Supremacists terrorists to storm the Capitol of my federal government is a situation I cannot ignore. And as I am too scared of both the global pandemic surging as well as potential police and said-White Supremacists probable violent reactions to march in the streets, I’m picking up a [metaphorical] pen.

This post, to be frank, is for my moderate White friends. The ones who agree that racism is bad, but sometimes feel that they can say me, they’re not always radical, geeky, more likely to have a Kindle instead of a protest sign in her hand African American friend, that there must be better ways to seek social change than destroying property or disrupting bystanders by blocking streets, interrupting meals, speaking out in situations that you don’t feel warrant this level of examination.

We need desperately to talk.

I need you to pick a side. And I need you to be pretty damn public about it. I need you to loudly and openly proclaim, “I am listening and supporting the people who have for literally hundreds of years proclaimed that the system is broken and set up against them and I am willing to lend them my voice and the priveledgge that goes along with it. I will not nod in public and do nothing in private because I realize that those actions have led us to the situation we now find ourselves in now, where my POC friends are dying deaths via a thousand microaggressions and cuts. I stand with you, I will listen to you, and I will work on being an ally in those spaces that I participate in and that you cannot.”

Or, alternately, I need you to admit, “I think that you’re over-reacting. I think that open, systematic racism is a thing of the past and I think that you should be happy with that. I think that the various pieces written about how POC, especially Black people, are discriminated against are overblown and I am not willing to look at these pieces about how the systematic inequality that can be found almost everywhere affects people of a different hue than me: mentally, physically, emotionally, and financially. I choose to believe that the representations I see in media paint an accurate and complete picture and that, at their core, POC are Other and as such incomprehensible. I do not consider the past history of reluctance to say unpopular or uncomfortable things complicit in this, and I am not willing to make changes now.”

Consider my gauntlet dropped.

I am a six foot tall, plus-sized Black woman. I have shoulder length dreadlocs which are woven through with “shiny bits” (as I refer to them in my head) with respect to the traditions of the continent my ancestors were stolen from to openly display the wealth you have and the wealth you have yet to acquire. I am the daughter of two parents who worked hard to teach me the history and strength that is my ethnic/cultural background and made it so that I never once looked in the mirror and wished my Brown skin was anything but. I am the aunt of two gorgeous nieces who have sparkle and the biggest smiles and I am literally willing to murder someone if it meant that they never felt limited. Ridiculously, insanely confident women (and possibly men, who knows if I’ll have nephews someday) who never know what it is to have someone follow them around a store, check their ids multiple times during a credit/debit purchase while not doing the same for their White friends, never having someone dismiss their collegiate acceptance/accolades with affirmative action being the catalyst instead of them just being smart; that is my goal as an aunt. And to meet that goal, its time for me to take the gloves off.

Anger is nothing new to me. Anger has been my quiet companion since I was old enough to recognize that hot feeling under my ribs when I was a kid. Frustration that results in helpless tears behind closed doors or in the presence of people who I truly trust has been an uncontrollable result from about age twelve. At age ten, I understood that there was going to be a difference in malice and ignorance in the things that White people said to me and that it was gonna hurt like a barb either way, but that I would have to learn how to school my face and reactions to not make them feel uncomfortable.

I was born and raised in Detroit so I was born and raised fully in the knowledge, that to be Black and to be from a Black background, is considered a thing of pity. I had White friends come over to our gorgeous home off Livernois and Curtis and express surprise that there were nice neighborhoods and that the house next door had a flagpole with the American flag proudly flapping. (It is my mother’s personal mission to reclaim the American flag. She has it on face masks, on her car, and waving outside of my parents’ home in Arizona because, “conservatives don’t get to claim this as solely theirs. Our family has probably been here longer than most of them anyways.”) I went to the suburbs for MSVMA festivals and saw schools with classrooms full of computers and professionally run auditoriums. I travelled outside of my city every single time I needed to visit a Target/Meijer/Kroger/Best Buy because we knew that stores banked on the fact that Black folks will travel to shop if you close a store close to us while White folks will simply shop somewhere else when it is inconvenient or undesirable and the corporations therefore had no real motivation to move things into our neighborhoods or communities, or put stores where their property taxes would help our schools and cities.

I know this is difficult. Racism is often portrayed as blatant, rude, outspoken hostility. And do not be mistaken, that does still exist. There are parts of Michigan that I fear to tread and places that my Melanin-deficient friends talk about with great fondness that I’ve treated as essentially sun-down towns. (Places you don’t want to be Brown once the sun goes down, for my non-POC folk.) But I will admit, it has become harder and harder to allow that to be it when it comes to White folk who believe that they have genuine relationships with POC. I’m going to let you in on the worst-kept secret ever: someone can genuinely have friends, romantic partners, coworkers, and even kids of color and still hold some hurtfully racist views.

I’m sorry, but its no longer enough that you not be part of the crowd of White Supremacists marching through the streets chanting, “You will not replace us.” (BTW, we never dealt with that fully. I am here, telling you as an African American, that I was dissatisfied with the national response to that heinous act and that I altered how I acted around people accordingly.) You need to do the work where I literally cannot.

As a single woman, one of the things that some of my matchmaking-minded friends ask is, “Are you open to dating guys who aren’t Black?” And I have to be honest, the older I get, the more difficult that question gets. Theoretically, yes. If you have a single male friend who is smart and tall and funny and liberal-minded, send him my way. But it gets so much more complicated than that if I actually want to settle down with him. Am I gonna show up for Thanksgiving and have to deal with a drunken great uncle who drops the n-word? Is his mother going to quietly assure me in the kitchen that she’s so happy I’m here because she knew just the nicest colored girl when she was younger and she honestly doesn’t see race? Is an ignorant cousin going to refer to the BLM protesters as “those thugs” before remembering that I’m at the table and either try to brush it off or get defensive? Is someone going to refer to President Trump with any type of praise and choose to disregard the offensive, damaging language and attitudes he overtly brought with him into the Oval Office in 2016?

These are questions that I rarely feel comfortable talking about with my White friends. But I too have to have uncomfortable conversations about social issues with people in my life who I’d rather not because I can’t let prejudice lightly lie because its uncomfortable. I’ve talked with people my parents’ ages about the importance of pronouns and the differences between gender and sexual identity. I’ve explained to grandparents why they can’t use the term “Orientals” to describe people. And I’ve straight up told elders, people who changed my diapers and sent me checks for significant moments in my life that what they’ve said was misogynistic or homophobic or just rude. It is uncomfortable and it makes the Midwesterner in my scream “Bad manners!” but it must be done.

Because the views openly expressed and not checked in private are views that are still held in public. Someone would NEVER tell me to my face that they think that straight hair is the only professional way to style tresses. But if they secretly think that my dreadlocs are unprofessional and decline to promote or hire me because of it, that racism got me all the same. The amount of times that I have been talking with my friends and joke about code-switching to get ahead and having them laughingly agree is us quietly bouldering each other up as we del with the non Eurocentric aspects of ourselves that we feel it necessary to suppress to succeed in certain areas. And that is never okay.

