Monday, October 16, 2017

TRUMP RANT


My heart breaks, and my blood boils.  The suffering in Puerto Rico. The NFL controversy. Charlottesville. The efforts to sabotage Obamacare. The resurrection of Frederick Douglass.  When will it end?  How many times will he imply that all black people live on one dark street in Chicago, where we routinely shoot each other? How many times will he trash Mexicans, Muslims and war heroes? When will his dog whistle stop signaling that whites rule, and the rest of us don’t count? Will he ever see the beauty, the honor, the strength, and the intensity of our American mosaic?  Can he spell the word mosaic?   I wonder if he acknowledges any color other than white (or gold). I doubt it. 

When I’m in a New York City subway car, I see the embodiment of Lady Liberty’s huddled masses.  I hear a rhapsody of foreign languages, and the lilt of jangling accents. I listen to the urban slang, the New York-isms, the Transit-speak, and standard English. It’s jazz. It’s rock ‘n roll. It’s klezmer. It’s salsa. It’s R & B. It’s opera. It’s the American songbook of life.  I see faces of countless hues and features, and glorious fashions from goth to glamour to Goodwill. I spot hijabs, caps, hoodies, kufis, and pork pies. And then I marvel at the hair – crinkly, straight, braided, curly, twisted, spiked, shaved, and all over the place.  So lovely. So American. I devour it.  But this man lives in a gilded castle in the sky, with no appreciation for the multi-colored fabric he represents.     

''A gorgeous mosaic of race and religious faith, of national origin and sexual orientation.'' – Mayor David Dinkins

The mayor was talking about New York City, but in truth, he described America.  We’re all different.  But we are one, whether we’re in Wichita, Beaufort, Dallas, or Brooklyn.  Our president should be driving this point home. 

He has the great honor and privilege of serving all of us, and he doesn’t seem to care.  He’s too busy playing golf, watching television, picking fights with CNN, and enjoying the slobbering and slurping sounds of people sucking up to him. He has the most important job in the world. But he’s playing it off, like it’s a joke. Like we’re a joke. At the White House, if they serve him his two scoops of ice cream, and he can get out of Dodge on weekends, he calls it an AMAZING day.   Where I come from, we call it “getting over.” He spends a day doing as little as possible, gets a paycheck, basks in accolades, and takes Air Force One to Bedminster or Mar-a-Lago, on our dime. 
We're getting screwed.

How does one begin to describe his handling of recent disasters?  In a word - disastrous.   His disdain for any skin color other than lily white was amplified when he finally got to Puerto Rico. We know how long it took him to get there.  We heard the conversation about body counts from the “real catastrophe,” Katrina.  And we saw him tossing Brawny paper towels to people who were hungry, had no drinking water, and could not bathe themselves or their babies. They couldn’t flush their toilets. Dying people. Desperate people.  Sick people.  When he left, this is what he said to one of the traumatized families.
“Have a good time!”   

WTF?     
There is no way to justify his behavior. We all know what it is – CRAZY.  He’s unstable.   He’s taking a huge stab at destroying our country.  And he’s just getting started.

By the time  he visited victims in Las Vegas, his ”Adult Day Care Team” administration wised up.  They kept him tethered to a script at every turn, and staged each photo op. Bingo. Like a baby, clutching his mother’s apron strings, he made it through the day without insulting anybody.   Oh, wait. Didn’t he tweet his “Warmest condolences” to the victims and their families?  Guess he did it early, before any of the grownups were awake.

I agree with Rex Tillerson.  The man is a f------ moron!

Add your own caption.
As North Korea flew bombs over Japan, he thought it was as good a time as any to insert himself into an NFL protest.  So, the President of the United States of America called the kneeling players S.O.B’s. Are you freaking kidding me?  Only an idiot would insult a black man’s mother – that’s asking for it.  But they all took the high road (and so did their mamas). These black millionaires have been kneeling to call attention to the injustices experienced by African-Americans who are murdered while sitting in their vehicles, or while running for their lives, unarmed.  Who is he to criticize? Will he ever have to worry about Baron being shot, just because his skin is white? I hope not. Does he realize these athletes are exercising their First Amendment rights?   He insists they’re being disrespectful to veterans and to the flag, even though many have said they come from military families.  And how respectful has he been to members of our armed forces?  He continues to dog John McCain and he insulted a Gold Star family.  Nine U.S. soldiers – three in Niger and six in Afghanistan, died last week.  He has yet to publicly acknowledge their passing.  And when one of their bodies came home draped in our flag over the weekend, he was golfing in Bedminster.

