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Getting the Lead out:Professional Procrastination

Now considering what it appears that I accomplish over short or long periods of time, it would seem that I am always up to or doing something. But that in itself is an untruth. Some tasks require they be handled right away and expeditiously while others are on my when I get around to it list. My standard 9-5 job is on the expeditious list. I knock those tasks out like a cookie with a staring problem just begging to be ate.

My personal life and the business I do on the side lacks that certain Je ne sais quoi. I meander my way

through it and often only write when I give myself an unruly deadline or need to siphon off some serious emotion. So needless to say consistency is not my forte. Plus I lack an ability to stay on task. Do I have a ADD? Perhaps I can rarely have a straight through conversation on topic, and my one friend who seems best able to jump around the spectrum with me is definitely ADD so who knows, but I’m not getting diagnosed anytime soon so in the meantime I’m forced to pretend I can police myself.

Despite the fact that I have scores of finished poems, enough for three books, I have more unfinished than finished. If I have an idea or a thought I have to record it somewhere or it will be gone forever, I know this is fairly common for others also. It starts a simple thought that quickly builds into a complete idea, process or partial poem and is lost forever in the abyss of my mind if not recorded in a matter of seconds. I have insomnia sometimes due to excessive imagination. I’ve seen many a movie; comedies, dramas, action flicks, that have played out nowhere other than my imagination. The movie character I relate with most is Walter Mitty. Unlike Walter though I usually only drift off in my own bed.

So how do I accomplish anything you wonder? The sweet stress of procrastination! It lights an inextinguishable fire under me when I start getting closer to the deadlines for specific goals. On occasion I like to do things in a timely manner but generally to get the best out of my brain function I either procrastinate or drag it out over an extended period of time with random spurts. Kind of like how they teach you to run a marathon. You run for x number of minutes, then walk x number minutes and so on until you run the whole way. I just tend to keep walking.

Some might say that just shows that I am not really passionate about what I do, or that I am not driven. Both of which are false, I’m just not consumed by my passions or desires. My dreams outside of my work and my children are the back burner late night inklings that occasionally see day while I help my children plant and water their dreams. I don’t believe because I’m a mom I can’t have dreams, I just believe I can’t have mine at the expense of theirs. In the meantime I’ll be occasionally on my hustle and everyday on my ‘Walter Mitty’.

Originally published 2/4/2016

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Single Black Female: The Elephant in the Room

Since the start of the fourth grade, when my family moved into a neighborhood where I would become the minority in a verifiable way for a child I have often been “the elephant in the room” so to speak. On occasion there were other black kids in my class, but as we moved deeper into suburbia that number varied sometimes singling me out. I slowly became accustomed to white people wanting to touch my hair and other weird things that people do when the only knowledge they have is of themselves. I went from being declared as gifted and talented to being considered average, (even though the kids in my class weren’t the brightest) and I eventually slipped into the stereotypical trouble maker (ie. bored black kid). For the most part, I just did my work, but I would be remiss to say I never felt like some of my teachers resented me. It was almost as if I didn’t have the right to be this intelligent.

I found myself in the midst of an unknown identity crisis. I had never before questioned my beauty, but now I no longer fit into what was the norm. In order to fit into white standards of beauty I needed to wear my hair straight, dress a certain way, but that was only the surface. I also had to fit the stereotype of who white people thought that I was as a black girl. This meant simple things like I couldn’t be smart and a good dancer, because in the age of Steve Urkel, of course that could not be possible. It also meant I had to have an attitude, know at least one gang member, know where the hood was and what it was like and so on and so on.

I, of course knew and still know none of those thing except where the hood is. The first time I heard a gunshot it was because I fired it in a controlled setting. I have no idea what it sounds like from the other side of the gun. I did develop and attitude though and a propensity towards the famed “angry black woman syndrome.” How could I not eventually develop an over-reaching rage at the notion that I can be everything but who I say and feel I am. I am naturally a smiley person. Even when my life was pure HELL I always had a smile, except when I was truly weary and considering being done with it all, but that’s another blog on another day.

