Meeting Eye-to-Eye

So there was a discussion thread on the post about Jim Golden and his latest lurking that forced me to face a clench I had been avoiding since watching Lace’s latest video on the Chromebooks. The thread referenced a post in Kinfolk Kollective and their community’s response to our participation in the Chromebook initiative. I was initially very excited to head over to KK and see what they were discussing as my perspective was that I had stretched and sacrificed in my budget in order to participate in the Chromebook ask, and additionally that when I looked around in my offline life, I had deemed myself as working harder and doing more than those around me, so I was primed and ready to hear how awesome we had done and what LaSha and her community had to say. Especially since the first time I watched Lace’s Chromebook update, I had an uncomfortable response; I was outright angry, to the point of yelling at my screen. More on that in a bit.

Reading the post in KK checked my violent, cookie-seeking perspective. It was humbling to read, especially the KK community’s responses. This shifted my perspective from how above and beyond I thought I was going to it’s really just being a decent human being. Even if it felt sacrificial, it really wasn’t. It’s not exceptional. It’s bare minimum. When several of KK’s community members referenced that there is no applauding a fish for swimming, this stuck with me. No praise for what you are supposed to be doing anyway. Now to return to Lace’s video, where she herself reminded us that there is more to do, even for the group who participated in the Chromebook ask. This is why I was angry. I didn’t like Lace’s response to my “hard work” and “sacrifice”. And I went looking for the response I thought I deserved, only to be abruptly reminded of what I already knew – I had received the response I deserved, from Lace. I just didn’t want to hear it.

I went back and watched the video again with this new perspective. There was still a clench and uncomfortableness there to be worked through. Less anger but still uncomfortable. As first I thought the uncomfortable feelings were due to the others who didn’t show up. But due to work learned here, part of my praxis is when I see something troublesome in someone else, that’s my cue to turn inward and root it out in myself. While doing this, I returned to the Jim Golden post and saw Lace’s comment about hope vs. entitlement vs. expectations. I went back to the post she was referencing. I found where she talked about determining if we are coming from a place of entitlement or expectation. They each bring a different internal response and external relating with others. Entitlement is exactly what was happening in me the first time I watched Lace’s video. Because I had contributed materially, I felt entitled to accolades and acknowledgments and cookies. My internal emotion was anger at Lace’s response to our efforts in the Chromebook ask – which actually did include all those wonderful things I felt entitled to. But because her response also contained hard truths, this guided my external relating to Lace towards anger and harm. Even though, as she said, she is allowed to say hard truths, my entitlement revealed that I didn’t believe this, and I was still struggling to see eye-to-eye with her. Revealing that I am still rooting out my white supremacist belief about how Black women are allowed to respond to me. This shows how much more growing up I have to do, to come from a place of expectation instead, relating in ways in which both of us have equal footing, a two way street way of relating. And then, beyond entitlement and expectation, there is hope – hope for what might come from this type of relating and regulated internal responses. Hope that I will grow up, become reflexive at relating eye to eye with Lace and the other Black women and women of color in my life, relationships where I am giving back as much as I am receiving and ultimately being less violent and harmful.

I could have stopped there. That reflection could have been labeled by myself and others as good enough. I had downgraded my anger to just uncomfortable, seemingly mitigating the harm I had caused. But I realized that as I watched the video, I literally didn’t want to look Lace in the eye. I still needed to root out this clench. I still hadn’t moved from entitlement to expectation. So I went back and watched the video again. Lace asked, “What is the point in hanging out at a racial justice website if you don’t plan on actively prosecuting your racial justice praxis?” And I realized that I’m still hanging out and lurking at some level. I may be engaging in the space every day but I still sit on some responses for longer than I should, waiting and reading the other comments before risking to post my own thoughts. And entitlement does not take risks. My entitlement is what keeps me back from truly internalizing, because it told me that my financial engagement rendered me a pass for this level of lurking and a pat on the back for doing the bare minimum. It wrongly told me that I was participating as asked, so I was done. Also, because I’m not seeing eye to eye with Lace, and I’m putting myself in the top position of the top/down dynamic, my participation is actually conditional on her compliance to my entitlements and even expectations. And to use Lace’s words, this is straight up supremacy. Much like the larger community participation here, I’m not personally at 100% participation and the participation I do have is conditional on how Lace responds. So I don’t want to hear her remind me that I have more work to do. I would rather rest in my complacency with my racial justice box checked off. I’d rather pat myself on the back and go take a nap. Because I’m a white woman, so I’m tired, even though I haven’t made it 2 blocks into a 26 mile run. I haven’t even stepped out of the driveway really. And also, this is predictable behavior to Lace and the other Black and brown women that are watching. Even in my attempts to hide it, it’s not actually hidden. I had thought that Lace would not know about my violent reaction to her video unless I admitted it. But that’s not true – she knows without me directly saying it. It comes out in ways that I choose not to think about, in what I say and don’t say, how I say it, what I choose to do or don’t choose to do. As Lace has taught me, white folks are so predictable. What made me think I was any different? Oh, that’s right. Entitlement.

