A Special Essay From the Lady Geek
"Mixed Girls and Mama's": A Personal Journey
"..she
raised me to never ever forget I was on parole, which means no black hoodies in
wrong neighborhoods, no jogging at night, hands in plain sight at all times in
public, no intimate relationships with white women, never driving over the
speed limit or doing those rolling stops at stop signs, always speaking the
king's English in the presence of white folks, never being outperformed in
school or in public by white students and most importantly, always remembering
that no matter what, white folks will do anything to get you.
...Mama's
antidote to being born a black boy on parole in Central Mississippi is not for
us to seek freedom; it's to insist on excellence at all times...There ain't no
antidote to life, I tell her. How free can you be if you really accept that
white folks are the traffic cops of your life? Mama tells me that she is not
talking about freedom. She says that she is talking about survival."
An Essay By:
Kiese Laymon
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I will not lie.
I never go to the website that I found this essay on because most of the news I follow is only available through technological sites. It was fortunate for me that not only did I see the link on a dear friend's Facebook page, I became so engrossed after the first few sentences that I opened the link and read the powerful story of a man's experience growing up black in the south. I read that entire essay maybe
six or seven times and though the entire thing excited me, it was those two
small paragraphs that spoke to me...
I am and always
have been an interracial woman of Philadelphia. I don't claim to be otherwise
unless someone asks me where I'm from then I'm free to speak the truth
and say "I'm from Bayside New York”. When I get tired of hearing,
"What are you?” I will lie and lie and lie.
"I'm
Batman!"
"I'm Vulcan!"
"I'm Klingon"
"Me? Why
I'm Japanese!"
As for the of vs. from conversation,
well, I am of Philadelphia because that is where my parents - the real
ones that raised me, loved me, beat me, created both my demons and my angels -
happened to be retired to from their real home of Bayside. However my
freedom, and thus my only childhood memories of laughter and light and of happy
and relaxed within my own skin...that makes me from Bayside.
In Philadelphia
proper, I have never been fully black. The times that I grew up in were never
particularly embracing of a pale skinned reminder that a black man actually put
his dirty, nasty, disgustingly unworthy penis inside of a pure and respectable white woman.
Neither were they particularly embracing that a black man would 'succumb' to
that stereo type of 'reaching for better'. That they created not one but at least
three equally pale skinned, soft haired, white featured children was a sin as
grave as burning a cross on the White House lawn.
I've written
often of the differences between my home life and my real life before I was old
enough to reach peace within myself. I've touched on the Philadelphia
neighborhoods I've been the victim of, I've focused on the abuse from my
mother, the never ending love of my father. But after I read that except from
that wonderfully rendered essay, it poured over me, touched my soul and brought
back something important that I'd forgotten my parents gave me, all of them.
Especially
my mothers, the biological one that walked away as well as the important one
that owns the title to my heart.
They gave me
life. Whatever her reasons, Elizabeth H. gave life to Mary-Alice Burney and
walked away two months later. Whatever her reasons,
Fannie Ware Reynolds Paris gave life to MaryAnn Elizabeth Paris and stayed for
the long haul.
There was no way
Beth could fathom the possible fate of her first born daughter. Had the young, upper class white
family she'd first left me with never discovered my black ancestry, I would have been
accepted as a white child with no other family. I could have had a life without
the death of my elderly parents so early, without ever knowing the sting of welfare, without my husband, Dion, without the chronic abuse and four and a half children
and without a brother.
I could have been Mary-Alice. When my skin finally
darkened enough to tell I was something else, or the first time I had a sickle
cell trait attack we would have been shocked and I would have had a whole
different set of problems with my identity and race.
Much like I suspect my white brother, Bobby, went
through when he found that not only had he not actually been the oldest of his
clan to be abandoned, but that the older, blood related siblings he had were of the races.
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| Yep, That's all of us |
Had they never
discovered my parentage, I would have been a "whole race" living a
lie. Instead, Beth chose to tell the truth on the adoption forms and I got to
go to my mother and father's house to be raised with my brother and
perpetually be hated from all races within Philadelphia boarders. Elizabeth
H. gave me both life and truth before she walked away. Perhaps the
best gift any parent could give to their child. That's important.