It takes courage to kneel – to protest, in full view of millions of Americans. I don’t know If I could do it.  They're receiving death threats; they should get kudos.  Unlike the president, who stirs up hate at all-white rallies, these men are peaceful. Silent. They are posed on one knee, as suggested to them by a veteran.  I believe they will persevere, just like Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks, Muhammed Ali, and so many others who came before them. 

“Do what you feel in your heart is right – for you’ll be criticized anyway. You’ll be damned if you do and damned if you don’t.” - Eleanor Roosevelt

This president will never understand.  Here is why they kneel. 



MAGA.  What does it mean?  I believe it is code for Make America White Again.  But that will never happen, because America was never white in the first place.  Ask our Native American brothers and sisters.  They will never forget. And we should not forget that slavery predates the founding of the United States of America. We’ve been here forever and we’re not going anywhere.    


He doesn’t seem to care how many Americans, white or otherwise, are proud of their country’s depth and breadth of colors, religions and cultures. He's hell bent on making this nation white as snow, from coast to coast. So, he writes executive orders, to get rid of Muslims and immigrants.  He shows his ass in Puerto Rico, letting the world know he doesn’t care about its people, his people - American people.  He said black Americans have nothing to lose.  Truth is, we'd like to lose him.  We've had his number for years. Here’s a quote from one of his black Atlantic City casino workers.
“When Donald and Ivana came to the casino, the bosses would order all the black people off the floor,” Kip Brown, a former employee at Trump’s Castle, told the New Yorker for a September article.



It was the eighties, I was a teen-ager, but I remember it: they put us all in the back.”

He also disparaged his black casino employees as “lazy” in vividly bigoted terms, according to a 1991 book by John O’Donnell, a former president of Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino.

And we all know about the Central Park Five.

What does he know about African-Americans? This country was built on the backs of my ancestors. We should never be minimized or characterized as a race of ne’er do wells or thugs.

“I, too, am America.”  - Langston Hughes     

We are all important.  We have equal rights.  We are Americans.

My parents were freedom fighters.  My mother picketed in front of Woolworth’s in New York City, in support of black southerners who were fighting for the right to sit at the counter for lunch. Note the different colors of the people picketing in this photo.  That's my America.  Our America. Not Trump's America. Still, some passersby and haters spit in my mother's face. Yet she never gave up on the Civil Rights Movement.  She marched and sat-in until she was too weak to fight anymore, and God took her home at a young age. That’s my heritage.  That’s my history.  Her spirit is in me.  Her love of country is in me. That’s why I will use my voice to call him out, and my vote to get him out of office.  

People of all colors and creeds have struggled and sacrificed their lives to make this country great – and that includes immigrants.  Great contributions to science, technology, agriculture, and more, have come from all ethnicities.  It’s not about white people.  It’s about America.  

There are so many more puke-worthy, un-American Trumpisms.  Like “fake news.”  Birtherism.    The Putin bromance. Pussy-grabbing.  Tweet storms.  Interviews peppered with talk about women bleeding from various body parts, and press conferences lauding “very fine” white supremacists. Then there's the narcissism. The lies.  The unpredictability. Un-presidential. Unthinkable. Unprecedented. Uncouth.  But dammit!  Not unstoppable!  He will NOT win this one.

Keep the faith.  No living president would endorse him.   All is not lost.

The presidency should exemplify strength, truth, honesty, dignity, grace, patience, and wisdom.  He has no scruples and he cannot lead.  He does not unite us.  He’s fueling a race war. We’re seeing swastikas.  Aryan Nations are marching in our streets. KKK members no longer hide under white sheets.  Some people in Charlottesville were shouting, "Heil Trump!" What’s next? "Strange Fruit"?*       

This country is in trouble.  POTUS. Does. Not. Embrace. American. Values.

