Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Advantage

I've been ruminating on privilege, or advantage if you prefer, for a few years now. I have lots of it. I wrote the following in 2017, and some things have changed. I now have a progressive, invisible illness which has affected my ability to function. I have a child, a beautiful, clever mighty girl. I want to be a better mom to her. That means knowing what advantages I've had, and making sure she grows up aware of them as well. Aware of the dangers and inequalities that others face every day. Aware she can change the future.

The fact is that I am very privileged. Also fact is that I am not better than anyone else. I did not do anything to earn most of my privileges.
I was raised in an upper middle class home. I’m of exclusively Western European descent, very WASP-y. My parents will celebrate their 48th wedding anniversary next August. Between them, they have 5 college degrees. They waited 14 years to have children because they felt that they weren’t financially stable enough to support children. As a result, I grew up without the fear that we didn’t have enough money for food or bills. It never occurred to me. I have always known that they love my brother and me. We were never mistreated or abused by our parents. I have always had health care, through my parents and through my husband. My only chronic health condition is clinical depression, which was diagnosed 20 years ago and has been reasonably controlled with medication for the last 15 years. For me, it is truly a chemical imbalance (triggered by puberty? who knows) in my brain that means I will most likely be taking my medication for the rest of my life. I had the HPV vaccine before I became sexually active. I have always had access to excellent health care. When I had a miscarriage at 5 weeks, I had care. When I found out I was carrying a blighted ovum (a fertilized egg with no genetic material), I had options, and miscarried at 11 weeks without intervention. I was not forced to have a funeral for the tissue that would never have become a baby.
I have traveled to 35 states, 1 US territory, and 9 countries on 4 continents, mostly with my family. Both of my parents have traveled to all 50 states. Travel is valued as a form of education in my family, and when I had opportunities through school or church, my parents paid for my travel, or let me use my “college” fund.
I have no student debt because my parents were willing and able to pay for my three years of college.
I’m straight and cisgender, very happily married to my husband of 8 years. I have never questioned my gender identity or sexuality.
I have never been the victim of sexual assault, nor have I ever to my knowledge witnessed a sexual assault. I find it horrible that this is one of my privileges. Everyone should be so privileged.
I have extraordinary privilege. I did nothing to deserve my parents, I am just lucky enough to be their child. I did nothing to be straight and cisgender, I am just lucky that my genetic makeup is what it is. Similarly, I did nothing to have this skin color. It does NOT make me inherently better or smarter or more worthy. It is simply evidence that my ancestors lived somewhere that had limited sunlight. They evolved light skin so to better absorb vitamin D. (Why yes, I was an anthropology major for two years, how did you know?)
My point is that I try to be aware of my privileges, and to acknowledge that I’m not really anything special because of them. I’m not special because I’m white, any more than I’m special because I have Type A + blood. This does not dismiss hard work and effort, but we all have advantages in this world, whether or not we recognize them. Some of us have more than others due to tradition, societal norms and expectations, racism, sexism, and other biases. It is often too easy for us to assume that our experiences are the norm, because that’s human nature. It is the challenge to step outside that norm, and examine and compare our experiences that is so important. Just because I have not experienced sexual assault doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist. Just because I have not experienced racism doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist. Just because I have never questioned my gender and sexuality doesn’t mean that others haven’t.
Please think about your life, and your privileges. They are real. We all have them. Most of them are things we have no control over, or that we didn’t work for. That means that if you are not privileged in one of the ways that I am, you did NOTHING to earn or deserve that lack or privilege. YOU HAVE DONE NOTHING TO DESERVE OR EARN RACISM, SEXISM, OR ANY DISCRIMINATION. Nothing.