So let me explain why I’m writing this today, finishing a piece on the same day I started it, which I never do: Today is the day that the United States celebrates the birthday (but really the death) of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, a civil rights icon who’s legacy has been white-washed a disturbing amount. And less than two weeks ago, armed White Supremacists militias stormed the United States of America Capitol, egged on by President Donald Trump as he continued to falsely accuse the election of being rigged because he didn’t win, thanks in no small part to Black voters such as myself. I requested and mailed in my absentee ballot weeks before November 4th to not risk getting sick or caught up in any craziness, and it probably wasn’t counted the day of the election, but instead in the days after and helped turn Michigan blue after our shameful red switch in 2016.

I sit here, in 2021, and see that a disappointingly large population of people feel that my choosing to be safe and express a vote and opinion opposite to what they believe is somehow legally wrong and they want my vote discarded. And fine, the older I get the more stupid and gullible I realize people are. But there were so many elected officials who gave them credence. And I cannot tell you how upsetting that is.

My views on federal government are simple: I may not have voted for you. I may not like you. But I pay my taxes and you work for the public and as such, I am your boss. I will work to vote you out and subsequently have you replaced and someone who is in a different political party than myself should do the same. You do not get to work in federal government and feel like I didn’t vote for you so you don’t care about me. That’s not how this works.

There is a MLK quote that I see everywhere that I am having particular trouble with at the moment. “Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.” Well I must be honest, all the light I currently have is currently dedicated to keeping my own flame lit so that I can just function and exist and not curl up under the covers whenever possible. I am not currently willing to unconditionally love my neighbor. I am not willing to break bread and move past this and aim high despite them aiming low.

I do not want to be the bigger person. I am sick of being the bigger person. I am tired of rewriting casual barbs that people throw at me because they don’t know better. I know jack shit about hockey; as a result, I ask people about hockey so that I know what the hades is going on as well as just doing some basic googling. I am exhausted at continuously forgiving people for being surprised that I desire advancement and recognition because I too want better things. When I misgender someone, I apologize, use preferred pronouns and keep working on being better. I am sick of wearing bracelets in public so that I can shake them and not scare White people who are initially frightened of having someone like me in their space before they remember it is not solely theirs. God am I tired.

I know that the majority of people are outraged. I know that most logical, thinking people on both sides are upset and dismayed and appalled. I recognize that as a Black liberal, I am mostly in solely Black liberal spaces and am therefore in a kind of echo chamber, surrounding myself with the voices of people who think and look like me. (I no longer apologize for this. The majority of the world doesn’t look like me, the majority of the world won’t look out for me, and I am no longer apologetic for not putting myself in recreational spaces where I don’t feel heard, comforted, and safe.) But I do occasionally look out and I have to be honest, the moderate outrage is lacking. The justification, the downplaying, and the willingness to let this go is deeply upsetting. At no point, with any of the causes I support, do I believe that if we armed ourselves and broke into a government building with the express purpose of hurting people who do have different views would the result have been anything other than national condemnation on both sides. There would be no, “Well, sometimes these pro-choice activists can just feel super passionate about their cause.” No news anchor would argue, “If we look at the leader’s rhetoric, we can understand how the anti-prayer in school believers would think that this was the next step.”

I need more from my friends who consider themselves aware. I need more from White moderates who pretend that because there are flaws with both parties, neither side is clearly in the wrong. The time for being uncommitted has come to an end. You are either with us or against us. Stand next to me in the foxhole or tell me that I’m not welcome at your lunch counter. You clearly see color, yes it does have to be about race, and no I’m not being overly sensitive. I am no longer accepting the things that I cannot change, I have now moved on to abandoning the things that no longer make me feel comfortable.

Pick.

The Devaluing Dong

*I have been working on this piece FOREVER!  Somebody better share this shit!*

So I’m going to talk about penises.  Brace yourselves.

Well, a mix of penises and sex.  So, like, especially brace yourselves.

Are you braced?  Because I’m dead serious, this post in mostly about penises and sex and I do NOT want people telling me they were surprised/shocked/offended.  Because I feel the devaluing dong is a subject that deserves discussion.  And I warned you.  And I suppose I could warn you one last time via shock value, like by posting a bunch of penis pics or something to especially get my point across, but I have been on the receiving end of too many of those to ever do that to you, non-existent followers.

(Seriously, stop doing that.  If I wanted to see your penis, I would ask.  IF I DON’T ASK, I DON’T WANT TO SEE IT.

“Can you send me a PICTURE OF YOUR PENIS?”  [Picture of penis]    Acceptable.

“Hey, do you want to meet up later?”  [Picture of penis]   Completely unacceptable, why would you do that, dear God my poor unsolicited dick pic receiving phone.)

The devaluing dong is what I have decided to call the issue that coming into contact with a penis (other than your own) almost instantly lowers your “value” but possessing a penis somehow puts you at the top of the heap, to quote Frank Sinatra in a way that would probably horrify him.

What do you call a woman who sleeps with a lot of men during college?  I would call her hopefully sexually satisfied and pray that she uses protection (condoms really are important, people) but according to media, she would probably called a slut, a whore, a girl you don’t take home to Mama.  What do we call a woman who sleeps with a lot of women during college?  Confused, questioning, experimenting, lesbian until graduation, and a whole host of other terms that basically state, “Have your vagina fun because it doesn’t really count.”  See, from what I can tell, penile contact is a serious matter.  You can no longer wear white as a bride, your vajanejane suddenly risks “hot dog down a hallway” potential, your sexual value takes a sudden turn because the next penis won’t be the first.  In my opinion, total bullshit, but since my armies haven’t risen yet to create a peaceful global Musique23-dictatorship, we have to deal with the cards we are dealt.

Now I’m going to be honest.  I, musique23, am sexually active.  I have come into contact with the devaluing dong.  And even though I consider myself an active, healthy feminist and human being with all the urges and desires that come with that label as well as a healthy and understandable disdain for what I routinely declare as “patriarchal bullshit,” (which is often either hissed under my breath at the movies or in public or yelled at my television or phone as I read various articles), I had to deal with my own perception of my lowered value after I slept with my boyfriend for the first time.  Sad and shameful, I know.  For you see, despite my parents masterful teaching that value is much more related to what’s between your ears vs. your thighs, I still had a stupid amount of pride in my flowered status.

Speaking from experience as what felt like the world’s oldest virgin (23 years old baby!), I felt a stupid amount of satisfaction in shrugging while my friends talked about their sex lives.  A frustration-satisfaction mix, actually.  (My early twenties were weird.  I would recommend skipping them whenever possible.  If you ever have the chance to just wake up at age 27 with a degree and a job, I advise doing so.)  I knew I wanted some lovin’.  Didn’t know from where, didn’t know from who, but my ladybits were starting to not so quietly warn me that their time to shine had approached.  However, (again, despite my parents doing their best to combat the fuckery that is society) I still thought of women who “slept around” as something shameful and prided myself in my white bridal gown state.

