Thursday, January 29, 2009

What Does Happen?

"...Or does it explode?" ~Langston Hughes

What is this world coming to?

On Tuesday, a California man shot his wife and five children before turning the gun on himself. All of them died. Apparently, before he died, he faxed a letter to a local television station explaining the reason for his actions: both he and his wife had lost their jobs about a week earlier.

It's a shame.

The first thing I felt when I heard about this story was sadness. Not anger. Not disgust. Just sadness. I don't believe this man was evil. I don't believe he was a crazed sociopath. I don't believe he was a monster. What I believe he was, was desperate.

I also believe that in this time of economic crisis, many more are reaching that point. Rock bottom.

It's so easy for people to point fingers or place blame, because in a case like this, there has to be a culprit, a bad guy, a villain. Even though it seems pretty obvious that it was desperation probably mixed in with some depression that caused this man to make such a drastic, terrible decision, we can't leave it there. We have to cast this man as the bad guy, perhaps to distance ourselves from his repulsive humanity.

Financial security is a blessing. It's a blessing that so many of us take for granted and many more of us kill ourselves to have. How many families are out there, about to reach their last dime, not sure where the next meal is coming from, feeling like failures because they can't support the lives they created? How many families work themselves into an early grave of hypertension and anxiety and loneliness and isolation in order to prove to their family and friends that they are good and hardworking and worth love and support and expenive things? And how often does our society, with it's mantra of pulling one's self up by one's boot straps and it's model of the American dream and it's mandate that financial security and material possessions are a measure of one's worth, how often does this society say that the latter is worth more than the former? How often does it blame those very individuals for not carrying their share of the weight and demonize those who struggle to take care of their basic needs?

The reality of the situation is that this man and his wife had five mouths to feed in addition to their own. They had bills to pay and necessities to buy and they had no way to do that. In a day and age when thousands of people are losing jobs in a single day, the likelihood that they would quickly find alternative employment was slim.

Desperation.

We live in a carniverous, cannibalistic society that preys on the very lifeblood that keeps it going - the working class. We berate people with the idea that they're only worth as much as they can give. We beat little boys over the head with the idea that it's their ability to provide money and material things, not their ability to love that determines their worth. We tell the poor that they have no worth and treat them accordingly. We take out the mistakes of the greedy on the backs of the hungry. We do all this and then we turn and point our fingers when the very backs we've been walking on buckle under our weight.

When tragic situations like this occur, we rightly examine and critique the behavior responsible for it. But when we stop there, when we fail to go a step farther and look at the cause for such behavior - in this case a recession that's killing more families than this man did - then we continue to contribute to the problem. We continue to ignore it and thus we contribute to the ugly cycle that allows it to happen again and again and again.

In no way am I saying this man was right, to the contrary, it was sick, tragic and wrong. But in every way I am saying that there is more to this case than domestic violence. By denying this man that truth, we are denying his humanity and ours.

Is this what happens to a dream deferred?

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

25 Random Things...

Rules: Once you've been tagged, you are supposed to write a note with 25 random things, facts, habits or goals about you. At the end, choose 25 people to be tagged. You have to tag the person who tagged you. If I tagged you, it's because I want to know more about you.

Ok... so I've been tagged several times recently on Facebook and here thought I would go ahead and play along... Here goes...

1. This is the third time I've attempted to do this but each time it's mysteriously deleted... I wonder if it will work this time or if the gods are trying to tell me that my life is not interesting enough to post 25 things about... we shall see...

2. I tend to think really dry, really negative things are funny and so I often appear to be more depressed than I really am... does that make sense?... basically I have a really wierd sense of humor that involves laughing at the misfortune of others and myself... hahaha! I'm also usually laughing at folks in my head... but I'm a really nice person.. I promise! :)

3. My 25 things will likely be 25 paragraphs as I am extremely long winded or more acurately long worded as I tend to be somewhat quiet in person.

4. I'm a writer of non-fiction, fiction and occasionally poetry... I'm an artist and I'm sensitive about my shit... :) really sensitive.