Fitting into the white standard of beauty had its consequences; the first of which was my hair. It ran for the hills like lemmings off the cliff of death as I tried desperately to maintain the look of my new white friends. This, of course lead to years of torment from my few black peers because we just love to call each other bald-headed and regulate a large chunk of a woman’s value to the length of her hair. I started shaving my legs, completely and painfully unnecessary. I’m just not a hairy person. I changed the way I dressed, which was an extra expense for my cash strapped mother, and I began to learn to be the bitchy expectation.

Once I reached HS, I began to realize that a lot of how people treated me really swarmed around who they wanted me to be based on their knowledge of black people, courtesy of prime time television and MTV. I was fortunate enough to develop friendships with a diverse group of young women who thought outside the box and gave me some space to be myself. It wasn’t until then that I could see some of the damage the stereotypes were doing to our community, and what they had done to me as a young woman. I was still a teenager though and still subject to peer pressure and the need for acceptance.

Halfway through my HS career we moved back into a majority black school’s boundaries, and once again I was subject to an “I don’t fit in culture shock.” Now instead of not fitting in with just the white kids mostly, I didn’t really fit in with anyone, and I began to wonder if bitchy black women were really a stereotype. It took me longer than expected to make my first friend, and it was not any of the females. My class selection still had me singled out to some degree, and so I remained the elephant in the room.

It would be that way through much of my college experience, and I began to grow tired of being the representation for all black people. I mean I would like to be able to have a bad day without sending all my people to hell in the eyes of these individuals who will preface their next interaction or even their willingness to have that interaction on their short term dealings with me. The stress and pressure to maintain public perfection is strenuous. The way I speak, walk, dress, talk, and respond to any type of adversity or conflict is always all on center stage.

In my professional career I was often the only or one of a few. The only positions where there seemed to be greater numbers of us (blacks) were in low level, dead end positions, which I am now certain is how they define the diversity of the workforce at larger corporations. As I increased my skill sets and moved into other positions, it seemed as though anytime there were two or more of us in the same department there was a concerted effort to separate us. The black workers I found carried a consistently higher burden. They performed more of the workload but were highly scrutinized by co-
workers and managers as lazy. If one of us were having an off day and not quite as cheerful but still successfully meeting the requirements of the job it was an issue. When we stand up for ourselves, however, we are aggressive instead of assertive.

At 36 I am okay with being the only black woman in the room and being the example or the scale at which you will weigh the likes of all black kind; most days. I am not okay with being subject to various levels of disregard or racism and expected to grin and bare it because it is common place in my life. I no longer have the capacity to be silent for fear of falling into the angry black woman stereotype, or the desire to always wear my hair straight so you won’t think I am one of those radical black people. I am one of those radical black people. I want to be seen! Like, actually seen for who I am and what I have to offer! I want to be heard without ill-conceived notions, and I want to be respected without fear from falsely perceived aggression. I want to be able speak my mind without being labeled as “angry.” Because that honestly makes me angry! The complete callous disregard for the fact that I am a woman, a black woman, a fearless priceless individual who is proud to be representative of the wonderful kings and queens from whom I descended, but I am tired of being treated like the elephant in the room. The one everyone sees but refuses to acknowledge or even address unless it shape-shifts into a mouse.

Originally published 2/10/2016

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Me and My Insecurities


Insecurities, a common occurrence that most people expect you to get over and
or not acknowledge. By Webster’s definition being insecure is: not confident about yourself or your ability to do things well :nervous and uncomfortable. That said insecurity sometimes runs rampant in my life. It is often the reason my abilities and passions are tabled by inaction, and procrastination. As with most people, usually the issues that we face have a root explanation or cause, and to change the situation sometimes you have to dig up and cut out the roots.

So where does my insecurity stem from? If I were to pinpoint it to a time frame I would say my childhood. Throughout my life I have had a myriad of talents that I virtually wasted away. I know sounds ridiculous right? Who wastes talent, natural or acquired? Well, I do and did. So why did I chose to not bother? Well, for me it was a lack of support. I was so self-sufficient perhaps my parents got lost in their own worlds after they divorced and forgot how important it is to encourage a child. I can certainly relate, I almost got lost in my own world of maintaining my household after my own divorce. That said my parents were busy, too busy. My childhood and adolescent years lacked presence and encouragement.