It wasn’t until many moons later, dating and sexing a great guy and laughing with my friends, that the concept of the devaluing dong blew my mind and angered my soul.

So, quick poll: How many people would call a woman who kissed another woman just once in her life a lesbian?  How many would cite a singular Sapphiric night of love as basis that obviously said woman/women are DL lesbians, or at least bisexual?  The answer is very few.  Hell, I kissed a girl in college, and I thought I might actually be bisexual.  (She had very soft lips.  I was mentally disappointed she wasn’t a guy.  Team hetero it was.)  I openly have like 3 lady crushes.  My boyfriend has been informed that if Amber Rose and I are ever trapped on an elevator and we are both feeling it, I have a freebie card in advance.  (That woman is FINE.  She knows it.  I know it.  Ain’t no shame in my game…)  And at no point has he or any of my friends ever suggested that this might be because I am secretly gay.  My best friend is gay, and when I told him, “I think Girl X is cute; am I in the LGBT community now?” he just looked at me and rolled his eyes.

Now, how many people would feel the same way if instead of two women, it was two guys?  One night, when your boyfriend was 19 and on the wrestling team (I’m sorry, but that sport is crazy homo-erotic.  I enjoyed watching them struggle for dominance in the Olympics and all, but that sport is suspect as Hades.), he and his teammate got a little drunk and had sex with each other.  It was only the one time and your boyfriend decided that he didn’t really like it as much as he thought he would, but still, he came into contact with another penis.  Suddenly, it isn’t harmless fun due to youthful curiosity, it is confused men on the DL and unless he wants his heterosexuality to forever be in question, he will tell NO ONE.

This is where the patriarchal bullshit comes in.  (Seriously, that is one of my top ten phrases I use in my private life.  It covers so much!)  To be man is to be successful.  Wait, I can do better.  Masculine attributes are considered the default measure of success.  Feminine attributes are considered the default measure of weakness.  Men fuck, women get fucked.  To fuck is strength, to get fucked is weak.  Now ignore the bad language (Mother and Daddy, may you never read this post), I’m about to blow your mind.

Having a thrusting penis is apparently a good thing.  But receiving said penis-thrust is a bad thing.  Does that make sense?  No.  Is it nonetheless a thing that heterosexual women and gay and bisexual men have to deal with?  Yes.

(I would like to note that I came up with this concept before the Insecure episode “Guilty as F**k” aired; however, that episode is a great example of kind of what I’m talking about, especially sexuality wise.  Also, should Issa Rae ever come across this, know that I think you’re brilliant.)

Having a penis equals power.  But coming into contact with  that instrument of power equals weakness.  (I’m going to give everyone a minute to have a proper laugh at that statement, because it is funny, but I couldn’t think of any other way to word it.)  It affects so many things.  Let us be honest here, men are what make people uncomfortable in the LGBT rights struggle.  (Side note: people should not be uncomfortable; people are stupid.)  Girl-on-girl porn is widely and openly watched, but put two penis together and suddenly the frat boy has a moral obligation to announce that he doesn’t like that gay shit.  You just put a jello shot in my hand and cheered when I smooched my sorority sister; yes, you apparently do.

Why the stupidity?  Calling someone a pussy (especially a man; actually, I’ve never  heard a woman call another woman a pussy) is supposed to be a deep insult, saying that they are weak or something stupid.  My official resort to seeing/hearing that phrase is now proclaiming loudly, “You WISH you were that strong.”  Because I saw my sister give birth.  Like, I saw my niece before my sister did because I saw when she came into this world and my sister was still pushing.  And then hold the whole HUMAN BEING she had pushed out her body and smile.  And then smile at her husband, who had kinda helped put the whole human being into her body but just had to hold her fracking hand through contractions.  And then, like, live her life and just continue being awesome.  And THAT is what a pussy is.  But also not at all because I hate that phrase.

Look, I’m a heterosexual woman.  I have come into consensual contact with a penis.  Inversely, as a heterosexual man, my boyfriend has come into consensual contact with a vagina.  But when’s the last time you heard about grandfathers whispering that they couldn’t believe the groom had the nerve to wear a certain color on his wedding day?  Never!

So let us put an end to this devaluing dong concept.  My value as a woman, partner, and human has NOTHING to do with what/who/how many penises I’ve entertained any more than any of my male coworkers are somehow better men due to how many ladies they’ve had sex with.  I realize it is all tied up in Christian, hetero-normative nonsense, but being aware of it is that first step of fighting it, and I don’t want anybody to be able to say “Well nobody has ever put it that way before…”

And just to be more direct, think of it this way:  There are still areas in the world, in 2018, where the belief that a woman is less than worthy due to contact with a penis, even if it isn’t consensual.  And there are still countries where it is not a crime to harass or hurt a man for being gay.  And people DIE.  The devaluing dong KILLS people.  And I can quip about it safe in my bedroom in Detroit, and I can offer up witty observations that blanket a secure plea to do better, but honestly, think about this shit.

Oh, right, positive closing note.  Keep fighting the patriarchal bullshit?  Yeah!  Keep fighting the patriarchal bullshit!

Because seriously, this is some bullshit.

I’m Trying, Honestly….

Okay!  I am back.  I was gone.  I was gone for a really long time.  The last thing I posted was in March of 2017.  My bad.  I AM SORRY.  It was a rough year, okay!?

Some quick updates/explanations:

  • I lost my job and was unemployed for basically all of 2017.  It sucked, it came out of the blue, I still don’t really understand why, and creative juices really dry the fuck up when you are in your late 20s and your parents have to pay for everything again.
  • My laptop broke!  This was one of the bigger reasons.  Some stupid hacker got my laptop and locked me out of my own laptop and I gave my laptop to my beau Scott and to fix and I just didn’t have a functional laptop for like 4 months.  And I tried writing posts on my Kindle, it wasn’t for me.  However, this “nicely” (you’ll see the reason for the quotation marks in a second) lead into the next biggie…
  • Scott and I parted ways.  And it sucked.  And if I’m being honest, random people on the internet and maybe a few coworkers who I gave my card to (I’m trying to be legit here, people!), every time I even thought of writing something, break-up melancholy would seep into my soul and no one wants to read that.  But you will!  Because I need to get it fully out of my system and oh the fuck well, don’t read it if it doesn’t float your boat.
  • I got a new job!  And a full time one at that!  Look at me, being a whole, actual functional adult and member of society with health insurance and shit!  However, my full time job, which I LOVE, involves staring at a screen all day and I just haven’t had it in me to open up my private laptop after work and stare at another.  But I’m going to try to.  Because I love writing.  (And they encourage us to basically use small words at work for our notes and if you know Musique23, you know that I do enjoy my verbose vocab.  Why use one word when you can use four?!)

