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there are two dimensions to this living. One is the surface, the ethereal, the light to the dark. The shadow to the skin: The depth of pigment. But then, there is the deeper sin the battering within. The judgment of blackness based on skin. It has hounded us, through our history, from House to field. from basketball court to court house. From boardroom to dorm room to class room to living room. Granny used to say, ooh girl you've got good hair. Nice and wavy, like your grandpappy's. Used to say, see you're the pretty one. Running her fingertips along our cheeks, mired in awe of our caramel complexion. while like tar, it stuck to the minds of our classmates, cohorts, coworkers. With jealousy they said light-skinned, not black enough, not us enough. not us enough. when one day in class, the teacher had asked, "what do mommy and daddy do?" Janitor. Works for the state. Garbageman. we piped up proudly, "my mommy and daddy have college degrees, one creates houses the other works in network security" all the while, our classmates had laughed, made fun of us, "so, that's why you don't talk black" Two smart ****** bred a smart ***** And so the story of us, had morphed from the days of Angela Davis, to this new form of self-hatred. the valley between us suffered a cataclysm and became a canyon. Continued to grow, our skin a stain, and as actors we had to train, mellowing our dialect just to make it seem as if we had intellect, cause we all know a succesful black man, has two distinct voices, and not through his own choices, it is bred from necessity. can't sit in front of white man and talk like pickaninny. got so comfortable out of our own skin, that we felt we were the ones digging out the edges of the canyon. So far thrown from blackness that maybe this is how they separate us, make us hate ourselves and love they wealth. make us hate our hair and love they locks. Cause like superheroes we switch from day out to day in. Being dark, light or caramel complexioned we stay hounded by how close we get to whitening.
0
Jul 18, 2018
Jul 18, 2018 at 6:58 AM UTC
Ghosts.
there are two dimensions to this living. One is the surface, the ethereal, the light to the dark. The shadow to the skin: The depth of pigment. But then, there is the deeper sin the battering within. The judgment of blackness based on skin. It has hounded us, through our history, from House to field. from basketball court to court house. From boardroom to dorm room to class room to living room. Granny used to say, ooh girl you've got good hair. Nice and wavy, like your grandpappy's. Used to say, see you're the pretty one. Running her fingertips along our cheeks, mired in awe of our caramel complexion. while like tar, it stuck to the minds of our classmates, cohorts, coworkers. With jealousy they said light-skinned, not black enough, not us enough. not us enough. when one day in class, the teacher had asked, "what do mommy and daddy do?" Janitor. Works for the state. Garbageman. we piped up proudly, "my mommy and daddy have college degrees, one creates houses the other works in network security" all the while, our classmates had laughed, made fun of us, "so, that's why you don't talk black" Two smart ****** bred a smart ***** And so the story of us, had morphed from the days of Angela Davis, to this new form of self-hatred. the valley between us suffered a cataclysm and became a canyon. Continued to grow, our skin a stain, and as actors we had to train, mellowing our dialect just to make it seem as if we had intellect, cause we all know a succesful black man, has two distinct voices, and not through his own choices, it is bred from necessity. can't sit in front of white man and talk like pickaninny. got so comfortable out of our own skin, that we felt we were the ones digging out the edges of the canyon. So far thrown from blackness that maybe this is how they separate us, make us hate ourselves and love they wealth. make us hate our hair and love they locks. Cause like superheroes we switch from day out to day in. Being dark, light or caramel complexioned we stay hounded by how close we get to whitening.
Waverly
Written by
35/M/American
Jul 18, 2018
Jul 18, 2018 at 6:58 AM UTC
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