5. I hate my job and at this point I don't care who knows... believe me I am formulating my escape plan... daily.

6. I've lost some friends and gained some great ones in the last few years... I thrive on friendship and connections with others and I love my village and all of my friends!!!

7. I am incredibly silly and often make myself laugh. I sometimes wonder if I will grow out of said silliness by the time I'm like 37... I hope not.

8. Both my daughter and I have Arabic names and both of us have fathers who practice Islam... and we're both Black women... haha way to state the obvious...

9. I waiver between really wanting another child and sticking with the lovely one I have. I do know that I love being pregnant and want to experience that again at some point... maybe I will be a surrogate.

10. Not to brag or anything... but I think I'm pretty brilliant... well I know I am.

11. Here's a haiku... sort of: I love to sing.
I am not a good singer.
I sing all the time.

12. When I was in high school I secretly dreamed of being an actress and used to practice my Academy Award acceptance speech often.

13. I love knowing random facts... and spend hours online reading about random things... like the time I spent the afternoon at work reading about rivers and streams on Wikipedia. I like to think I'm preparing to win thousands on Jeopardy one day.

14. I have a strange affinity for bodies of water.

15. I love adjectives and really vivid descriptions and words and language. Right now I love words that begin with L, (hahaha L Words!) like lilting, lovely, lyrics, love, lesbian... they roll off the tongue so nicely!

16. I am very passionate and I cry easily... especially when watching movies... I was messed up after watching the Hours, seriously, couldn't stop crying for like an hour afterwards.

17. I want to be the next bell hooks/patricia hill collins/oprah/aishah shahidah simmons/rebecca walker... basically a brilliant ass black woman writer/activist/feminist/queer/thinker.

18. I love music and art! I consider myself to be somewhat of an artist...

19. I really like to debate/discuss.

20. I have an obsession with reading and books... I can be a compulsive book buyer.

21. I love my apartment, but hate it at the same time. I'll probably be moving soon...

22. I plan to go back to school to finish my Bachelor's in Journalism in March (see escape plan in #5)

23. I think my daughter is hilarious and destined for greatness... she wants to be either a Mommy-Dancer or a Mommy-Doctor.

24. I am astonishingly unorganized.

25. I'm quirky, some may say weird... I embrace it all. I like to fancy myself a free spirit!

On Closets and Me and the Televangelist...

Being in the closet will fuck you up.

That's the honest truth.

I'm sitting here watching Oprah's interview with Ted Haggard and that's the first thing that came to my mind. That and a saddening remembrance.

What he's saying sounds crazy and ridiculous and makes no sense, but I understand. I understand believing so much in something that says what you feel, essentially what you are, is bad. I understand believing that if you pray enough, are good enough, ignore it enough, deny it enough, God will make it go away. I understand being afraid of losing all that you know, your family and friends and community, your life for something that you think is bad and want nothing to do with. I understand hating yourself. I understand all that.

I guess what I he a hard time understanding is how, after Haggard says he's come to grips with who he is, with his sexuality, how he can still basically find fault in it. In him. He said he understands who he is. He said he accepts who he is. He said he is a heterosexual man with homosexual attachments.

What the hell is that?

You know, I'm no proponent of boxes and labels. I agree with Haggard, in that they are only something used to make people feel comfortable, to let them kow how to identify you and interact with you. They have nothing to do with the person being labeled as much as the person ding the labeling. I get that and I agree with it. However, there is something to be said by giving voice to one's own truth. Giving name to it. If he said, I'm not heterosexual, but not homosexual, and left it that. I'd be cool. If he said I prefer not to use labels, but I recognize that I have attractions to both women and men, I'd be cool. What I'm not cool with is that he's still clinging to this heterosexual identity, in essence, placing more value on that identity than on who he truly is. It makes me sad.

At the end of the interview, he said that he thinks the ideal is monagamous, heterosexual relationships. He said God accepts everyone, but that there is still this ideal to achieve. Basically, he's still saying that who he is, is still not quite good enough. Because, no matter who he chooses to be with, how he chooses to identify, how he chooses to behave, the truth of who he is will never change. He will always be a queer man.