So, that’s been what’s up.  Again, sorry non-existent readers for abandoning you.  But I have had some experiences over the past year and I am going to try to get back on it and grow this more.  A lot of people don’t know this, but I’m trying to turn this into my legitimate side hustle.  I want more readers, I want to own this blog outright, I want other people to hire me to write stories/essays for them, I want authors to think “Yes, that young lady is brilliant and thoughtful and funny and I would love to hire her to edit my own work.”  (I would also like for book people who scour the web for bloggers such as myself who have had novels in the works since they were like 12 to find me and offer me a nice check cause I am ready to sit Sallie Mae down and talk to that hussy about our relationship.  Just saying…)

So bear with me.  And read what drips out of my head, through my blood and out of my fingers.  (That was horrible.  Just awful.  But I have a BA and not a BS in Psych and I don’t feel like thinking of a better visual for the creative process.)  And hopefully, I’ll make you laugh, make you feel, and soon enough, make you sing my praises.

Thanks,

Musique23

Bumping your head on the ceiling and other such bullshit

So, for those who don’t know (I honestly can’t remember if I’ve talked about this or not) I’m a pretty tall lady.  5’11.5″, and yes, I do legitimately believe and say that “and a half” because the last time I was at the doctor’s office where they measure things like that, the nurse/physician’s assistant/medical personal told me that I was five-eleven and a half.  So what I’m saying is that I know how to quickly judge a doorway before I just barge through, I put things on the top shelf with complete ease, and I am all around familiar with the struggles, trials, and tribulations of being a tall[er] woman.  There are also some awesome things, but I’m talking about the cons in this post, so work with me.  This, in my opinion, are the 14 most aggravating things about being a lady long legs.

  1. Airplane seats.  I love to travel.  I suspect once I have a job and steady income and am traveling more than just for family vacations or trips to see my sister out of state I’ll fly more and generally see more of the world.  The most annoying things about flying?  The tiny ass seats with their minimum amount of leg room!  God help the traveler who sits in front of me on a plane, because I will not let you put your seat back.  I realize that you want to take a nap.  But seriously, you can’t.  Like, I literally cannot allow you to.  I’m honestly surprised you couldn’t feel my knees in your spine before, but you definitely will I you lower your seat onto them via reclining.
  2. Shoes.  Being tall equals bigger feet.  Straight to the point.  I wear a size 12 wide.  Do you know who makes a size 12 wide consistently, so that I could potentially have a designer that always creates cute shoes in my size?  NO ONE.  If you do, let me know because that would be manna from heaven.  Seriously, shoe shopping is one of the biggest pains in my ass.  Equally as difficult?  Dealing with people’s opinions over your shoes because of your height.  “Oh, you’re going to wear HEELS?  Don’t you think you’re tall enough?”  I could touch the moon with my fingertips and I would still occasionally want a nice pair of heels to look sexy, dammit.
  3. Insecure men.  Uuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuugh.  Seriously.  No, I am not at least 6’4″ because you want to believe you are six feet tall when you are obviously no taller than 5’8″ if I am being generous and no, I do not want to start a conversation about my height because I have tall lady things to do that do not include you because honestly I just want to buy my ice cream and Goldfish crackers and leave because I did not come to Target to talk about this.
  4. Sundresses.  Obviously, not all the time.  Musiqe23 is kinda chesty, okay?  And, like the majority of human beings, I experience temperature differences and at times wear articles of clothing that allow for higher ventilation.  I AM SORRY THAT MY DOUBLE DS WERE IN A TANKTOP OR SUNDRESS AND WERE THEREFORE BASICALLY IN YOUR FACE IF YOU ARE 5’5″ OR BELOW, OKAY!?
  5. Low seats.  Oh joy, you expect me to sit on the floor or a pillow or one of those little kindergarten chairs or a sinking couch with limited support.  What you THINK I’m going to do is fold gracefully onto the seat and instantly maneuver into a sitting lotus position to manage my long legs.  What I’m ACTUALLY going to do is plop down like a spastic tomato, stretch my legs out (possibly inadvertently kicking either the person across from me or the table or both), and wait until everyone leaves before even attempting to get up, looking like spider with an inner ear problem.
  6. Literally, bumping my head on the ceiling.  I have done this.  I have cursed in front of children due to doing this.  I have had knots on my skull because a ceiling slopped and I was unable to tell that my surroundings would suddenly go from me being able to walk upright like a homo sapiens to hunched down like some sort of troglodyte.  Fuck you, unexplainably low ceilings.  Also on my shit list: unexpected low door frames.  I was in the clear, walking around with my spine straight and everything and then WHAM!  Never cool, always shocking in the worst way.
  7. Clothing.  I am tall.  I have longer body parts.  My torso, legs, and arms are not your average length.  Most clothing stores leave me with unintentional crop tops, an inch+ of wrist showing, or pants that look like I am prepared for a flood.  It is annoying.  What is equally annoying is that buying tall/extra-long clothing almost always means that it is considered a specialty clothing item and the price therefore reflects a special, because-fuck-you-we-can upcharge.  Longer legs do not equal bigger paycheck, trust me.
  8. Too-short things that you lay down on.  Do you take relaxing bubble baths?  Lie down on couches regularly and put your feet up?  Recline in Lazy-Boys and expect not to have your ankles hang over the edge?  I DON’T.  To quote my fabulously fellow tall cousin, “My dream is to one day have bathtub in which both my boobs and my legs will fit under the water.”  Don’t we all…
  9. Asshole short people.  You might be thinking, “Didn’t she cover this in number 3?”  Oh no, assholes come in both sexes and this covers them both.  I am tall.  I can literally rest my head atop of yours, and it is only due to my lofty graciousness that I don’t use you as a human arm rest.  Let me have the front seat.  Obviously, it would be better if I could sit in the aisle so that I don’t develop a cramp from having my knees touch my elbows for the whole damn concert.  There is an unspoken pact that my kind have with yours: Show us some common damn decency and we won’t put the snack food up on top of the refrigerator.
  10. Regular towels.  Long torso + average length towel=I guess my behind just doesn’t need to be covered.  Seriously, buy bath sheets.  They are longer and wider and altogether better.
  11. People with higher expectations for me because of my height who I feel like I disappoint because I am neither a model not athletically inclined.  No, I don’t play basketball.  No, I do not play volleyball.  Nope, that wasn’t me at the track meet because I’m not fond of walking, let alone running.  Why yes, I am the model from Chicago, thank you so much for calling me a model, excuse me while I walk away statuesquely and avoid you after the fashion show when you try to ask me follow up questions because you don’t think you saw me on the runway.
  12. Bathroom stalls.  I am so sorry, I am not trying to be a peeping Tomina, it’s just that I am in heels and I didn’t realize that I could see over your stall and I will let you pee in peace now, again, my bad.
  13. Having people think you’re a guy.  More when I was younger (and boob-less) than now, but every now and then someone approaches me and thinks I’m trans, which doesn’t really bother me but if you think that I’m a trans-woman then calling me sir would still be disrespectful, no?
  14. Meeting other, taller people and having to be the beta tall person.  Look, my friends are short.  Our friendship is not based on our height discrepancies, but it is what it is and I have gotten used to being the go-to tall person.  Don’t suddenly introduce a new lady who is like 6’3″ to the group!  How am I supposed to take that?  Is she gonna be the one who reaches for stuff on the top shelf now?  Who does this tall heifer think she is?  Look, there can only be one, and I’m already in the group chat.