We must continue to do the things he can neither fathom nor carry out. We must condemn white supremacists, KKK and Neo-Nazis.  We must stand up (or kneel) so that black men, women and children won’t die while driving, or walking, or while just being black. Because Black Lives Matter.  White Lives Matter. Blue Lives Matter.  All Lives Matter.

“We must fight till hell freezes over and then fight on the ice.”   - Verner Tandy Woodson 



No more Sandra Blands.  No more Philando Castiles.  No more Heather Heyers. No more Tamir Rices.  No more Carmen Yulín Cruz Sotos, pleading to save the lives of a people – American people.

There is no master race.   This is America.

It’s 2017.  Don't let him turn the clock back.     

Stay woke.  Vote.  Resist.

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*"Strange Fruit" is a song performed most famously by Billie Holiday, who first sang and recorded it in 1939. Written by teacher Abel Meeropol as a poem and published in 1937, it protested American racism, particularly the lynching of African Americans  - Wikipedia

Southern trees bear strange fruit,

  Blood on the leaves and blood at the

  root,

  Black bodies swinging in the southern breeze,


Strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees…”  -

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Evicted and Abandoned, at Eighteen


The eviction notice came on the heels of a tough and mournful year. The torment began with a venomous phone call from my father.  His voice was weak, but his words cut like a knife.    






"Joni, you killed your mother." 

Little Joni & Daddy.

I hung up on him.  My legs buckled.  I steadied myself against the wall and made it to my bed, where I collapsed.

I knew what he meant. Mommy was gone.  She was only forty-six years old, and I was just sixteen. But was I a murderer now?

As I lay there, still dazed from the stunning blow, the world stopped. And in that surreal moment, a small voice in my head told me the truth. Your mother is dead, but you are not a murderer. And then I smashed my face into the pillow and howled like a wounded animal.  There could be no greater pain than this.

My Beautiful Mother
I loved her. And her love for me was unconditional, no matter the magnitude of the teenage problems I laid at her feet. She was my beautiful, tall, brown-skinned mommy with the pretty dresses and the soft, lovely voice. She was the warm hug and gentle smile that sent me off to school every morning, and the loving squeeze and kiss on the cheek that greeted me when I returned. She was the strong hand that guided me through life. My rock and my protector. Asthma and pneumonia took her away – not me. I knew it. Daddy knew it. And later, an autopsy confirmed it.  






Pain

 What was I going to do now? 

I curled up into a ball, for days.  My family banned me from the funeral.  They said I was too young.  Too fragile. Too broken. The truth was, they didn't want questions and whispers about my secret. My mother was the only one who didn’t shun me for it. But she was gone. Now I’d have to get rid of the problem, just like everybody wanted me to – wash my hands. I didn't realize my decision would leave a bloody stain on my life, and an even deeper hole in my heart. I needed my mother more than ever now.

 Numb

 She died right before Christmas.  My father walked around the apartment, singing a song with a line I will never forget, “There will be no Christmas for me...”  And when he sang it, I heard his tortured soul crying out for her.   Sometimes he'd sing songs of hope, and recite poems about butterflies and sunlight.  He encouraged me to write. To sing. To thrive. And a few weeks later, when I turned seventeen, he bought me a birthday cake.

 Despite his cruel indictment of me, he didn't want me to drown in my sorrow. In those moments, I was still his little girl.  And he was still my teddy bear daddy – my laughing, sunshine daddy – the man who'd loved, nurtured and adored me all my life.  

Now we cried together, a lot. We were trying to get through life without her, and we were failing miserably. I forgave him for the way he delivered the news of my mother’s passing – I knew he didn’t mean it. Later, I realized he was projecting his guilt onto me.

 All I could think about was my mother. I pushed my secret to the back of my mind – I couldn’t absorb another loss. I was a zombie, just trying to make it through my last six months of high school. I graduated, but skipped the ceremony.  I couldn't face college either – it would have to wait.  I even turned down a full scholarship to a school in Florida. I knew I barely had the strength to put one foot in front of the other. Besides, I couldn’t leave home, because my mother wouldn’t be there to cheer me on, to call me, or to just love me.