That's why being in the closet will fuck you up.

I think when people deny who they are, when they can't even be honest with their selves about who they are, then that is the sickness. It's not being gay, that's not the sickness. The sickness is the shame and self-hatred and the lies. The sickness is not being able to give voice to who you are. The sickness is not seeing your inherent value, but that of something that you will never be.

That sickness will kill you. If not physically, then certainly mentally, emotionally and yes, spiritually. I truly believe that when people repress their sexuality, it finds ways - often unhealthy ones - to seep out. For me it was promiscuity and a deep self-loathing. For Haggard, it was prostitution and drugs. For others it make be something equally as danderous to self and to others.

It's ironic that I could see so much of myself in this fundamentalist, Christian televangelist. Seeing him today brought back memories of much sadder, much younger me. I feel sorry for her and for him and for anyone else who believes choosing the closet, choosing self-hatred, choosing to not to give voice to one's truth, choosing to operate and identify from a place of other is a better option than choosing to love and accept self.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Change is Here...

I can't even write one of my lengthy posts today because I am speechless. Really truly at a loss for words.

I can say thought, that I am happy.

I am happy and I am proud. Proud to be Black. Proud to be an American. Proud that Barack Hussein Obama, a black man with a funny name is this Black woman with a funny name's President. I am moved almost to tears, most definitely beyond words at the weight of this occasion.

It's simply beautiful.

It's beautiful that Black folks in this country finally can see themselves reflected back it's face.

I am speechless.

I sit here, searching for words to describe exactly what it is i feel, because that is what I do, I paint my thoughts, my feelings, my ideas, inklings and notions with words.

Right now I can't even do that.

This lack of words symbolizes just how joyous this occasion is for me.

...

Saturday, January 10, 2009

On the Value of a Life...

So far 2009 seems to be the year that police officers' have designated to kill off Black men. Only 10 days in and they've already killed one and wounded another.

When will this shit end?

A few days ago I was enraged when I learned about Robbie Tolan, a minor league baseball player, who was shot by police in front of his own home. Apparently, the officers thought his car was stolen and questioned him in front of his home. When his mother came out to see what was going on, an officer allegedly pushed her. Tolan, who was already being held on the ground by an officer, looked up to say something and was promptly shot in the chest. Thankfully, he is recovering in an area hospital.

Just a few minutes ago, thanks to Little Miss Nobody's blog, I learned about yet another shooting, this one fatal. Twenty two year old Oscar Grant, was shot in the back by a police officer, while handcuffed and face down on the ground. This man is dead.

Why?

I am so sick of this. I swear. In Cincinnati, we've seen this same story unfold over and over in the past 10 years. Not one of the officers has ever been found guilty. I guess Black life has little value in this country. Let me rephrase that: I know Black life has little value in this country.

I just can't wrap my mind around the idea that one human being has the power to take another human being's life just because he or she has a badge and a blue uniform. What the fuck? How can it be ok to give another human being that much power? What's the difference in if he hadn't had that badge and uniform and if he hadn't? They'd still be human beings. One still would be dead. And it still wouldn't make any sense. Does this badge and uniform suddenly exempt one from humanity? From basic right and wrong?

You know what? Why don't they just put on a white uniform instead? You know, one with a pointy hat and a face covering? Why don't they just trade their cars for horses and their guns for a noose? They obviously want us gone, why don't they cut the bullshit and be real about it? Don't pretend to kill me in the name of justice, kill me cause you want my Black ass dead. That's what this is really about. Kill me because you'd rather take my life than protect it. Because I mean more to you dead than I ever will alive. Be honest with the shit.

The cynic in me doesn't think anything will happen to any of these officers. Just like nothing happened to the ones who shot Amadou Diallo, Sean Bell, Timothy Thomas, and all the other Black men whose lives haven't meant enough to police to allow them the right to continue living them.

People wonder why I tell my daughter that some police are good but a lot of them are bad. This is why. I don't want her to get it confused and think they are actually there to protect her. Maybe white folks, but certainly not us.

Certainly not.

Fuck the police.