 

Yes, there are some great things about being tall (the good does outweigh the bad), but I was in a complaining mood, so there you go.

A Quick Shoutout

This is just a quick shoutout to my fellow mid-twentysomethings who are single.  So often, my facebook page is filled with people with their babies and their partners and often they are accompanied by posts about how happy someone is in this life and how they don’t know how they got along without their familial responsibility beforehand.  And that’s great.  For you.

But as a single woman, I’m not really supposed to brag on myself or my singleness.  And that right there is some BS.  Because my singledom is wonderful and the majority of my friends are single (as in not married, not as in not booed up), and this is a quick caps off to us.

Here’s to NOT waking up early on Saturdays to take our offspring to puppet shows and instead going to brunch and having morning liquor.  Here’s to coming home at the end of a long day at work and taking off your pants because who-the-hell-cares.  Here’s to sleeping sprawled out on the bed, limbs in every direction, because that queen size is for you alone.  Here’s to date nights followed by passionate, non-procreative sex (also known as sodomy), and basking in that orgasmic glow.  Here’s to dinners out whenever you feel like it, no need to plan in advance.  Here’s to searching for Mister or Misses Right but having fun with Partner Right-Now along the way.  Here’s to drinking alone and eating cheese while marathoning “Scandal” or “Love & Hip-Hop” or “Jane the Virgin” all Saturday and not feeling guilty.  Here’s to enjoying your solo 20s and making the best of this part of your life when you’re probably saddled with student loan debt and indecision.  Here’s to spending Friday nights however the hell you want, and feeling free and clear to do so.  Here’s to discovering you and not feeling one iota of societal pressure to do anything but.  And here’s to curling up next to a great guy or girl if you want because that’s cool too.

Here’s to our awesome twenties!

(Also please vote in November.  For anyone but Donald Trump.)

My Eternal Bad

Look, I graduated from college in May.  It is now October and the fun and pride have worn off, my student loans are coming due, and I still don’t have a job or any prospects.  Ideal blog writing conditions these have not been.  But hey, maybe putting some stuff down will help me not go insane, so expect a blogpost in the next 2 weeks.  I’ll try to pull myself out of my depressive funk and write something witty.

Or I’ll just build a big blanket fort.  Life after college is difficult and I’m coping the best I can.

 

*Added in February 2016:  So the blanket fort won for the most part, but I’m still gonna lie to myself and the internet and promise that a post will come!  Eventually.  Look, LIFE IS HARD RIGHT NOW, OKAY?!*

Terrified

This is going to be a somber piece.  I might try to inject a little humor into it, but this has been rattling around my head (mayhaps my soul) for a while and I felt like I needed to say my piece.

Darren Wilson was found not guilty.  I’m not surprised.  I actually would’ve been really shocked if the grand jury had decided to indict him for the simple fact that they almost never charge police officers in cases such as this and they really never charge White officers.  Not being [openly] cynical, merely reporting a fact of life in these United States: our police officers are underpaid, under-trained, and overworked, but we don’t let them get charged with murder.  Ferguson went wild.  Fires were set, stores were looted, police made their semi-ominous appearance in riot gear, the streets were packed with angry and upset people.  However, most importantly, a mother felt crushed that the death of her son would go unpunished.

Now let me inject this: I don’t know enough about the Ferguson Incident/Michael Brown shooting to have a well-thought out, decisive opinion on the matter.  I have worked really hard to stay out of it with my friends and family.  I neither approve nor disapprove of the actions that have been taken in Ferguson, Missouri as a result of this incident and the loss of life.  I stand on the sidelines, watching these events with a heavy heart and a hope that we can learn from this.

And I wish I could stop there, because my post isn’t about Darren Wilson/Michael Brown.  This post is about me.

I’m afraid.  I am scared of many things in this world (spiders, sickness, and failure among them), but I am usually afraid for me.   Even if its about my parents, like when my mother was in and out the ER a couple of years ago and we still don’t know why, it’s ultimately selfish.  It’s how the tragedy will affect me, my family, my world.  But now, it’s a deeper, primal fear that I am not really equipped to deal with at this time in my life and there is nothing I can do to lessen it.

I am terrified for my son.

He doesn’t even exist.  I’m not in a place to raise anyone but me at the moment.  He is at least 5 years away from conception, and I’m terrified for him.  Because no matter what race his father is, no matter how much money I/we make, how he is educated, where he is raised, the fact remains that he will be a Black man in America.  And that terrifies me.

I realize that this seems strange.  I just got done stating that this wasn’t about Michael Brown.  But the fact remains that it is hard to be a Black man in this country, and I am scared for my baby before he is even a possibility.  Look, I’m not blind to the faults and problems within my community.  My sister is right, black-on-black crime is such a bigger problem than police brutality yet we’re up in arms when we feel that someone else has hurt us.  Like most forms of abuse, you are much more likely to be hurt by the ones you know and see and are the same color as than a stranger.  And that’s why I’m afraid.

While I don’t have an opinion on the Darren Wilson/Michael Brown case and while I have never had anything but helpful, courteous service from police officers, I am not naive about the relationship between the police and the Black community.  But I’m a woman.  When I had a flat at night in the suburbs, where you have to be careful DWB at high noon, when a police officer saw a car at an empty gas station and a strange Black person peering through the windows for a clerk, when he asked what was happening, I whirled around, flashed a smile, and clutching my coat around my curves, proclaimed that I was so happy to see him because I needed quarters for the air pump and the gas station that I thought was manned was actually closed.  At which time he shut off the flashlight that had moved to my face, got out of his car, and offered to escort me to 7/11.  Do I think that would have gone differently if instead of being female, I had been male?  Hell yes.  And I’m not a small girl.  If a 6 foot, statuesque Black man had turned around and said that he was looking for the clerk cause he needed some change, there would have been some friction.  And that’s the problem.  I will have to teach my son not to be afraid of cops, but to always be actively non-threatening to a population that will often view him as thus.  No matter how educated he is or what his reasons may be, I will have to teach him a whole set of rules that he will have to follow or risk the grave consequences.