I'd made a prior commitment to be a junior counselor, at a camp where I’d spent many summers. So, six months after my mother's death, I got on a bus and headed to the Catskills. The camp’s executive director, a loving, earth mother type, was the only one who knew my story.  I interacted with campers and fellow counselors. I smiled. I hiked. I sang campfire songs. I did what I had to do.  But on the inside, my soul wept.



Downward Spiral

I returned home from camp, thankful for the weekly allowance my father continued to send me all summer. I’d saved all the money I earned at camp, and I had a tiny inheritance from my mother.  It went fast. After a few months, I started showing up at my father’s barbershop, desperate for cash.  

Daddy was losing interest in my well-being.  He kept coming home late, stumbling and reeking of alcohol.  After a while, he rarely showed up.  I didn’t know where he was staying – he never brought up the subject, and I didn’t ask.  Week after week, I was mostly home alone, struggling to make it on the few dollars he gave me.

When I was a little girl, I thought my daddy was rich.  He owned a barbershop.   Before I was born, when he and my mother fled the south and came to New York, he thought his college degree would open doors. He’d been a brilliant student. A plaque, displayed in the lobby of his alma mater, memorialized his academic achievements.   But he ended up mopping floors. Undefeated, he cut hair on the side, and saved his money. At the same time, he raised his children, and doted on his wife.  By the time I was in second grade, he opened his shop. That was years ago. I no longer thought we were rich, but I still didn’t understand why money was so tight.  

Soon, my frequent trips to the barbershop got ugly. My father was always angry when I showed up.  He’d dig into his pocket, and throw a fist full of money at me.  I’d try to catch the bills before they hit the floor, and I crawled around to pick up the coins.  I needed every penny. There were times when he’d chase me out of the shop, empty handed.  I never knew what to expect.  One day he pulled a knife on me. Oh. My. God. I ran for my life, but I came back after a few days.  I had no choice. I’d pray that he’d have a customer in the chair, but who would take a haircut from a drunken barber? The shop was usually empty. I didn’t realize he was running the customers away. The man who was my daddy had become an alcohol-fueled monster. 

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 Eviction

 Then it happened.  The eviction notice was taped to the apartment door. 

I had never seen or paid a bill in my life. I’d taken everything for granted. I panicked.

I called my father. He slurred some words into the phone, and hung up. Something told me he was never coming back home. The weight of the eviction was solely on me.  

I took the scary notice to my girlfriend Sherri’s house, so I could show it to her mother, Mrs. Lake.  I needed an adult to weigh in on it. She knew about my mother’s passing, and I filled her in on my father. She sat at her dining room table and read the eviction notice. I watched the color drain from her pretty face.  She said the back rent had to be paid or I’d have to get out in thirty days, and all our belongings would end up on the sidewalk. And then she said nothing. I could see she was worried.  She was known for her big, beautiful smile – she was always a ray of sunshine, no matter what. There was no smile on her face now. She handed the paper back to me, telling me how sorry she was. We were both speechless as I walked out of her apartment and headed home.  

 I went to bed and curled up into a ball, and I stayed there, for days.

The lovely Mrs. Lake, over the years.
Just days before our belongings were tossed out, the phone rang.  It was Mrs. Lake.  She asked me to stop by. I needed food, so I went. I got a nice meal, and something else that I will never forget.

She asked, “Would you like to come and live with us?”

My emotions overwhelmed my voice. We hugged.  When I got myself together, I thanked her as I choked back tears.  I felt relieved, but terrified.  I went home and packed my clothes.

 It was late summer.  I felt the warmth of the sun on my face
Mr. & Mrs. Lake
as I walked out of my building, lugging my suitcases. I wondered when our furniture would be put out on the sidewalk. And then I pushed my feelings way down into a dark place, for a long, long time.  

 I walked to Mrs. Lake’s building, which was just steps away.  When she opened her door and let me in, her beautiful smile was back, but like me, she was speechless.     

 My girlfriend Sherri had just left for college, so Mrs. Lake gave me her room.  Sherri's younger sister, who was still in junior high school, had her own bedroom too.  We didn’t have much to say to each other.   I was functioning, but not feeling.  