And then there
was my real mother. Fannie Paris forged me when she wasn't raising me.
That's a fact. I was forged through harsh fist, iron will and lack of even the
softest of words. I was raised in experience, example and caring. Under
her tutelage, I became. That's important.
So the question
now would be, of all the words in the world, why would those excerpted
from that essay strike such a chord with me? Let me share
something with you.
When my parents
adopted my brother and me, my daddy was sixty years old and my mother was
fifty-six. Think about that. I do, quite often. I'm only thirty-six
and my children, as much as I love them, will be my last. I can not see about
signing on for another round when I'm supposed to be in my golden years. That
takes something.
My mother, the daughter of a brown hued bi-tribal Native American (Blackfoot/Cherokee)
sharecropper named Claity Ware and a bi-racial (white Irish Catholic/Blackfoot)
pale skinned woman named Mary Charity Carroll Ware.
My grandma spent her life
in Georgia, 'Passing' so that my grandpa, acting as her 'hired help' could get
the better deals on their crops. They were both born in 1878 in post war
Georgia. In 1921, Mary Charity and Claity Ware had their baby girl, my mama
Fannie, and her brown skin revealed the whole 'Passing' thing. Mama was
classified as "Negro" on her birth certificate and grandma and grandpa
were forced to pull up stakes and move to Long Island .
Mama was
defiantly reddish brown, as would be my Uncle Bubba when he came along a few years
later. There was no 'passing' on Long Island, but there were more opportunities
for them. My grandpa started 'Ware Construction' and it was he who paved all
of Long Island back then. For sixteen years after mama was born, grandma stayed
with grandpa and her kids. But according to mama, grandma just up and left one
day leaving mama with my Uncle and Grandpa on Rocky Hill Road.
However for
those sixteen years, my mama and I had something in common, something she tried
so powerfully to hide from me until I was too old to need the information, but
grateful for the glimpse into my family's history before Daddy and Sissy and Carl
and I came into it, nonetheless.
Mama's parents
were 'old' for the times that she grew up in. Forty three-year old couples were usually on their way to becoming grandparents back then not just starting their family. Just like she grew up with 'older parents', I grew up with everyone who
met my family assuming that my parents and I were grandparents/grandchildren until we
set them right.
The main thing we shared was that mama knew
what she witnessed from my grandma being deemed 'tainted'. A pale skinned woman
with a brownie child. No matter where they were, mommy was a brownie. Grandma, looking like a white woman, would tell mama, when she went to the
'better' shops, not to call her mommy. In their community, grandma was
called names and demeaned for having her skin. My mother witnessed that. When
mama was six, she witnessed white men try to rape my grandma while calling her
a 'nigger lover'.
My mother grew up defending her skin color, as she was
deemed a 'shame to have not gotten your mama's color'. My mama got 'what are
you'? from her peers because her skin was reddish brown like grandpa's, but her
hair was 'white'. My mama had to witness all of this, had to protect my
Uncle and had to justify her existence and defend against the realities of
being the brown spot in the pot of rice. Compared to my life in the seventies,
eighties and early nineties, I don't think I could have survived it. Just the
'forced to deny my own mother' part would have left me dejected and broken. But
she did it. She did it and lived it and spited it and became.
My mother, too, became.
That attitude,
that hardship, that pain. It forged my mama just as certainly as it forged me.
You see, when she decided to adopt a child, she didn't want to go with a 'pure'
anything. My mama wanted two things in her new babies.
1. That they be
mixed with something
2. That they know their real place in this
world.
The piece I
excerpted above -
"..she
raised me to never ever forget I was on parole, which means no black hoodies in
wrong neighborhoods, no jogging at night, hands in plain sight at all times in
public, no intimate relationships with white women, never driving over the
speed limit or doing those rolling stops at stop signs, always speaking the
king's English in the presence of white folks, never being outperformed in
school or in public by white students and most importantly, always remembering
that no matter what, white folks will do anything to get you..."