Also, even if I were currently participating at 100%, running the full 26 miles, taking into account my late arrival to this work, I am working from a deficit, making up for time lost to willful ignorance. I may have participated in the ask this time, but how many asks have I seen and heard from Black and brown people and I turned my back on them and ignored them because I was unwilling to lay down my own comforts and privileges to even see their humanity? That’s it. The ask is to be seen as a human. To see eye to eye. This realization did stir some new emotions – more clues to dig under and regulate. There is guilt, shame, and regret – of the many harms and deaths I have caused by my unwillingness to unarm.

Again, I could have stopped here. But I had only moved from entitlement to expectation. That’s not the full journey. Now it was time to dig into hope. So I returned to the video again. Yes, again. If you are counting, this is now the 4th time I needed to return. Because I realized that I needed to apologize to Lace for the harm I had caused. So I did apologize but I knew that my nice words meant nothing if I didn’t repair the damage done. I wasn’t sure how to do that, how to even fully name the damage, so back to the video for me where I located the name of my harmful behavior – a fully informed choice to hoard resources. While I may have chosen to participate in this action, there are commitments I have made that I’m not seeing through. There are ways I have learned to mitigate the harm of Black and brown people, but I’m not deeply invested enough to change and uproot my problematic beliefs. I’m violently and willfully choosing my own comfort over Black lives. I have become a well-read racist. I have learned of my weaponry and armor of white supremacy, but I won’t lay them down. I’m clinging to them out of fear. I’m afraid to actually live out the praxis I’m forming here and stop pretending. And for that to be revealed and brought to the light.

As Radha addresses in her Carrot Cake post, I’m resource hoarding – my comfort, my time, my financial resources, my mental blocks. When Lace referenced the financial engagement here as giving a tip, that’s exactly how I’m hoarding my financial resources. I’ve committed 10% of my income to supporting Black women. That’s the socially acceptable minimum for a tip. And I usually tip more than that in a restaurant or delivery setting, so I’m not even tipping Lace in the full amount of my usual praxis. The focus point is not to get stuck on how much percentage I should do now, but focus on why I thought paying a minimum tip to Black women for their work that I’m consuming was enough without paying for the full price of the meal first. And then tipping above and beyond. Because that’s the harm in white people’s actions (including myself) – I throw a small amount of money at what makes me uncomfortable in an attempt to make the discomfort go away. And usually not a significant amount of money. And again with the focus still being on my comfort and maintaining my resources.

This speaks to what Lace said in the video, treating her nourishing meal like fast food. Cheap consumption. So my focus now is the harm that I’m causing by operating from a narrow frame of payment and consumption. Framing minimal financial engagement as enough justification to slosh about and misnaming my consumption as authentic engagement. Thinking I could repair my consumption by throwing money at it when I actually needed to stop consuming and truly start engaging. Still with financial engagement and also by leaning in to the meal and the people who prepared it, letting the nourishment take root, growing up and growing in (learning how to contribute to the making of the meal without overtaking and wanting to make it my way) so then I can repay by growing out. Seeing the true value of the meal and taking a part in the making of the meal. This is more authentic repayment and repair. Stop approaching our space as a place for my consumption but as an authentic community in which to meet everyone eye-to-eye. This will still involve increased financial engagement. The addition is my changed perspective from consumption of cheap, processed food to partaking in homegrown food made with expertise and love and care that I take part in growing and cultivating. True engagement with more respect for Lace and the community and fully living out my values and convictions.

