From the category archives:

Thoughts and Debacles

Ebonics, and other things.

by Maria on March 15, 2010

in Thoughts and Debacles

Yesterday, I started to comment on my friend Cecily’s post but it ended up being a post in and of itself, so I figured it’d be best to make a post of it here.* She wrote about conversations she had with ladies in her neighborhood, where they planned to school their children, and how the fact that most of the children at the school were African American tied into their decisions. One woman she talked to didn’t want her child to go to their local elementary because she didn’t want him to learn ‘Ebonics’. Immediately after reading, I didn’t even really know what to say, but I wanted to comment. I felt that maybe, being a minority and having children that were mixed, and one child in particular that has been mistaken for fully white, I had a different perspective.

Ebonics is, inherently, a racist term. It implies that black (ie., “ebony”) people speak in a dialect so broken and incomprehensible that it needs to be separated from the rest of the English language and learned. It may not have been coined negatively, but regardless, it is a sweeping generalization that paints black people as uneducated and incapable of understand or speaking as  “good as the white folks do.” You don’t have to be a politically correct über-liberal to see how that’s a bad thing.

For her to assume that the children at that school all speak that way is prejudicial, and unless she plans to shield her child from all forms of entertainment, such as hip hop and Quentin Tarantino movies to name some off the top of my head, for the rest of his life, he’s going to learn it, at least some semblances of it, whether she likes it or not. And what’s wrong with that, really?

I’m not dense enough to suggest that many of the black people I know aren’t more likely to say “Y’all niggas done lost yo damn minds, fah real doh” (spoken exactly as I typed it) rather than “you guys are insane, seriously” but so what? As long as these same people know the correct way to say what’s on their minds, and when to use that wonderful, wonderful thing called code-switching, what’s the problem? I don’t speak that way. I used to, when I was younger, but now, I don’t really bother with it, although if you smack me in the middle of a group of black people, such as my cousins on my grandfather’s side,  after a while I’ll fall back into it. Just like if I spend too much time with my grandparents or my boyfriend, every little bit of Southern in the way I speak will be exacerbated too. Still, being as I normally don’t talk like that, I find it seriously offensive that if she saw me entering a school, maybe with a little boy or girl that was my skin tone, she’d assume that I did. Just the way that I’m sure people here in the South see my tattoos and piercings and wrongly assume I’m a bitch with a long criminal record. That – the assumption based on appearances – is what’s prejudicial here.

I won’t call her racist, because I’m very big on semantics, and there is an astounding difference between racism (ie., hating someone) and prejudice (ie., generalizing or having preconceived notions and opinions) in my opinion.  For a popular example of the difference  I consider between the two words, look at Ms. Morello from the show Everybody Hates Chris (an all around brilliant show). She frequently assumes Chris’ mother is a crackhead, his father is absent, he has a dozen brothers and sisters, and that he eats ribs and pig’s feet, but she doesn’t hate Chris or treat him unkindly or unfairly. She’s not racist, she’s prejudiced. I believe that White Privilege allows the average white person to believe things and feel things about other races that implicitly affect their view of the world, whether they are aware or have ill feelings or not.

The lady Cecily was talking with may not have any idea that what she said was offensive, although I strongly doubt that. Why? Because I don’t believe she would have used that term or even brought up the race:school thing in the discussion had Cecily been a bit more brown, but she MAY be sheltered. Which, to me, says something else about her. Cecily lives in Philadelphia, right? There’s no way she could have had so little interaction with black people that she not realize that term was offensive unless she was almost purposefully avoiding it. “It” being interaction with black people.