Thursday, January 08, 2009

On Black Womanhood and Femininity...

In light of my last post, I really want to explore the idea of the feminine as it relates to Black women.

Can Black women really be feminine?

Honestly, I think not. And this is coming from a make-up wearing, heel rocking, skirt loving Black woman who wears her femme-ness with much pride. But, all that aside, I don't think that Black women, or any woman of color for that matter, but especially Black women, can ever truly be feminine in this society.

Let me explain why.

Femininity is something that has been of utmost importance in this country. In the days of slavery, it was a privelege (if you can call it that) awarded to white women and fiercely protected by white men. Feminine was to be demure, delicate, dainty and lily white. In fact, back in the day (way before bronzer and tanning beds), proper young white ladies protected their feminine, with bonnets and hats as not to darken their lovely lily skin. Femininity was and I believe still is a code word for white woman.

For that reason and by that definition, a Black woman will never be feminine. Why? It's simple. She will never have white skin.

It's pretty obvious when you think about it. Why is the standard of beauty in this country still a blonde haired, blue eyed white girl, with a waif-life body and perky breasts? Of course, said white girl might have her occasional chocolate (or should I say caramel friend) and of course she'll have an Asian one too, (gotta make it PC right?) but they are always other to her is. That is, she is model, they are only variations of a prototype.

And even when you break it down within the community, it's always those women closest to white who are deemed most beautiful. My mom always joked about the society she was introduced to when she was in grad school in New Orleans. A society that put just as much stock, if not more, into personal appearance as in education. My mom said her roommate was unattractive and overweight (both usually strikes against a woman's worth) but was always accepted because of her light skin and eyes. And my mother, who is brown, was saved by her long hair. The valuation of these attributes is obviously their likeness to the white standard of beauty. But, despite how close she (the light skinned beauty) might be in the subculture (if you can call Blackness that), she will never be white and thus never be truly feminine to the culture at large.

Now of course this is not to say that a Black woman or any woman of color can not be seen as sexy or attractive. Of course she can. Black women have always been sexualized. That's never been the question. It's our ability to be truly feminine, meaning truly valued and revered as wholesome, noble and beautiful that's been up for intepretation. Black women are always cast as sexy, alluring and sexually available, but rarely is a Black woman put on a pedestal as a true "lady".

What kind of effect must this have on the psyche of Black women in this country? Always trying, but never quite measuring up. Using all the tonics and potions to straighten our hair, lighten our skin, and mold our bodies in the likeness of a standard that will never include us? How must it feel to know that no matter what we do, our beauty will never quite be enough? It's got to be a pretty serious mind fuck. In fact, I know it is.

So what is the answer? The answer in my opinion is reject this idea of femininity. No, this doesn't mean "dressing like a man" (unless youu want to) or trying to be more masculine (because thats a whole 'notha mind fuck for a whole 'notha post). What it does mean is coming up with our own standard that exists outside of white womanhood. A standard in which we are central and not operating from a place of other, a place of being outside looking in. A standard that celebrates our whole selves and not just a caricature of a caricature of someone else.

But what does this look like?

There's really no true answer. When I think of this notion or rejecting the boxes of gendered socialization, I think about queer culture and genderfuck. I also think about black women choosing to celebrate their natural selves. I think about including other representations of woman into the standard. Representations that include fat women, dark skinned women, masculine women, noncorfomists women, androgynous women, and more. I think about completely dismantling this paradigm of beauty and femininity for something new and different and revolutionary.

Something truly beautiful.

On Anne Coulter and Black Womanhood...

Anne Coulter strikes again.

This time she's written an(other) inflammatory book entitled, "Guilty Liberal 'Victims' and their Assault on America," in which she accuses liberals (surprisingly) of playing victims when really they are the ones victimizing America.

Yawn.

Usually this wouldn't be a big deal. I mean, of course she gets on my nerves and yeah can cause my blood rise a degree or two, but I let it roll off my back. I mean, she is afterall Anne Coulter, a name as synonymous with conservative hate as Bill O'Reilly. However, this time she really struck a nerve. Coulter tapped into what's been brewing below the surface of many an American's mind and seeping oh so discreetly (sometimes not) into American media: the attack of Black womanhood.

