I Should Be Asleep.

I should absolutely be asleep right now.

It’s 2am. I never stay up until 2am. 2am is usually when I wake up on my couch or laid out on my bed and go, “Oh, shit, time to go to bed for real.”

But tonight (this morning?), it’s 2am and I’m heating up pizza and watching The Office and feeling reflective and peaceful and a little expectant/anxious. But I am also tired… But I want to eat my pizza. So I figured I’d really dig into this rare moment — where I find myself awake and present and active at 2am — to update this blog I always talk about writing, but never actually write.

I think maybe three people on the Internet read this blog (and honestly, I’m OK with that), so forgive me if y’all aren’t into spiritual or woo-woo shit. But I’m big into spirituality and woo-woo shit. And in this moment, I’m feeling particularly spiritual. Also, reflective. I think it’s because it’s very late/early and I’m very tired and I just spent a good chunk of time writing, which is just as much a part of my spiritual practice as it is my creative or professional practice.

I find it’s easier for me to root myself in my spiritual practice more when (a) I want something, (b) I’m anxious about something, and/or (c) my schedule is more fluid. But also, it’s easier when I feel empowered. And in the last week or so, I’ve been really feeling myself and my power. Somedays, it makes me feel… Scared. Uncomfortable. Frustrated. Humbled. Somedays, it means me feel… Beautiful. Held. Big. Audacious.

This past year, I’ve oscillated a lot between feeling powerful/empowered and disempowered. There’s a lot of reasons for that. Some of them are very obvious (COVID, lockdown, election, racial reckoning) and some of them are less obvious.

For all of it, I’m grateful. Because I am at my best when I am growing and learning and healing and in communion with the world around me.

Anyway… My pizza is ready.

I Want to Have a Difficult Conversation…

I’m making an effort to (a) bring One True Thing back and (b) be even more unapologetically honest and vulnerable than I was before.

I enjoy having frank conversations about race with people. All people. While there’s usually an ease or safety to talking about race with Black people, I also find a lot of value in having these conversations with all of my friends — yes, including my white friends.

At this point in my life (31 years and 8 months old), I only know how to show up in every space and every relationship I’m in as myself. Y’all might get different slightly varying flavors depending on my mood and the context, but the meal is always gonna be the same. So if you’re gonna rock with me, you have to be able to participate in uncomfortable conversations about race, racism, Blackness, white supremacy, all of it. Truly.

For the most part, all of my friends — no matter what their ethnic or racial identities — are able to and seemingly enjoy doing the same. Sometimes, there are disagreements. Sometimes, there are blind spots and assumptions and things to unpack. Sometimes, there’s fervent agreement. Almost all of the time, there is a kind of learning that happens. It’s why I have not yet given up all hope on humanity, on our futures, on the possibility of better, kinder, more just, and more liberated days ahead.

But y’all, the one thing I notice my white friends have a really hard time understanding is how deeply impactful, harmful, and dehumanizing racist microaggressions really are. Seriously. It’s where all liberal white folks’ anti-racism training from June 2020 goes to die. By now, most well-intentioned, left-leaning white people understand that using racist epithets are wrong, that extrajudicial killings of Black and Brown people are wrong, that not trying and convicting those killers are wrong.

What they don’t understand is how moving through the world as a Black (or Indigenous or Asian or Latinx or Middle Eastern or Arab person) person and constantly encountering white people who say and do seemingly small or indirect or subtle things that are rooted in racism and discrimination isn’t just inconvenient for us. (Because we don’t necessarily experience those things are small or indirect or subtle…) Microaggressions harm us. They negatively impact our emotional and mental health, which then also often impacts our physical health as well. They dehumanize us. They make it impossible for us to move through the world with a sense of comfort or safety.

When I’ve explained to friends the racist microaggressions I’ve encountered at work, they do their best to be sympathetic. But they usually go into minimizing or justifying whatever the microaggression is. “Maybe they didn’t mean it that way…” or “Well, do you think it was actually…?” When it happens over and over and over again, it then becomes, “Ugh, I’m sorry. That sounds annoying/frustrating/exhausting…” Yes, but it also harmful, dehumanizing, and a threat to my safety and wellbeing. (Not to mention, the questioning and minimizing of the microaggressions are also… microaggressions.)

In the wake of Meghan Markle’s interview with Oprah, so many of my white friends have engaged in conversations about the Royal Family’s racism and treatment of Meghan — whether with me or on social media. They think what happened to Meghan and her son are terrible. What they don’t understand is… that same shit is happening to their friends everyday. Every person of color I know has experienced microaggressions in the workplace. Especially in Hollywood. The stories are always bad. The wrongdoers and the perpetrators are always protected — by the studios, by the networks, by the agencies. And often, by the very people of color they’ve harmed and victimized. Because we know when we speak up, our careers and livelihoods are on the line — not the people who have hurt us.