I worry about how parents like this, and the children who ultimately learn from them, will affect my children. Bella has a slight concept of color, and she calls herself pink and me brown, like Cecily’s daughter Tori does. For a while, she was seriously obsessed with the differences and somewhere along the way she learned that being pink was better than being brown. I don’t profess to be color blind – no one is, and if you are, you’re doing yourself and the world around you a disservice by ignoring the differences between the races – but a child should never get the impression that anyone is less than because of their skin. Which I guarantee you the child of that woman who doesn’t want him to ‘learn Ebonics’ is going to learn, listening to the conversations of his parents. It’s not too much of a stretch to think that eventually (whether coaxed or no) the child will learn to believe that since a school full of black people is inferior to a school full of white people, the same must be true as a rule for the general population. It is very possible for his parents and himself to be almost completely unaware of such a belief, too.

Hence, the perpetuation of white privilege in America, repeatedly passed down, even unknowingly.

I am hoping that no matter how black or white or Hispanic my daughters end up looking, or how gay or straight or bisexual they are, or how Christian or Muslim or Atheist they decide is right for them, that they are always not only tolerant and aware of the differences between them and others, but that they welcome situations that put them outside of their ‘comfort zones’, whatever those may be. How else are they supposed to grow or develop into tolerant individuals? I would hate for anything that I do, or anything that they pick up from other, more close minded people, to inhibit their ability to accept the world around them in a complete way.

Family
*Whoa. This was long. See why it needed to be its own post?!

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Listening to: Toto – Africa

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My turn.

by Maria on November 8, 2009

in Thoughts and Debacles

I don’t really spend money on material possessions for myself, unless you count what I spend on t-shirts. (I don’t.) I spend it on them. That’s how it’s been since Bella was born pretty much. Of course I’ve bought myself things over the years, but compared to what they get? I’m like a hobo. I won’t think twice about dropping a large amount on my daughters, but for me? Rare.

That is going to change. I’ve almost decided that within the next few months, after I pay off my loan shark, I’m going to buy myself something nice. I deserve it.  It might not happen, I frequently buckle when I’m about to press the ’submit order’ button if it’s not something for my munchkins and I don’t doubt that it’ll take me some time to work up the nerve to make this purchase, but I know that I want it. And I have ideas!

4065029309 8caf302727 My turn.

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An iMac. My laptop has been giving me a lot of trouble lately, and while I love him, he needs to either be replaced or he needs to be used less. He shuts himself down at inopportune times, he runs super hot, he’s just one malfunction away from me losing everything on him (and yet I still haven’t backed up, jeeze). Since just about all new computers now come equipped with Windows 7, it seems to be a good time to make the switch to Apple, if I’m going to do it. I do want another laptop, but it’s a not a dire necessity, and I miss having a large display. I can postpone that, especially if I keep Patchouli (that’s my laptop’s name).

I really love the iMac’s all in one design and the wireless keyboard and mouse. I love the minimalistic design and the clean lines of it. I’m a girl and I like pretty things, and I’ve yet to see a computer as aesthetically pleasing to me. I love the huge-mun-gus display. I’ve polled all the people I know and a good 90% that have experience with both PCs and Macs say Mac. I’ve talked a lot to the photographers I know and every single one of them has said a Mac is best for photo processing and workflow, and if they don’t have one, they really want one.

I have reservations about getting one, many of the just regular PC to Mac things that everyone has such as right clicking, the cost of the systems compared to that of PCs and a couple of other things, but yeah. This is one of my ideas.

2168822100 781f503a89 My turn.

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A Nikon D300. I currently have a d40 (the smaller camera on the right) and it’s great, but I’m really limited. I feel constrained, I’ll blow up a photo that I know could have been much clearer, much crisper and I know that it’s not necessarily me but it’s the camera. The D300 is not a step up. It’s like…6 steps up. It’s closer to the D3X, which is Nikon’s top of the line SLR for pros, than it is to the d40, which is the very bottom rung. I love my current camera, but as I explore Flickr and JPG and a bunch of photography blogs and sites, I see that my initial reason for getting a DSLR in the first place (to capture really good memories of my daughters) would be better served with a better camera, better lenses, better everything.

