Monthly Archives: May 2018

#YoungPersonTuesday 5.29.18 (part 2)

 

Circling back to my first #youngpersontuesday post, my baby bro @djnel__  back-to-school book bag drive is up and running! Please visit this link( https://instagram.com/p/BjYQZ3YD_A5/ )for more info. #support the youth!!! #youngkingtuesday

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#YoungPersonTuesday 5.29.2018 (part 1)

 

 

This week’s #YoungPersonTuesday is @littlemissflint. This young queen  has dedicated most of her life to making sure the people of Flint have clean water , something that should be a human right. While the Flint water crisis has been known for several years, thousands of Flint citizens are STILL without water. They hype of issue has died down but @littlemissflint has never wavered from her support. Just yesterday, she and others passed out over 135,00 bottles of yesterday in 90 degree heat. Let’s continue to lift this #youngqueen in support and love. Go to her social media pages (fab, twitter, insta) to find out ways to support and donate https://instagram.com/p/BjS63V2A67B/ #youngpersontuesday

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#YoungPersonTuesday 5.22.18

I seem to always be super busy on Tuesdays but I’m going to get better! This late #YoungPersonTuesday post is dedicated to one of my students, Maria Gil. She’s a very dedicated and humble queen who’s trying to better her lives and the lives of those around her. It has been a particularly trying year for her but she’s still here! Her persistence and optimism in the face of constant turmoil is inspiring. She has many causes that are near and dear to her but her favorite one to support is the Lupus foundation. If the spirit moves you, please use  this link and donate to the cause in her name. Let’s lift this #YoungQueen up in love and support #youngqueentuesday #YoungQueenTuesday #YOUNGQUEENTUESDAY #YOUNGPERSONTUESDAY

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#YoungPersonTuesday 5.15.18

 

A late #youngkingtuesday post is dedicated my brother, Scott Baul. Scott has spent years fighting to live and be seen the same way he sees himself. He’s a young, black trans man trying to make space in this world for himself and others like him. He is an upcoming computer programmer , tech guy , and musician destined to do great things in this world. He is still in the process of completing his transition and needs all the support he can get in order to be his true self. If you are interested in supporting him/following him, please visit his top surgery funding page   or his website. Let’s lift him up with support. Please donate and repost!! #youngkingtuesday #transblackboy #blackboy #YoungKingTuesday #YoungPersonTuesday #youngpersontuesday

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#YoungPersonTuesday 5.8.18

Today’s #youngqueentuesday is dedicated to 4 young women who are passionate about helping the homeless. They created their own non-profit (Her Hygiene) and are currently raising funds to provide feminine hygiene products for homeless women. Please read more below and support these YOUNG QUEENS  https://www.gofundme.com/her-hygiene-fundraiser “Her Hygiene.” was founded by four young women: Zana, Kathy, Rachel, and Khadijah, who aspire to advocate for homeless women who do not have access to the necessary feminine products. Our mission is to raise funds or donations to deliver and provide the New York’s homeless woman population with necessary products to ease some of the stress that hygiene often brings to us women” #youngqueentuesday #YoungQueenTuesday#YoungPersonTuesday #youngpersontuesday

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#YoungPersonTuesday Post 5.1.18

My baby bro called me this morning asking for advice for his upcoming book-bag drive in Cleveland. He wants to provide for as many children as possible and he needs donations! If you would like to donate, please comment or DM me. Furthermore, he’s inspired me to start a social media signaling boosting of dopeness. Every Tuesday, I will be highlighting one person (under the age of 25) doing great things in their community whose cause may need more publicity or funding called #YoungKingTuesday/ #YoungQueenTuesday / #YoungPersonTuesday. My network isn’t large but if everyone shared/reposted/retweeted someone, imagine how much impact we could have. So, my first #YoungKingTuesday is dedicated to my brother @djnel__ . He’s an amazing young man, doing great things, looking for any support he can get. Comment below if you’re interested in donating.

#YoungKingTuesday #giving #service #bookbagdrive #youngkingtuesday #YoungPersonTuesday #youngpersontuesday

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Bury me and watch me grow

 

This is one of my favorite sayings and the inspiration for the vine tattoo I have on my back. I like to think of this saying from two different perspectives: overcoming personal struggle and circumstance that almost knocked me down for good ;and waking up, every day, in spite of  the institutional barriers in place that tame and shrink and murder women like me. I am aware of what is up against me, I have seen it work in real time. I felt pains of its collateral damage. But I’m here though. Growing and strong (but only when I want to be). Chipped but never broken. I will live on.