Then there was that abusive relationship. As a teenager I had yet to develop a sense of self. I had no idea what it meant to love or value myself. Over 16 years It wore me down to a nub of a woman and robbed me of the option to learn and grow for over a decade. I still carry the words from the verbal abuse, like they were etched in stone on my heart. Every time I stumble they are a constant reminder of what or who I am not, and what I will not accomplish. Since that time there is no bigger critic or harsher critique that comes in my life than the one I have for myself. Everything that I saw as me was inadequate. Physically I was not pretty enough. Mentally I was not smart enough or tough enough.

Eventually I trended from borderline overachiever to professional half-asser/get by chick. I have half assed my way through almost everything in my life. My children and my job are the only exceptions. In college I settled for a 3.4 GPA skipping class, and assignments because it didn’t really matter. After HS I gave up singing and squashed my range which was tenor to soprano (think Sara Brightman). The one thing I regret the most was running. I don’t know anything that made me happier, and I was naturally good at that. Why didn’t it matter? Because it was me, I adopted the mind state as a youngster that if it involved me it didn’t really matter as long as it wasn’t bad. I have carried this mindset for the majority of my life, and it is one hard ideal to shake. To fight with myself to entrench the importance of me and the fact that I; my abilities, my goals are important and they matter sounds like utter nonsense.

Then there are the physical things. Look in the mirror long enough and you can identify everything the world will judge and misjudge you for, along with a few things they’ll never even notice. Being beautiful has never been my forte. Now for those of you that see me and see gorgeous well honey, I definitely did not always see that, lol. My vision of me wasalways marred by the fact that my nose is pointier like white folks, and I’m a little light. My hair was never right be it afro, relaxer, braids, weave; there was always a place in there for criticism about the lack of self love based on a style or texture. My boobs went from small, to small and sagging after three kids. I added fat, stretch marks, varicose veins to the not subtly unsexy mix, and there was full on depression. It did make it easier to blame myself for my husband’s cheating.

In the summer of 2010, I did my first of what would become many photoshoots. Strangely for the first time I saw myself as myself. I did not have on a ton of makeup, and I was not altered in any way. I saw my bruises and scars, literally, along with my imperfections and I loved them. Slowly I began to love the me I saw too. My freckles, my quirks, my eyes, every little thing that made me who I face every morning before I face the world. The image that God had in mind when he created me.

I struggle with either of the two extremes success, and failure. I’m most comfortable being mediocre, which in itself lets me know it’s not where I belong. The idea of success is overwhelming because with success comes people. Highly critical, over reaching people, in your business and personal space people. No one has an assessment of the average. Failure, on the other hand, ushers in more insecurity and the inability to trust myself and my possibilities. My first book published in 2014, was finished in 2012, and I found every excuse not to proceed for fear of failure and success.

Insecurity is like a dam holding back everything that I am and have to offer. It is bolstered by my heartbreaks and what I perceive as my failures and imperfections. My prayers are the lone chisel compromising the dam’s integrity. I am 37 and learning to leap like children do and know that if I fall I’ll be fine, and if I make it, it’s okay to celebrate. Instead of being bitter or pointing fingers I am grateful that my parents worked so hard to provide for me. I am astounded that I came out of my relationship so optimistic despite my scars. I am happy that I am learning to push myself and take things one day at a time. The first step in working against my insecurities is acknowledging them. The second was learning how to recognize it for it what it is so I know when to push just a little harder and go take just one or ten more steps toward the ever dreaded success. One of my favorite songs is Mary J. Blige’s “Take me As I Am”. She croons about how life and people just can tear you to pieces but at the end of the day you can take it or leave it and they can take or leave you. I, among many around the world love the song and relate because we want to be accepted for who we are. The irony is that far too often, we barely accept ourselves.

Originally published 1/27/16