Most nights when I lay alone in Sherri’s bed, my mind raced. This isn’t my bed. What am I

Motherless, Teenage Me.

doing here? I can’t do this. What happened to me? Then I started hearing voices at night. It was always someone calling out my name. Joni. Joni. Joni. I told Mrs. Lake about it, because I sensed that I was losing my mind. She said it was probably one of the kids in the apartment upstairs, trying to spook me.  She was wise to find a rational explanation, but I wondered if she really believed what she was saying. Looking back, I cannot imagine what was going through her mind. Her face was calm and reassuring, but I’m sure she was worried about me, and about what she’d gotten herself into.  After a few weeks of torture, the voices stopped. But I was still very troubled. I worked harder on shoving my feelings way down, deeper, and deeper.

 I was robotic and needy at the same time. I asked Mrs. Lake to send me to college.  I shared my dreams and goals and asked her to finance all of them.  I didn’t realize she and her husband were doing their best to raise their own daughters, and get them through college. By taking me in, they’d saved my life, and disrupted theirs. But I thought I’d automatically become a member of their family. Mrs. Lake knew it, yet she never dismissed my requests – she didn’t hit me with the truth.  She always said she’d think about it. Then she gently suggested that I get a job, just so I could have my own pocket money. That was okay by me.  But I still didn’t realize the Lakes were not my substitute parents.     

Jobs were plentiful - I found work without much effort.  But I was young, inexperienced, and not ready for the customer service job I’d landed at the phone company.  I refunded customers without reviewing their accounts – I took them at their word. It wasn’t long before I got fired.  

 I started working long term temporary jobs, doing repetitive work, like stuffing envelopes.  With everything that was on my head, it was all I could manage. 

Once I was working and appeared to be adjusting, Mrs. Lake gave me tiny goals – like buying my own toothpaste and toiletries. Or at least buying laundry detergent, since she was the one who was washing the clothes.  She was trying to teach me how to be independent. I needed to understand I was a boarder in her home.  She was very nurturing and gentle as she tried to nudge me into a reality that I still wasn’t ready to accept.  She was a mom – but not my mom. Her talk didn’t work. I had been through too much. I wanted my mommy, and if I couldn’t have her, then I needed Mrs. Lake to be my mom.  I also didn’t do all the things she suggested. So, I ended up feeling guilty, and then I pushed the guilt way down deep.   

 I didn't know Mrs. Lake was an angel.  I didn't know I would cherish her for the rest of my life. I didn't know her gift was so special that I could never thank her enough.  I didn't know that years later, whenever I saw her, I'd get a lump in my throat. I didn't know she would pass away before I could tell her how grateful I was for what she did, and how much I loved her. I remain eternally grateful, and forever touched by her kindness, and her grace.

About a month after I’d moved in, I was chatting with Mrs. Lake and I mentioned something about one of my aunts.   Mrs. Lake was shocked – she’d assumed I had no relatives. But my mother had eleven siblings, and most of them were married and living in New York, in nice homes. I never thought of reaching out to them. It never occurred to me – my parents always took care of everything. Mrs. Lake picked up the phone and called every aunt, and every uncle.

 PTSD

They set up a meeting at an aunt’s house.  Not only did every aunt and uncle show up, but my sister B.J. and her husband were there too.  They were all sitting in a circle when we arrived. Mrs. Lake explained how I’d been evicted, and that she’d been caring for me ever since. She said she couldn’t imagine how I felt, and she was glad she was able to help. She smiled as she spoke, and she kept that beautiful smile on her face, as my family thanked her.  I’m sure she expected someone to say they’d take me in.  That didn’t happen. They passed a hat, filling it with money for Mrs. Lake, as a thank you for her troubles. She must have been shocked, but she just kept smiling. The meeting was over.  I left more dazed than I was when I walked in.     

I was traumatized by that family meeting. For many years, family gatherings were difficult for me. I’d feel sheer terror. I was always waiting for that terrible blow, or for the hat to be passed around in front of my face, making me feel worthless. Year after year, I showed up at family reunions, parties, and holiday gatherings. I relived that awful day, over, and over, but I smiled through the pain until the feelings passed. Sometimes I started reliving it on the way to the gathering, or the night before.  Nobody knew what I was going through. I showed up because I loved and needed my family. I forgave them. My cousins knew nothing about my ordeal. And my aunts, uncles and sister didn’t know they’d almost killed me that day.