I will have to teach him to not antagonize his fellow brothas if he doesn’t know them well enough.  I will have to make sure that he doesn’t go out at night in dark colors that make him look like a suspect.  I will have to drill into him to never run down the street if not in obvious running clothes after the age of 10, and that he should probably find a closed track or treadmill to be safe.  I will have to teach him how to make sure that his footsteps are heard so that he won’t inadvertently sneak up on someone.  And I will have to comfort him and prepare him for the shock, surprise, assumptions, and fear that he will inevitably eventually encounter, from members of other races and his own.  For not getting angry when a woman clutches her purse when she sees him.  For being amused and not insulted when people think he’s in college because he plays a sport and not for a career (for any son of mine WILL go to college and earn a good education through academia, even if he might also be on the basketball team).  For forgiving people like me, who will judge him against their will.

Because I have.  I do.  And it is a horrible thing, that at 25, I am afraid that my eventual son will face some of the shame I carry.  How I froze when a Black man all in black ran toward me, and the anger I felt towards myself when his valet uniform was revealed and he plucked keys from the person standing behind me.  The way I clutched my backpack tighter on campus when a Black male student with his scarf covering half of his face walked toward me a few weeks ago during an especially vicious MI cold spell and stopped as we passed to compliment my dreads.

I am afraid that he will be treated the way Black men in my life have already been treated.  I am afraid that he will be arrested for driving erratically within his lane like my father.  I am afraid he will be ticketed for loitering while sitting on a bench outside his apartment like my cousin.  I am afraid he will have a gun drawn on him by cops while reaching for his wallet like my boyfriend.  And I am afraid that I will be a heartbroken mother like Sabrina Fulton, Sam Rice, Wanda Johnson, Alice Faye Williams, and so many others.  I am afraid of the pressures he will face, of the judgments made concerning him before knowing him, of the struggle he must overcome.  I am afraid of him being afraid to ask for help, I am afraid of him befriending those who might lead him down a bad path, I am afraid of him succumbing to the stereotypes and I am afraid of being so scared that I separate him from the community that could help and hinder him, but a community that he will need nonetheless.

I am terrified for my son.

But Without Snacktime

Hello blog readers! If I have any followers, I applaud you; y’all are some loyal sons-of-a-gun because I haven’t posted anything since before my birthday in July. Sorry… But I’m back now! (sidenote: No, I’m not really.) Look, I’m a college student okay? I am writing this while I’m supposed to be studying *You see the theme? Posts when I shouldn’t be posting?* for my Psychology of Women exam but I have been in the library–not at school, just in the library–for going on eight hours now and I’m pretty positive I’ve hit my saturation point. One more chapter to read, and frack it, I’m going home and probably picking up chicken wings on my way there because I have had a PopTart and a cookie to eat today and I’ll probably start gnawing on my Kindle soon because it looks like a delicious big blue sandwich and now I’m hungrier and off topic. What I was going for was the fact that I’m a graduating senior *yay! I SAID “YAY” FOR ME INTERNET!* and I’m taking a number of classes that keep me quite married to my laptop/backpack and getting constantly bombarded with advice THAT WOULD HAVE BEEN HELPFUL 2 YEARS AGO about what to do and expect when I graduate and how I’m never going to make enough money to survive AND pay Sallie Mae back and how I really should have majored in business or been smarter and pursued an engineering degree like my sister wanted me to. And I didn’t even spell engineering right. *bangs head on desk, effect somewhat lessened by sheer volume of dreadlocs* But hey, its all good because that brings me right to this post’s point: how being a senior in college, and probably high school, is like being 7 again.

Now I know what you all (what, I have like 3 readers twice a month?) are thinking. “Musique23, you’ve been in the library too long and the stress of learning about modern sexism has broken you.” Well you’re wrong, 3 readers! Actually, you may be right, I am quite overstudied at the moment… But hear me out anyway. The question that I by far hear the most is, “So what do you want to do after you graduate?” Seriously, my top heard phrases these days are “Hello,” “How are you,” “What did you do this weekend,” and “So what are your plans after graduation?” In all actuality, I have no idea. Psychology graduate school is NOT going to happen (we won’t talk about my dreams of being a music or sex therapist went so wrong. Also, that combo would have been AWESOME!). In an ideal world, I think I’d like to be an editor: read books all day, correct them of their grammatical mistakes (seriously, whomevers’ jobs those are: you are slipping), send notes back to the authors about changes and either recommend or reject them from publishing. I would get paid to read and drink hot chocolate in baggy shirts! I’m actually calling this plan D, not because I have to go through my other options first, but because I don’t really know how to get to that point. At all. Will I need another BA, this one in English? *I would totally be willing to do that.* In a practical world, I’ll apply for a job with the UAW and also put my feelers out in the city I hope to move to, but I have no concrete plans. And that isn’t the point of this post! Quick, ignore the last 10 lines so I can get back to my glib point!

See, the thing about being asked what I’m going to do after college EVERY 5 MUTHA FRACKING MINUTES is that it triggered a memory in the deep reaches of my brain. (I don’t know what they’re called, if I were good at biology I would probably be pursuing a Bachelor of Science instead of a Bachelor of Arts and probably wouldn’t have this issue cause I’d still be on my failed-because-frack-biology-that’s-why premed track.) When I was just a wee lassie, EVERYONE asked me one question: What do you want to be when you grow up? Teachers, my sister, family members, friends of my parents, other kids; you name them, they asked it. I think I got asked that question at least once a month. I had a lot of potential future occupations over the years. This is what I remember, in as close of order as I recall: Ballet dancer, stripper (look, I just knew they always were portrayed as having singles [for the vending machine] and they seemed kind of magical and powerful. Why can’t I write/study about THAT in my Psych of Women class?!), astronaut, President, scientist who would discover the cure for cancer, Broadway actress, opera singer, psychiatrist, musical therapist, sex therapist, UU minister, and finally, currently, someone who was done with school and had a full time job and her own insurance. (And possible future senator: it’s just an idea I throw around my mind like every other day.) (And also a writer. I need more followers so I can accurately judge my potential/talent.)

When you’re seven and you’ve just mastered the tying your own shoes thing, the world is your oyster. You don’t even know what oysters are or what that expression means and its still your oyster! And, in theory, that’s the situation when you’re finishing up in school. When I was 17 and applying for colleges, I had no idea what was going to happen in my future, but I knew it was going to be great and I was going to crush it! Oh, to be 17 and full of spunk again! *Dirty joke registered and deleted with the comment “But some of my friends…” left for inappropriate chuckles* And to be honest, I needed some of it. *SOME of it, life; I think I’m strong enough now, thanks, you can stop throwing stuff that could kill me …* Learned some life lessons, sun rose again when I thought my life was over, grew as a person, met some cool people, sang a lot of karaoke. (Learned the signs that the guy you’re dating also likes guys! Undervalued but still important.)