- explained
so eloquently my mother's attitude with both my brother and I. Her goal was
that we never be ashamed of our skin, that we never 'Pass', never deny either
side of our heritage, that we be prepared to deal with the Philly whites as
well as the Philly blacks.
She dressed us
in the best clothes, she took the time to make sure we were well coiffed, well
scrubbed, well spoken. Forget hoodies. We had Pierre Cardin and London Fog coats and
blazers. Sneakers? Hell no, only for gym class. McDonald's and Pizza Hut?
Forget about it. We ate in "Whitey Land" at handpicked
restaurants with cloth napkins and quiet ambiance, where the monied lived.
Walking into the establishments, her lessons started, "Look at the way
they're looking at you! Don't you dare slouch. You have nothing to be ashamed
of."
We were monied too, we were 'Good Enough' to eat at the
establishment.
We shopped at
the best Department Stores and boutiques. We studied the dictionaries, we left
our 'ghetto talk' out of the house. We got the grades or we would die. When
there were Whites about, we were articulate, well informed about the news,
politics, history, philosophy and we were always more cultured than the 'Filthy
Slugs' of South Philly White Trash. Mama made daddy hire only white Italians in
his business, you know just so she'd further prove the point that "White
or Black, green speaks loudest."
If we were going
to curse, we'd better enunciate the entire word. When we were around whites,
we'd better not misbehave or we'd go to the bathroom and be promptly beaten
with the strap she kept in her purse. When asked "What are
you." she made sure we had clever retorts. When I came home and told her I
was sick of being the only black girl who no one wanted to play with, she told
me, "Well then be the only mixed girl that's too good to play with
them."
She and daddy
took an entire lifetime pounding these lessons and more into my brain. On top
of that, I was a smart mixed girl. I was talented. My grades and
achievements belonged to them and them alone, no one helped me of any race. So
for me, there were ‘special’ extra lessons on decorum, on subtlety, on
snobbery. There was a work ethic of "be the best or die
trying".
I had no friends
in Philadelphia that lived close to me. My friends were school friends only. No
matter where I went, school friends were not good enough to bring home. There
were no boys. There were lessons to be learned, multi-level educational
excursions, there was Carl. This Iron Gate was for my protection, not
Carl's. Mama made sure the real face of Philly stayed far far
away. My skin always got me into trouble. The fact that I was a seventh
grader who could quote history from sources besides my texts books to my 'White
Trash Teacher' made me a target. My articulation, even when I tried to speak
the 'ghetto talk' of the neighborhood, got me labeled as "Wanna be".
"...Mama's
antidote to being born a black boy on parole in Central Mississippi is not for
us to seek freedom; it's to insist on excellence at all times...There ain't no
antidote to life, I tell her. How free can you be if you really accept that
white folks are the traffic cops of your life? Mama tells me that she is not
talking about freedom. She says that she is talking about survival..."
My mama's
antidote to being a pale skinned mixed child in Philadelphia was also
excellence. The lessons we received in Philadelphia from my mother were also
about survival. I got through it with my soul intact.
Bayside was
home. By the time I came along, our neighborhood was full of people of
upper middle class blacks, mixed couples, retired Jews and blacks. No one
gave a crap what color I was, how old my parents were, and forget
language. These people spoke the exact same language I did. It was no
ghetto, there were no Filthy Whitey Trash, and there were definitely no
NIGGERS. This was home.
Mama and daddy relaxed, the lessons stopped to be
replaced by my sister, the evangelist's, religious training. I could run and
play and breathe. My friends were welcome into my home and my yard
became the hub of activity - often overfilling with children. Mama would
encourage us, there was music and laughter and there was happiness.
My children were
born when all the Philly racists finally got a clue about keeping their mouths
openly shut. They are honey colored and beautiful. What do I give them? They
know the rules, expect a fight that hasn't happened yet.
Do they identify as
black or white? HELL NO.
They identify as the Second Generation Philadelphia Paris children. They know the measure of a man
is in his heart. They are mine.
So I am who I am
because of two women. A white one who gave me life and truth. A Native
American/Irish one who gave me life, forged me and gave me love.
Written By: MaryAnn Paris
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