Now there are in between cameras and I’ve looked at those as well, but I don’t think that’s what I’d want to do, especially since my hope for the distant future is to own one of those D3s. I would rather be closer to the top than the bottom, get a feel for the functions, the weight, the everything, so that when I do accomplish that absolute goal, I feel like I don’t have as steep a learning curve. And, if I ever did decide to start *gasp* doing this photography thing fore real for real, I would already have a camera capable. A great starter. Also, it takes pictures like this. And this. And this. And oh, this. I want to take pictures like that. I believe I could, if I really devoted the $ to it. And I don’t mind purchasing a refurbished from Nikon because I know they cover their refurbs under the same warranties as new, and their customer service on my current (purchased new) camera has always been excellent. I’d also consider a used if it was under warranty as well, or had one available for purchase. And I know that it’s the lenses that make the shots, and that rack up the bills.

xbox360 hdtv dvdrecorder rszd My turn.

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A new television. I didn’t have a television in my room for quite a while, and I was fine with that. I don’t really watch tv because I’ve been spoiled by too much DVR and not having it here makes it so that I only watch my shows on the internet. Then my grandfather bought a small television for the girls, and now we have that. And too many times am I looking at something on this itty bitty screen and wishing it were larger, clearer, better. If I get a TV, I’ll be getting a 32″ flat screen. It’s the perfect size for my room – the length of space between were I normally would be watching from and it’s location and if I move, it would be fine for a living room display too, short term.

If I get a television, of course I will get a blu ray player and what not – that’s a given. But, I will get an XBox 360 Elite at the same time and my concern with that is the future time/$$ suck. I know how I am with video games. I get obsessed. I start one and I will. not. stop. until I’ve completed it or entirely given up (which is rare). I’ll spend hours and hours researching upcoming games, reading up on and reviewing current ones. I’ll spend too much $$ that I don’t have on new purchases. I’ll just…it’ll be ugly if I haven’t gotten any better at maintaining my composure over it in the last 5 years. Especially with XBox Live and the fact that I already know like 20 people that have texted/twittered/emailed me their usernames so that I can add them immediately when I procure my system. I mean, I could prevent the $$ suck by just pirating the games and movies that I don’t want to pay for, but the time? Yeah, unlike the past, I have responsibilities that cannot be postponed so that I can finish a level. If I don’t have a handle on that, it’s not a good idea.

Also, with the prior ideas, I can justify the expense. I need a computer for school, for writing, for play. I have to have a reliable computer, it’s just not optional. I could potentially use the camera to generate income, so it could be seen as an investment, and the memories I’d capture – that I already capture – truly are priceless. With the entertainment system, it’s basically just “I want it.” Although, it is the cheapest of all the options.

42572743 9fb8ce5864 My turn.

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New York City. Not really material, nor is it optional like the things above. I’m going for BlogHer ‘10 next August. I would have preferred to go to Comic-Con, but today I discovered that the 4-Day passes were not already on sale, but are sold out. So yeah, 2011 it is, which will be good anyway since The Avengers is still looking at a summer 2012 release and I know the Comic-Con previews and panels that year will be SO FUCKING GOOD.

I could go on and pay for the plane ticket and hotel stay, and put aside whatever spending money, instead of doing what I did last year and procrastinating on saving for so long that I almost didn’t make it. My issue with this is that I promised the girls that the next time I got on a plane, they’d be going with me. And I don’t see a trip (that requires a flight) in my budget between now and then. I could circumvent breaking this promise (it would be my first broken promise and also the first lie I’ve told them) by driving up. I’ve taken that drive before, it wouldn’t be a big deal. But parking at a lot for a week in NYC? No. Thanks. Yes, I want to stay for a week. I stayed in Chicago for a week this year, not my plan and it was hard the first couple of days but I came back home so happy and refreshed that I knew I not only wanted to make it an annual thing, but I needed to.