And now I’m at that point again. May 2015, unless I seriously frack up (in which case you all will never hear from me again because my mother has honestly threatened to kill me if I don’t graduate by the end of the year), I will walk across the commencement stage and be done with my academic journey. *For now. I fully intend on getting a Masters and hopefully a PhD someday.* Once again, I’m at a point in my life when I can try to decide what I want to be when I grow up. And I find it flipping hilarious! *Whoops, you thought I was gonna be all serious! I have to keep you on your toes internet, keep you guessing! …and I’ll [probably] be serious later, as is my style.* 18 years later, and I’m still getting asked what I want to be when I grow up! If I didn’t know when I was 7, why would I know when I’m 25?! Sometimes, I wish the world were like “Futurama” and I could have an assessment that let me know what I would honestly be best and happiest working as. Then again, that hand chip piercer thingy looked quite painful and I already have enough holes as is… *In my EARS you hentai! Three piercings in my EARS!*

Because you see, I really, honestly have absolutely NO IDEA what I want to be when I grow up. *And don’t give me that mess about how no one really knows, parents/sister and boyfriend! All of you are employed/retired and have at least your first secondary edumacation degrees already!* Honestly, part of me wants to drive a truck across country, because why the hell not? Careers discussed by my psychology advisors, aka the people who have been out in the real world with their undergraduate psych degrees and now what my prospects realistically are: customer service advisor, waiter, retail manager, hospital administrator, and graduate student. I kid you not, they don’t even know! One of the leading factors in me choosing psychology as a major was that I didn’t want to sit in a cubicle all day. Now, I honestly don’t care. I, Musique23, have absolutely no idea what/who I want to be as an adult. And it stresses me out. Until it doesn’t. See, I tend to get a little tunnel-visiony about the future. I skip right over the class tomorrow and stress that I won’t find a nice guy to marry in Philadelphia. Jump over the MEAL I SHOULD BE EATING RIGHT THIS VERY SECOND and right into how am I going to save up money for retirement. One of my biggest obstacles is focusing on the present. And I am determined to do that. I don’t know what I want to be when I grow up, and I don’t care right now! All I can do is worry about my here and now. Whether or not I find a job in Philly is out of my hands at the moment. (However, if any of my readers know of any upcoming jobs for recent college graduates with psychology degrees, absolutely no real work experience other than movie ushering/condiment standing, and a starting salary of six figures, please feel free to leave a comment. And a moving stipend. Philly is far and my car is old…) I am going to retreat into the innocence of Musique of old, and believe that it will all work out as I munch on Doritos. *No, seriously, they had a sale on Doritos at Kroger’s. And it brings my title back into play so roll with it!*

Because push come to shove, stripping really is still an option.

Feliz Cumpleaños

I have a birthday coming up. Musique23 turns 25 in less than 2 weeks! A quarter of a century, I have been on this planet, breathing its air and hopefully contributing to its existence… That’s kind of heavy. I may need to take a minute…

And I’m back, since this is a blog and not in real time (thank heavens, or the few post I have so far would have sometimes taken y’all months to read, fully completed and edited) and you only see what I want you to see and I feel that the “…” properly portrayed my angst at the time.

I am a Leo. A lady lion. Also know as a lioness. Because that is the proper title for a lady lion. Making my second sentence unnecessary. Anyway… As A Leo, I am supposedly feisty and fiery and fierce and apparently a lot of positive f words. I’m also passionate and loyal. I am a fire sign. I am Hestia. There are those who know who I actually am, behind (actually, in front of) the booty-less-ness. THEY WILL GIVE ME PRESENTS. Everybody else just knows me from my picture and I hope (please God) that no one has become so taken with my blog that they’ve hunted my actual identity down, because what’s the point of hiding behind a made-up persona on the internet if people actually know you? Even though I would be flattered that my writing moved you that much and it might cement my interest in pursuing a MFA in Creative Writing which my family often tell me I should be doing. (Keep it together girl, there was a point to this post!)

As I inch ever closer to this milestone birthday, I have decided to stay [mostly] positive. I had a bad birthday last year. I was going to celebrate it and be happy but then my mother kind of told me that I hadn’t done much with my life to celebrate and then I was all depressed and she acted surprised which made me mad and I like to hold grudges which is hard to do when you’re parents still mostly support you and require regular check-ins to make sure you’re still alive… This birthday, I shall be happy! True, I may not be in the place in my life that I originally envisioned when I started high school or college, but hey, I have no babies, I haven’t been arrested, and good books are still being written every day. Life could be worse.

However, a rosy post gushing about all the Snow White-esq things that make my life tolerable would be beyond boring to read and write, so I’m going to take a honest look at those things that both made me happy and sad as I approach the end of my first quarter century.

  1. CON: I haven’t really started my life yet.   No job/career, no apartment/residence of my own.  Still kind of in limbo here…
  2. PRO: This is the last birthday I’ll spend as an undergrad in college because I GRADUATE IN MAY!
  3. PRO: I have travelled quite a bit.  Four continents, ten countries.
  4. CON: I don’t have a real resume.  About four months working in a movie theater in my twenties, that’s all I got.
  5. CON: I didn’t have a semester abroad.
  6. PRO: I have a pretty good relationship with my family.
  7. PRO: I don’t have any mortal enemies. Except Paris Hilton.  She just irks me.  But I’m 99.99% positive that hatred is one way.  Unless you want to start something?!
  8. PRO: Have I mentioned that there are good books to read and how happy this makes me in general?
  9. CON: I don’t think I’m going to be able to pledge this sorority that I’ve wanted to since I was little while in college.  And it’s much more expensive doing it via grad chapter.  And my mother was going to pay if I did it while in college.
  10. CON: I have no money.  None.  That sucks so much.
  11. PRO: I have quality friends who make me happy.
  12. PRO: I have an awesome boyfriend who makes me happy.
  13. PRO: I have big boobs.  Is it altruistic and helpful to the world in general? No.  But I’m tall and I have feet that it’s hard to find shoes, especially cute ones, for, and it helps that I have pretty awesome melons to cope with all that.
  14. PRO and CON: I hail from Detroit.  (This is a post in and of itself; I’ll get there eventually, I promise.)
  15. PRO: My music taste is superb.
  16. CON: My sister doesn’t live in the same city or state as me and in less than 2 months, she’ll be moving farther away after she gets married and leaves me as the only LAST NAME OMITTED FOR SECURITY REASONS and I’ll be a fifth wheel in my immediate family.
  17. PRO: I have an awesome older sister
  18. PRO: I never truly went hungry.  I came from a family of not modest means and that afforded me opportunities that have shaped me into the woman I am.
  19. CON: I really worry that I’m not going to be able to provide that experience for my own kids.
  20. PRO, and I’m going to continue with PROs from here on out:  I honestly consider myself in the top 90% of readers in the world.
  21. PRO:I have a wonderful voice (that I should probably take more lessons for).
  22. PRO: I took 10 years of piano and I loved it and my teacher was one of the nicest piano teachers in the land of Michigan.
  23. PRO: For my last piano recital/competition, I beat this one student who won 1st place EVERY YEAR and even had his own students and I realize that it shouldn’t really matter, but I still feel pretty damn good about that over 5 years later.
  24. PRO: I have awesome style.  Not for a big girl, not for a Black girl; I have awesome style in general.
  25. PRO: My future, despite all my worrying, is still pretty damn bright.