Monday, May 18, 2020

30 Days of Music

I've gotten so far behind on the 30 Day Song Challenge that I'm just going to post all of them here at once.
Day 1, a song you like with a color in the title
Blue Jeans Blues by ZZ Top; Pynk by Janelle Monae; Back to Black by Amy Winehouse; Afro-Blue by John Coltrane
Day 2, a song you like with a number in the title
20 Years of B.B. King by Curtis Salgado; 1234 by Feist; 6 Inch by Beyoncé ft. the Weeknd
Day 3, a song that reminds you of summertime
Fly by Sugar Ray; Take Me Out by Franz Ferdinand; Pink Moon by Nick Drake
Day 4, a song that reminds you of someone you'd rather forget
Blurred Lines by Robin Thicke. I think we’d all like to forget him.
Day 5, a song that needs to be played loud
Know Your Rights by The Clash, 1812 Overture by Tchaikovsky, Take Five by the Dave Brubeck Quartet
Day 6, a song that makes you want to dance
Now That We Found Love by Heavy D and the Boyz, Canned Heat by Jamiroquai, Jique by Brazilian Girls; 24K Magic by Bruno Mars
Day 7, a song to drive to
Wonderboy by Tenacious D; I’m Gonna Be the Proclaimers
Day 8, a song about drugs and alcohol
Alcohol is Free by Koza Mostra; Alcohol by Barenaked Ladies; Golden Brown by The Stranglers
Day 9, a song that makes you happy
Caroban by Nina; The Hamilton Polka by Weird Al; Fried Neckbones and Some Home Fries by Willie Bobo; Feeling Good by Nina Simone
Day 10, a song that makes you sad
Strange Fruit by Billie Holiday; Changes by Phil Ochs; Glad to Be Unhappy by Billie Holiday
Day 11, a song you never get tired of
I very rarely get tired of songs I like. I stop listening for awhile and then I discover the song again. But anything by Queen, or the Lemonade album by Beyoncé. Heaven.
Day 12, a song from your preteen years
I listened to oldies as a preteen. Lover’s Concerto by the Toys; Up on the Roof by the Drifters; Just My Imagination by the Temptations
Day 13, a song you like from the 70's
A Song for You by Donny Hathaway; Immigrant Song by Led Zeppelin; Rock Lobster by the B-52s
Day 14, a song you'd love to be played at your wedding
Well, I wanted The Way I Am by Ingrid Michaelson and Andy wanted You've Made Me So Very Happy by Blood, Sweat & Tears
Day 15, a song you like that's a cover by another artist
A Case of You by James Blake; These Days by Nico; I Will Always Love You by Pam Hall; Hey Jude by Wilson Pickett; Que Sera Sera by Sly & the Family Stone
Day 16, a song that's a classic favorite
Into the Mystic by Van Morrison; Danse Macabre by Camille Saint-Saens
Day 17, a song you'd sing a duet with someone on karaoke
More Than Words by Extreme; The Boy Is Mine by Brandy & Monica (I'll be Monica)
Day 18, a song from the year you were born
Sweet Dreams by the Eurythmics was #1 the day I was born
Day 19, a song that makes you think about life
Devil's Pie by D'Angelo; There by For Fortune by Phil Ochs; I've Seen It All by Björk
Day 20, a song that has many meanings for you
you should see me in a crown by Billie Eilish; Everything Is Everything by Lauryn Hill
Day 21, a song you like with a person's name in the title
Adam's Song by Blink-182; Clint Eastwood by Gorillaz; Ave Maria by Christina England
Day 22, a song that moves you forward
32 Flavors by Alana Davis; A Change Is Gonna Come by Sam Cooke
Day 23, a song you think everybody should listen to
Three Little Birds by Bob Marley; Lift Every Voice and Sing by Laval Belle; Power and Glory by Phil Ochs
Day 24, a song by a band you wish were still together
Puttin' Shame in Your Game by Beastie Boys; If You Want Me to Stay by Sly & the Family Stone; Would? by Alice in Chains
Day 25, a song you like by an artist no longer living 
Let's Dance by David Bowie; Rock Steady by Aretha Franklin; Cinderella Ballet by Sergei Prokofiev; Northern Sky by Nick Drake
Day 26, a song that makes you want to fall in love
I Want Love by Elton John; Kedvesem by ByeAlex
Day 27, a song that breaks your heart
Wiegala by Ilse Weber (written for her son at Thereseienstadt concentration camp to comfort him); The Man That Got Away by Judy Garland
Day 28, a song by an artist whose voice you love
Lonlon by Angelique Kidjo; Glory by Common & John Legend; Yesterdays by Billie Holidays; The Boogie Man Song by Mos Def
Day 29, a song you remember from your childhood
Leatherwing Bat by Peter, Paul, & Mary; Road to Morocco by Bing Crosby & Bob Hope
Day 30, a song that reminds you of yourself
Darkness by Leonard Cohen; Floetic by Floetry; Fly Away by Lenny Kravitz; Rhythm Nation by Janet Jackson; Whale and Wasp by Alice in Chains