I suppose I could watch for cheap Jet Blue flights to somewhere inexpensive, and close, between now and then and take the girls on the first one that I was able to. I don’t know. I’d have to come up with something.

I have other ideas as well, but I’m tired of typing now.

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  1. I am like a bomb when I’m angry. Cut the right wire and almost instantly, everything is fine. Cut the wrong one and just as instantly, shit will blow up. Also, sometimes there’s more than one wire. I’m pretty easy to diffuse, but you have to take care and basically know exactly what you’re doing because if you just wing it, there’s a hell of a price to pay for making it any worse.
  2. I am made up almost entirely of contradictions. It stems from being overly introspective. I’m constantly analyzing myself and my decisions. Pair this with a penchant for honesty and the tendency to reveal more information than needed and you get someone that is seemingly unable to make up their mind. I believe that all it really is that I am just as likely to take you with me on my journey of self realization and personal responsibility as I am to go on it alone, inside.
  3. So, I change my mind quite often.
  4. I do not like to be wrong, but I’m usually quite fine with admitting I wasn’t right.
  5. I hate when people try to figure me out. It’s impossible.
  6. I hate it even more when people find out that you have some semblance of a diagnosable mental condition and begin to completely discredit all of your feelings and actions that they don’t approve of or understand by saying that it’s the crazy in you, not really you.
  7. I will trust almost anyone with my life but I trust no one with my bare secrets.
  8. I take my life and health for granted because I’m not afraid of dying.
  9. I am just as easy to please as I am hard to.
  10. I believe I feel more intensely than other people because fewer things cause me to actually feel anything. My emotion is heavily concentrated.

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by Maria on September 30, 2009

in Thoughts and Debacles

It’s cold in my bedroom. I feel goosebumps plucking their way up my back, giving me shivers. My hair is frizzy, twisted into pigtails over my shoulders, my skin shining under the sun blaring through the window to my right. The room smells bitter and ripe with chemicals as Goobie holds her arms to the sky, fingers taut and separated, careful not to get her fresh black nail polish on anything.

It’s silent in here, I can hear the birds waking outside, and the music of the crickets starting to wane. It’s early, but it’s already been such a great day so far.

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I created a new blog a couple of weeks ago – Why They’re Hot. It’s basically a place for me to lust over hot celebrities. To completely sexually objectify them like I do in my head. Like I believe many of us do. I write under ‘Blissed’, my friend Justine writes them up too and we get a crap load of awesome reader submissions. It’s funny and it’s explicit and all around awesome.

There have been all kinds of things said about it, negative and positive, but one that struck me as funny and sad simultaneously was someone saying that we are ’so un-classy’. They reblogged one of our posts and struck out the lines about sex.

At first I was like “WTF?! Hahaha this person is so crazy – what does she expect? Has she not read our previous posts? They’re insanely explicit – I mean that’s our thing, our little niche!!”

But then I thought about it more and I was like “hmm… I wonder why women discussing their sexual desires is so ‘ un-classy’.” I wonder why it’s not ok, why it’s frowned upon for a chick to talk about masturbating or giving blow jobs or fucking. Why in order to be a lady, in order to get respect, to be considered classy – you have to keep that kind of talk, those thoughts to yourself or between you and your husband. I mean of course there is a time and place but damn.

Women like to fuck, just as much as men do. Women fuck themselves, they fuck each other, they fuck whomever they want – there’s nothing classless about that. There’s definitely nothing un-classy about talking about it.

We’re not in the 40’s anymore folks. We have desires, we have needs and wants and we have just as much right to discuss them frankly as men do.

Talking about sex is not wrong or right, it just is what it is. It’s honesty.

This is not really in defense of the blog, or the post, or how badly I want to fuck Justin Timberlake’s dick off. It’s simply a statement on the fact that in this day and age? Women should be allowed to say they want to ride a man’s face if they want to, without being frowned upon. Because sometimes we do.

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Listening to: Sam Sparro – Cut Me Loose

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