I was a little black girl growing up in the land of white picket fences, lacking my own, but fenced in by those who had them.
If I was ever to make it over those barriers, I’d have to let go of a few things.
So I disowned my ***** hair, and refused to listen to Chris Brown or eat watermelon or fried chicken in public.
But I was still weighed down by my consciousness of being the “other”, the outsider trapped on the inside, the oil slick in the ocean still not buoyant enough to stay afloat.
And in all of my futile attempts to surpass them, I just ended up impaling myself on those white picket fences.