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An Ode To The Crew: My friends are my role models

 

I am privileged to be able to call the following women my friends, scratch that I meant family. These women are my sisters. And while I may have met each of them in different spaces and at different times in my life, we have created a chosen family, one that consists of regularly calling one another out on our bullshit, gassing each other consistently, and maintaining the healing space we’ve created. These are the people I can talk to without even having to say a word, whose memes make me la ugh at inappropriate times. These are women who uplift other women around them, daily.  I am not sure where I would be today without them. On top of being some of the best people I know, they are all out in this trash ass world doing amazing things. They keep me focused and motivate me to be the best versions of myself. They are soon to be doctors (studying Garifuna women and embodied memory) and nurses. They are middle school language and literacy teachers. They are youth advocates and volunteer engagement managers. They are truly what this world needs.  All badasses in their own right. Fearless and free. I truly admire their forms of personal resistance.

 

                 

 

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Urban Ed 75200: A Third University

I had a lot of “ah-ha” moments while reading this piece. Like I said last week, I am ever grateful the education I am receiving because I am still collecting vocabulary words and theories that speak to the things I have experienced and seen. La Paperson’s idea of the Third University is truly revolutionary, not only because it redefines how we view power, education, and representation but, it is also something that is already present. The very space we are in during your class is proof.  This mini book was really validating for me. There have been many moments during my time in higher education that I have felt that something wasn’t right and most of the time, I was made to feel that I was overreacting; but I knew I was not. It is an interesting feeling, not being able to name or identify the violence you face. For the rest of my response, I will talk about my experiences going to a Second World University and working at First World University.

I went to a second university school for my undergrad. It was a small, liberal arts PWI in the middle of the nowhere Pennsylvania. There were obvious instances of microaggressions, blatant discrimination, and even violence. I was lucky enough to have been recruited with a group of students who became my tribe, had advisors who cared for my complete well-being, and was a member of scholarship program guide.The college touted the liberal arts idea of being unique, being of service to our communities, and being inclusive. Yet, the college had policies and priorities that were contradictory of these ideals, especially when it came to the success of marginalized students. This reminds of La Paperson saying that we all have a complex relationship with the colonial perspective because we all are products of it.

While I will speak highly of my alma mater for giving me the space to discover who was I outside of my neighborhood and challenging me to think beyond my expectations, I cannot imagine what I would think if I were to go back now (especially considering my growing vocab). I think back to my last year and I can see what La Paperson was talking about when they said, the decolonial desires can be present in a colonized space. Myself, along with the majority of black, latinx, disabled, and LGTBQ seniors formed what we called “The Coalition”. The upperclassmen, the ones who made it thus far, had seen how the administration had used our faces to promote inclusivity while not providing the necessary support to stay at there, all but pushing black faculty out, not responding to hate crimes on campus, and gutting the “diversity department”. Our first meeting was just a group my friends (it’s important to note that it was a majority of black queer women), complaining about we barely made it to senior year (and not because we couldn’t keep up with academic rigor) while also lamenting the loss of yet another black faculty member. It was really organic, we were all very active, the presidents of diversity/affinity clubs and were connected our other marginalized folk. After our collected our club members and friends, we acted. We staged protests, sit-ins, class walk-outs, and marches. We met with administration but knew we would not be taken seriously, so we started reaching out to trustees. Many of us weren’t too optimistic about the work of “The Coalition” during our time; we knew they were waiting for most of us to graduate so, we trained the freshmen. I am almost five years out of college. One of the original members of “The Coalition” went back for an alumni event. Several students thanked her for our work. There are mandatory classes on cultural inclusivity, more initiatives and support for students of color, and even recruitment has become more honest. I am super proud to have been a part of that but more importantly I am happy knowing that  marginalized students are passing down this idea that their voice is important and necessary. If that is not decolonization in action than I don’t know what is.

I work at a First World University. The institution is a private university in Brooklyn that has awful graduation and retention rates. The administration prides itself on changing the lives of their students but they really only leave many of them with an astounding debt and no degree. When I first started working here, I thought it was me. I thought I was missing something or that maybe I was relying too much on the student perspective. I know better than that now; students tell the truth. The way they are treated is actually quite sick. The university systematically targets poor students, first-generation immigrants, first-generation college students, and other marginalized students knowing that many of them will not be able to graduate. They encourage them to take out financial aid packages that drops off after the second year and when the students go to them trying to figure out how they got into this situation, they are vilified. The school’s interest in expanding and selling property is pushed not to create a better space for the students but to increase the overall revenue of the university. La Paperson’s talks about this when they discusses the academic-industrial complex. The administrators who do care are burnt out because they are the only ones who can provide students with some kind of support. Watching the power dynamics as an outsider (I work for a non-profit that is housed in the campus life office), I see a lot. No one is forthright, the higher ups like to pit faculty and lower level administrators against one another all while the students wander aimlessly.  It has been an interesting and exhausting time here but while I watch, I’m also taking note.