 There will be no Christmas...

My friend Sherri came home from college for Thanksgiving and Christmas. The holiday season brought unspeakable pain to me. It marked the anniversary of my mother’s passing. I stood around, saying very little. I was an outsider. The Lake’s friends and relatives were eating, drinking, exchanging gifts, and just enjoying each other. I couldn’t wait for it to be over. I was glad when Sherri went back to college. I loved my dear friend, but when she was around, my feelings surfaced, and a sense of worthlessness, embarrassment and humiliation overwhelmed me.  She was my mirror.  When I saw her, I knew we were no longer equal.  I was a homeless urchin, sleeping in her bed.  I lived at the mercy of her parents. I was troubled. She had a bright future and a family. She could laugh. She could dance. She could smile.   
  
Growing Up


Mrs. Lake never asked me to leave, but after Christmas, I felt it was time to go. I was only eighteen years old, and damaged, but I wanted my own bed – my own room.  I didn’t want to be an outcast anymore. I realized I’d never recapture the life I had before my mother passed away.  I was growing up.     

 That winter, I struck out.  I found a room in a cheap, old, Single Room Occupancy Hotel (S.R.O) on the Upper West Side. The manager was reluctant to rent to me – he could see I was just a kid. So, I lied about my age, and he never asked for ID. He took my money. I rented a single room, no bath.

My room smelled stale. The wallpaper was faded. The carpet was threadbare, and the curtains were old.  I had a small refrigerator, a hot plate, a bed, and a television. I seemed to be the youngest tenant among a ragtag group of people who all appeared to be down on their luck.

The bathroom made my skin crawl, and having to share it with an old woman made it worse.  The tiles were cracked and dirty, the shower curtain was moldy, and there were always dead roaches on the floor. A housekeeper was responsible for keeping it clean, but no amount of scrubbing could remove years of soap scum and gunk. I know. I tried. I felt sick every time I showered, and I cringed if the toilet seat was still warm when I sat down.  I hated it.  

I was living in a disgusting environment that was not meant for a young girl like me, but I learned to deal with it. Because when I closed the door to my room, it was all mine. And that felt good.  

I went to work every day, and kept to myself. I got locked out of my room a few times, because I couldn’t pay the rent.  I was still working on temporary jobs, and I was struggling.   
When they locked me out, I'd go stay with my daddy, who was living with a woman in Harlem. Her name was Mrs. Palmer.  She wore shabby dresses and loved to drink beer, but she was very nice to me.  I got dinner and a place to stay, until I saved up enough to pay the rent at the hotel.  Mrs. Palmer was my father’s drinking buddy, and more. I didn’t care. For the time I was there, they were my parents, and that was heartwarming.

 Still I Rise*

 After nearly three years in the S.R.O, and six months at my sister B. J’s house, I got my first apartment.  It was a tiny studio in a tenement in Hell's Kitchen, but it was mine.   At twenty-one years of age, I was starting a new chapter in my life.

My losses, including my secret, still haunted me.  I had no mother.  My father was a shell of a man.  Later, he was found dead, lying in a dark, dirty alley somewhere in Harlem, like a bum. He was only in his fifties. I was inconsolable at his funeral.

Me, at about 21.
I held on to memories of the sweet, honorable man who raised me.  And I cherished the good years I had, growing up with two loving parents, and my sisters, before it all fell apart.  Those memories got me through tough years when I had no support. Sherri moved to another state, but we remain friends, for life. Her mother, Mrs. Lake, will forever be in my heart and mind. Over time, my sister B.J. and I bonded, and we were inseparable, until her passing. She was my rock, and I was hers.  But only time would ease the pain of my insurmountable losses.


Some family members predicted that without parents, I would spiral downward, and never make anything of my life. I knew better.  A college degree, a fine career, artistic expression, and healthy relationships followed.  I kept reaching higher, and higher. And I’m still climbing.

 *Dr. Maya Angelou