As Lace said in the video, Show up. Live it out or walk away. She is okay with me walking away. She doesn’t actually need me in the way that I think she does because I haven’t been safe, resilient, reliant, or committed to the work with resolve. Understanding this is my first step to repairing the harm I’ve caused. And then deeply investing in true change to my praxis and subsequent actions. Moving on the spectrum from entitlement to expectation to hope. And not just my hopes. But Lace’s hopes for our community – an authentic community that shows up in visible, reliable, and unwavering ways so that ultimately we become a community that people of color can trust, rely on, and rest in.

By community member/contributing writer Shay Roberts


3 responses to “Meeting Eye-to-Eye”

  1. Tanya Avatar
    Tanya

    I feel this post. I’m brand-spanking new to this community, and haven’t gotten to the entitlement phase yet (I don’t think), but the financial contribution piece hit me HARD. I’m cheap about most things. I want them to be freebies. I tip…medium generously, because I want the credit of not being stingy, but keep hoarding because I’ve never had to be without it and I’m scared to be. It’s an interesting point, about what is an appropriate amount to compensate Lace for all the work she does for us. I paid a pretty penny for my college education, but part of that was so I could walk away with a fancy piece of paper. There won’t be a fancy piece of paper here, and it won’t be done in four years, but it’s just as valuable (if not more) in other, equally tangible ways. I think for me the solution to this problem of what is *enough* is to treat it like a college course. How much time am I going to spend here per week? 1 hour? 4 hours? Relate that time to credit hours, and find a comparable rate. But even that gives me an out, because I get to decide if this is a 1 or 4 credit class. Am I taking this class at the local community college or at Harvard? I say all the time in my professional life that *where* you get the engineering degree doesn’t actually make a difference in your ability to engineer, but for some people, where you got the piece of paper matters. Honestly, it probably matters to me to, because I chose the fancy piece. I will have to sit with my desires to hoard the wealth. Realistically I can afford chromebooks for all the neighborhood kids, and I gladly pay taxes to keep our public education system merrily rolling along because it’s important. But the voluntary giving feels…different…maybe because I have other issues with privately funding public services, maybe because I’ve convinced myself I might need that money later, and it’s responsible to keep it, even though someone else has told me they need that money now and the right thing to do is give it to them. My needs are definitely still being met. Ooooo, I bet this gets into my need to feel successful among my peers….I will think about it.

  2. Jessie Lee Avatar
    Jessie Lee

    Shay, thank you for reminding me why it’s so important that we walk in community. Your words both shed light on some ugly things in myself that I have been avoiding… as well as encourage me to do my own work that’s needed to move from entitlement to expectation to hope. I must do that deep work especially when my reflex is to turn away from the mirror being held up in front of me. I must do it so that we can become “an authentic community that shows up in visible, reliable and unwavering ways… a community that people of color can trust, rely on, and rest in.” I can’t do that if I am avoiding facing the depths of my own supremacy.

    I have had a mental block in response to this post, and I’ve been hoarding it rather than engaging with my full self. Holly and I were having a conversation the other day that it’s particularly hard to embrace accountability for our mistakes when we (global we) feel ashamed that we should be farther along than we actually are. That’s the core of the mental block, I think: the shame that I am not as far along as I think I am or need to be. Like you said, I am working to catch up from a deficit. I have no business feeling entitled to any acknowledgement, from Lace, myself, fellow walkers, or anyone else, for doing the bare minimum to be a decent human being and repairing the harm that I’ve caused when I lived in willful ignorance that was comfortable to me and violent to people of color.

    I can ignore or push down that sense of entitlement all I want, but it will keep influencing my thoughts and behavior. Which people of color know even when I think I’m hiding it, as you pointed out. When I refuse to look in the mirror, I can make myself forget about my blemishes temporarily… but people of color are still seeing me for exactly who I am.

    So now that I’ve basically just paraphrased what you said, it’s time to face the mirror and do some interrogation and rooting out.