And thusly, I greet 25 with open and honest arms.

Smarty Pants

I was watching some show or movie and the main female lead (*cough* White! *cough*) was lamenting on how limiting it is to be smart and how she wishes that she had been able to blend in more and other such bullshit. I think she was wrong. I think the character was actually supposed to be a simpleton. This is a recurring theme in a lot of shows/movies/memes though, and it confuses me. I don’t know if it’s because I’m Black and our community, in general, doesn’t have that same hang up with peer pressure that the White community does, but I have never understood that. You think it’s somehow desirable to not figure things out, to be perpetually confused and behind the 8 ball? Are you sure you’re smart, cause that is one of the most stupid things I’ve heard all day. Yet again and again, in books and movies and television shows, it is implied that to be graced with a lofty intelligence, to put things together a little faster than normal is either a curse or somehow transforms you into a snob of the fancy cheese and obscure references variety.

I have a confession which I hope surprises no one: I, musique23, am smart. I am writing this post in my college library, after getting done with a tutoring session in which I was a tutor. (Side note: I didn’t know I was going to be the tutor, I just sent out a class email about studying for our upcoming exam, but somehow I ended up explaining z scores and, oh well, I really hope I get an A on this test.) Most of it is genetics and luck/upbringing/music. You want your child to develop quicker? Put your baby, once they reach a reasonable age, in front of an instrument. I started playing the piano when I was 8 (I begged for those lessons!) and playing music and learning theory and practicing and learning foreign music phrases from an early age has helped me out so much. I read for fun. (My soul breaks a little every time someone tells me that they just don’t read.) I find European history fascinating and less than a month ago, recited an abbreviated history of Queen Elizabeth and the Windsor family to my friends while we at a buffet at MGM Grand Casino.

I have always been a little sharper than average. I got problems quicker than others in school. Assigned readings in class that were assigned in class over a month would take me a weekend. While my grades have not always reflected my intelligence, I walk down the street and feel pretty damn confident in my cognitive abilities. (Except for science. Me and science; man, we wanted to be friends so badly but we just could never click…) Albert Einstein I am not, and I doubt that I would win even a grand of Jeopardy, but I am smart. And I have had so much fun being smart.

Seriously, it is so much fun being smart! I have never understood why intelligence is often portrayed as some type of burden, the weight of the world on the thinkers’ shoulders. Do you ever see people laughing over inside jokes, looking like they are just having the times of their lives with this knowledge that they share? Do you get jealous? You should. My inside joke is intelligence and it is fracking hilarious.

There are different types of smarts, and I only have some of them. There’s book smart, knowing your way around one’s literary works. There’s trivia smart, learning and hoarding little tidbits of information that you can pull out and show off when needed. Often book smart can lead to trivia smart. (When I was like 14, while on vacation with my family and some friends, we were playing Catchphrase. My mother was trying to get us to guess with “You fill it up and throw it and it explodes… You can make them at home… Often used in revolution/rebellions…” I screamed out “Molotov cocktail!” and our team got the point. Immediately afterwards, she turned to me and asked how did I know that. I shrugged, I’d learned it reading a book. (Also, I just looked up Molotov cocktail in order to determine how to spell it right, so if the NSA is now monitoring my blog and life, worry not! If I’m gonna take over the government, then world, you won’t see it coming…)) There are street smarts, which I am gradually acquiring. There are language smarts and mathematical smarts and so many more. And all of them grant you access to this awesome club of not only knowing what the hell you’re talking about, but into the lingo, quirks, and perks of not only your brand of intelligence, but the intelligent world.

Somehow, there’s gotten to be this stigma about being smart, as if it’s something to be ashamed of or something that you bear with dignity. Fuck that! Stupidity, that’s a burden. Illiteracy, that’s a weight on your shoulder. Being smart? Not only a passport you can cultivate, is an entry into a world of fun. Personally, I blame reality TV. I really wanted to give y’all an example, but I don’t watch enough reality TV to give one. (Except for Total Divas. I love me some Total Divas. But the Divas are some smart ladies.)

You’ve seen those clips of the smart ass kids, right? If you honestly answered no to my question, I don’t even know how you found my blog; seriously, stop reading Black Without Back and go to YouTube this very second. I was kind of one of those kids. I remember this one vocabulary assignment in English and we had two write 2 sentences, one with the word given and another with one of its synonyms. Now that I think about it, that sounds like a kind of weird assignment… Anyways, I don’t remember what the vocab word was but I remember that one of the synonyms was gay. And I, smart aleck musique23, put together this wonderful sentence of “The Teletubbies are a popular television show and the gay Tinkie Winkie is a fan favorite.” My mother looked over my homework and found this sentence. She looked up at me and lifted an eyebrow. I, knowing EXACTLY why I was being surveyed, blinked at her as honestly as possible and asked, “What? The Teletubbies are a kid’s program; they are often happy and jolly!” She just shook her head. “Change it, smarty pants,” she finally said, smiling at he youngest child’s brilliant wit.

You think a child bemoaning about his/her (usually a her. WHY LADIES!?! It took us centuries to be thought of with regards to our brains! Don’t backslide, for the love of God!) high intelligence would have taken the perverse pleasure in that sentence that I did? Nope! And I gotta tell you, it was fun… So much fun that over a decade later, I still think of the occasion and smile.

I wrote this post not just for the smarty pants out there, big and small, male and female (and in between; musique23 respects and supports the gender choices of all: rights for everyone!), I wrote this post for me too. Because there have been times when I’ve supplied an answer in class before anyone else or even corrected the instructor and I’ve been embarrassed. And later, while reviewing my day (as most self-conscious and neurotic musiques are wont to do) I get mad at myself. I should never feel the need to apologize for being smart. I should never hold back on my brain. You should bring your education game up so that I don’t have to slow down! (Nope, took it too far…) One of the reasons that I love my beau as much is that he’s smart as me. You don’t know what an enlightened sexy man looks like until you have an in-depth conversation about how the Ishvalans in “Full Metal Alchemist” are obviously representative of Muslims but at the same time are the socio-political equivalents of the Jewish people in Europe during the second World War and segue that into a conversation about the Israeli-Palestine debacle. Book, trivia, and general educational conversation, all wrapped up in my own personal 6’4″ package? Shivers!

So, my closing thought, before I go on another tangent and therefore off-topic again: Be smart. Be proud. Be proud of being smart. Because the alternative is being dumb. And even though I don’t know what that’s like, I’m guessing it sucks.