Let me clarify: Micgroaggressions aren’t annoying or frustrating. Racism is not a mere inconvenience. Microaggressions, especially when repeated consistently over a long period of time, harm us. They traumatize us. They are a reminder that many white people deep down truly believe that people of color are less deserving of our humanity than they are. We don’t deserve to be treated with compassion, care, or respect. We don’t deserve fair, authentic, and equal representation. Our stories and our lives are not worthy of the same nuance and complexity. Our labor, our talent, our brilliance does not hold the same economic or social value.

And of course, this is true for ALL marginalized and historically underserved communities and identities. But in the ongoing racial reckoning we’ve been having — starting with anti-Black racism last year and the current efforts to combat anti-Asian racism — I’m still waiting for the day the white homies will listen to me and say, “I hear you. I see you. Your experience and your pain is valid. You don’t deserve for these things to be said or done in the first place, let alone excused and minimized. It’s not up to me to decide how long you’re allowed to hurt, or how you should be allowed to cope with it. It’s awful that you must protect the people who have harmed you, in fear of retaliation and more racist behavior. It’s disgraceful that working in this industry often means you are forced to choose between your livelihood and your personhood.”

Hopefully, we’ll get there.

I Made Myself a Home.

It’s been over two months since the last time I blogged.

Oops.

The only things I do consistently are eat and sleep, and even then… There’s a lot of variability. So it would check out that as much as I love One True Thing and blogging, I would fall off. It was inevitable, really. Especially because this summer was A LOT.

But one of the best things I did this summer was make myself a home. Like, a true home. (Well, almost. I didn’t buy a house.)

I moved into a one bedroom apartment — in the same building as one of my best friends. I thought it would be tough to move out of my studio. I really loved my building and my neighborhood. (Los Feliz, I love you always.) And while I had started to feel like the walls were closing in on me during this pandemic, I also loved my old apartment. She had great energy and she allowed me to do a lot of growing and healing.

But there came a point where a bitch needed a bedroom that was not also her living room and kitchen. I wanted a shower I could sit down and cry in. I wanted a space I could invite people to hang out in (lol). And so, when this apartment showed up — an apartment I’d been in before and knew I loved — I knew it truly was meant to be my home.

And it’s been my home for the past seven weeks. My haven. My sanctuary. My temple. Whatever you want to call it — it has been that for me. I know it is my home because I don’t miss my last apartment at all. I did everything I could to leave my old place in gratitude and in love. And I think I succeeded.

And my love and gratitude for this place lives with me here as well.

Maybe I’ll share more soon about all the ways I’ve made this place mine. (I do floral arrangements now!) But for now, it is enough to share: I made myself a home. And I love it.

I Am Exhausted and Sad.

This has been an unrelenting year. And personally, this has been a most unrelenting summer.

I am fine. Today, I do not feel fine, but I am.

I don’t do well with change or uncertainty. And I don’t do well with chaotic or negative energies. I’m sensitive. One may even say an empath, but these days everyone is an empath, so… Let’s just go with sensitive for now. And all this year has been is uncertainty and change and chaos and darkness.

And personally, I’ve shouldered a lot. Resiliency is a beautiful thing, but it doesn’t make the burdens less heavy. And in the past week, I’ve felt the heavy of my resiliency.

Luckily, I think this season of needing to be a Strong Black Woman (TM) is coming to an end soon enough. And I think what will come after it will be restorative and healing and peaceful. As a matter of fact, I’m going to do whatever it takes to ensure it is.

I wish I had more to say, but again — I am exhausted and sad.

Procrastination Station.

I am a procrastinator. Big time.

I have been for as long as I can remember. Growing up, it was my “chore” to unload the dishwasher and/or wash and dry the dishes before my mom came home from work to cook dinner. I would ALWAYS wait until she was like, 30 minutes from home and then rush to finish before she walked through the door. From what I remember, this worked about 75% of the time. But that 25%? Whew, chile. She was not having it.

My older brother never understood why I just didn’t do the dishes right when I came home from school, which was usually HOURS in advance of my mom. To this day, I don’t know why. I just like doing what I want with my time. And then there’s something thrilling about being pressed up against a deadline that kicks my ass into gear and helps me focus.

To this day, I am a last minute typa bitch. Even when I try not to be.

Currently, I’m in the middle of cleaning my apartment — something I meant to do two days ago. It is 9pm. I started at like, 5:30pm. (I’ve been taking breaks. So many breaks.) And I still need to wash dishes, wipe down my kitchen, and clean my shower.

I am cleaning to avoid rewriting my episode. You know what they say about writers…

Sometimes, I wish I could be less of a procrastinator. Sometimes, I am. I’ll turn a script in by 8pm and not at 1am. Or I’ll make it to where I need to be with 10 minutes to spare. Or I’ll send in my rent check before two or three days early, instead of the day before it’s due.

But for the most part, that’s not the case.

I used to believe I couldn’t be successful if I continued to procrastinate. There are very real things in my life that didn’t happen simply because of my habit of waiting until the last minute. But for the most part, I’ve learned to succeed because of my procrastination. I know exactly how much time I need to skate by with a task and still do a praise-worthy job.

Anyways, back to cleaning.

P.S. Yes, I missed two days of One True Thing. And last week’s Poetry Friday. I have no excuse. Just didn’t feel like it. But I’m back.