    Whenever Lace does a video that includes words of gratitude as well as hard truths, my reflex is savor the words of gratitude and spit out the hard truths after barely tasting them. I don’t want them to apply, but they do. I want to hold myself apart from or better than “those people”, but I can’t. I am those people. Just because I wasn’t the 9,900 in this one action doesn’t entitle me to pat myself on the back and take a nap.

    I, too, sit on posts for much longer than I should before taking the small risk of engaging when I’m stuck. Sometimes I avoid the risk altogether by seeking out a different post where the weeds to contend with seem smaller or fewer so that I can respond with less effort. If I wait long enough, another few posts will pop up and I’ll forget about the one I was avoiding. I’ll forget because I can. I can forget because I’m a white woman whose life does not depend on fighting racism.

    This is still doing the work my way, not as prescribed. This is cherry picking the words that I’m willing to engage with, the bones that I’m willing to consume after they’ve already been sacrificed to me (a reference to Radha’s Thunderbolt piece). This is being selective about which parts of people I am willing to see. That’s not eye to eye, it’s one-way consumption. And it’s not unintentional. It’s, just as you said Shay, a fully informed choice. Those three words, fully informed choice, were the words that shook me.

    I need to be honest with myself and our community about my halfhearted and conditional engagement. My engagement started out immersive, intentional, deep, and disciplined. I had a plan for moving through pinned posts and I stuck to it. I kept thorough notes and reflections for each and every post and accompanying comment thread. I’ve since drifted. I still engage with posts and walkers daily, engage financially, and participate in direct actions without question. On the surface, to the untrained eye (so not Lace’s), it looks like I’m a dedicated walker, but internally I have lots of overdue weeding to do. I’ve indulged in the temptations to scroll and roll and try to truncate my growth by skimming and responding selectively.

    Even while I was looking down my nose at “those people” treating this community as a fast food restaurant instead of the wholesome home-cooked meal that Lace has expertly and lovingly prepared, I was treating this community like a dive bar I stumbled into for open mic night. In other words. I was using this space for my entertainment (even though I said I never would). In other, other words, I was doing the same thing that I was criticizing the Christian Left for doing. What’s the phrase about how you can have good praxis for bad reasons?

    To course correct, I will keep looking in the mirror because I’d really like to turn away right about now. I am committing to entering this space only when I’m prepared to engage fully. For me personally, this means no navigating to facebook or the website, no clicking on notifications unless I am prepared to read, not skim, both the posts and the comments, share my own thoughts, and respond to at least 2 other walkers. If that takes an hour or two, so be it… I will set that time aside reliably. I am also looking to add to my praxis a kind of ritual for calibrating myself to our North Star and preparing to treat this community as the sacred space that it is. As I was pondering what that routine should look like, I returned to your last paragraph and found an answer in your last sentence about Lace’s hopes for our community. Those are the words that I need to internalize as a mantra so that whenever I enter this space, I’m primed for meeting eye to eye. Thanks again for this, Shay.

  3. Christin Spoolstra Avatar
    Christin Spoolstra

    Again, Shay, thank you. It’s a pleasure to walk with you and learn from you. The entitlement sections are what stung me the most, how I “look for the response I think I deserve, only to be abruptly reminded of what I already know”… that I am getting what I deserve. I brush over the decades of harm that I have done and think that one small act should grant me membership into the Ally Club. A fish doesn’t get cookies for swimming. I don’t get cookies for doing what a decent human being is supposed to do. Though I understand that there is no end, only further and further horizons in this work, I still see myself clawing around in the dark for the “enough” line. When I bristle that truly living praxis is rearranging my entire life, I’m reminding myself that my life is currently arranged around white supremacy. Staying that way is endorsing white supremacy. Like you said, “my entitlement is what keeps me back from truly internalizing.” There are areas in my life that I know I’m not yet living praxis. There are others that I’m sure exist but I’ve cloaked. The internal work is not actually being done unless it’s being reflected in my daily actions. I have changed, but not yet enough and not yet with all deliberate speed. And why? Because of my entitlement, because I think I’m already doing much in other areas. But praxis is not a score card. It does not allow for one aligned act to outweigh a misaligned one. So where can I find my hope…? I find it in our community. I find it in those who hold me to account, who bare their own souls so that I can reflect myself and make changes. I find it in Lace and the whole admin team who model true praxis. That hope is pulling me free from my entitlement.

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