 

CITATIONS:

la paperson. A Third University Is Possible. University of Minnesota Press, 2017.

 

*Note: la paperson is the gender-nonconforming pen name of K. Wayne Yang. I used “they” pronouns when discussing la paperson to respect the author’s identity*

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Urban Ed 75200: University Violence

I enjoyed this week’s reading topic. The idea of higher education/ the academy not being safe is a new found realization that,  after years of working in this field (as an administrator who’d one day like to be a faculty member), is something that took a while for me to unpack. There  are times that I feel drained and insidiously watched in this space; and while I am not a professor yet, I can relate to many of the unwanted feelings this week’s authors discuss. It also served as a warning to stay woke and be mindful on how my body and mind, as a black woman, will be treated and the expectations will be placed. I often say that reading, experiencing new things, and being open to learning have provided me with the vocabulary needed to describe my struggle. I am reminded of that from today’s pieces.

Gumbs’ “The Shape of My Impact” gives me that vocabulary. Black woman, myself included have survived. I appreciate her reminder of the original meaning of the word as something to be associated with more than subsisting (barely making it). Survival is a state of overcoming again and again. It means existing within the realms of a society that constantly wishes to keep you bound and silent. While the author’s inspiration is Audre Lorde’s “Litany For Survival”, the piece also makes me think of Lucille Clifton’s “won’t you celebrate with me”:  …come celebrate/ with me that everyday/something has tried to kill me/and has failed”. I also like this interpretation of surviving because we do not need to compromise our beliefs or passions to do so, like the popular definition of the word suggests. We can survive on our own terms.

I think that Gumbs’ piece and N.H.I. (No Humans Involved: An Open Letter to My Colleagues) essay were good connectors to the reading we chose. The N.H.I. provides great historical context on how we have gotten here, higher education realm, a place that we were once systematically denied space, that now accepts us with a litany of expectations and unrealistic standards. White supremacy is one hell of beast. Only a system built on the dehumanization of Black people could evolve with times and insidiously become more prevalent and damaging over the course of time.

This connected nicely with Heidi Safia Mirza’s “Decolonizing Higher Education: Black Feminism and the Intersectionality Of Race and Gender”. I appreciated her including her own story of struggle in academia, it made the article much more profound. Mirza spends her article ruminating how the intersections of blackness and womanhood can act as a double-edged sword for academics. Our identity sort of pre-determines the type of treatment we get, the type of expectations placed on us , and possibly, the trajectory of  our time in any field. We are the token, the special case, or only the grad expert on race. We do not fall into any other category. Our work must be twice as good because we are being watched. As I read this piece, I thought two different metaphors: higher ed for Black women is a cage that was once small but now big, so big, that we may not even realize the bars are still there. We cannot see the owner but we know he’s watching. Or (using Mirza’s saltwater analogy), we are fish who finally got some water but can’t swim in it because we are freshwater fish in salted waters. The new form of oppression does not involve shutting us out anymore, it’s about letting us in and expecting us to maintain the status quo; to assimilate and forget ourselves in the process. The academy has now weaponized our “difference”. I know I must sound dramatic but I know I am not wrong. I have seen this in the extra labor given to black women, in the treatment of black women who choose not to ascribe to mold the university or department has created for them. I have lost quite a few Black female professors (mentors) because of this updated form of oppression. I have seen the research and work of Black women watered down and tainted because it did not align with “the campus ideals”.  These may seem like small things but over the course of time, double consciousness and the double-edgeness of sword can break you. It is violence. I am grateful that I have seen this in real time because I know what takes to stop it from happening to me. Us just being in these spaces is no longer good enough. If we do not stay vigilant against the violent traditions of academia than I do believe we will become the multicultural puppets they desire. I reject that idea and want to continue expanding my vocabulary so I can be better equipped to fight it.

CITATIONS:

Clifton, Lucille. Book of Light. Copper Canyon Press, 1996.

Gumbs, Alexis Pauline. “The Shape of My Impact.” The Feminist Wire, 29 Oct. 2012, www.thefeministwire.com/2012/10/the-shape-of-my-impact/.

Mirza, Heidi Safia. “Decolonizing Higher Education: Black Feminism and the Intersectionality Of Race and Gender.” Journal of Feminist Scholarship, vol. 7, no. 8, 2015, pp. 1–12.

Wynter, Sylvia. “No Humans Involved: An Open Letter to My Colleagues.” Forum N.H.I: Knowledge of the 21st Century, vol. 1, no. 1, 1994, pp. 42–74.

 

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