Coulter's new book includes a section in which she lashes into Michelle Obama, ridiculing her style as an, "obvious imitation of Jackie O's style - the flipped-under hair, the sleeveless A-line dresses, the short strands of fake pearls," that "would have been laughable if done by anyone other than a media-designated saint." Then she takes it a little bit further when she compares Obama to Cindy McCain saying the latter woman, "dresse(s) well without freakishly imitating famous first ladies in history."

My blood is boiling.

Not only is Coulter's assault on Obama's dress absolutely ridiculous and completely irrelevent (who the fuck cares?) but it stinks of gendered racism. Of course Michelle Obama could never be equal to Jackie O... or even Cindy McCain, because of course Michelle Obama is Black. Not just Black, she is a brown sista.

I've been watching this scene unfold for months now. The subtle and not so subtle attacks on Michelle as too hard and angry because she has a mind and mouth of her own and hasn't been trained into quiet submission like some politicians' wives. I've watched the way the media has questioned Barack's ability to lead the country with a fiery wife like Michelle. I've watched the media relegate Michelle Obama, an intelligent, well educated, Black woman, to a familiar take on Black womanhood - the angry Black bitch.

I believe and have believed for some time, that Barack Obama is not what scares some white folks at all. It's his beautiful, intelligent Black wife that frightens them. Michelle Obama represents what white oppression has tried to kill, vilify, subdue and control for centuries - Black womanhood. Black women have always been portrayed as such. You know, not quite woman. Somewhere stuck between raging savage and dignified lady, never quite measuring up to the latter. All attempts by Black woman to to embrace the feminine have been regarded as "freakish" attempts to "mimic" white women. Nothing more than a silly caricature. Black women in America can never truly be feminine - not by societal definitions anyway - because our brown skin, courser hair and of course round rear ends are the total antithesis of all things proper and ladylike, all things woman, in this country.

I've always thought, and still do, that the thing that scared some white folks the most about this brown president, is his Black wife. Putting Michelle Obama in the place of First Lady automatically thrusts Black womanhood into the front and center - a place where it's never before been in this country.

So of course Anne Coulter would attack Michelle's dress. Of course she would. Because by doing so, she's subtly attacking her womanhood and her right to step foot in the White House as more than a cook or maid. She's questioning this Black woman's right to take the place of the many white women before her as the face of the American woman. Essentially, she's questioning any Black woman's right to ever be more than a "freakish" imitation of a white woman.

It's sickening.

Sunday, January 04, 2009

On Parenthood and Black Girlhood...

So I was just reading Rebecca Walker's blog on Theroot.com and something she said struck me.

"...My son watches way more TV than I thought he would, back before I had a child and thought I'd be spending my every waking moment engaging mine with all natural, not-made-or-painted-in China, educational toys..."

I too, thought my parenting and my kid would be different before becoming a parent. Albeit, I didn't have too much time to make parenting plans before becoming a mother, I still had my ideas. I just knew my daughter was going to be this little Pro-Black, feminist, intelligent little prodigy who would disect the racism and sexism and all the other fucked up shit seen on TV, just like I do. She would reject the idea of Disney princesses and be angry at singing, dancing white girls who steal the spotlight from singing, dancing Black girls. She would play with gender neutral toys or a good variety of both toys marketed to girls and those marketed to boys. She would look at something like, oh I don't know, The Bee Movie and see what I see, a mockery of slavery and resistance struggles in the US.

Alas, my daughter aspires to be Cinderella. Sigh.

At least now she recognizes that she can be "Brown Cinderella" that's a start, right? Or maybe she's just starting to see herself as other.

Honestly, it's all quite disappointing. When I'm not frustrated by her predilection for white and light skinned folks and all things "girly" and pink, I'm feeling like a failure as a parent. I mean, I know that I'm a good mom. I know that I go out of my way to ensure that she is learning and has positive images of women and Black people, that she recognizes that she can do and be whatever she wants. But I still feel sad. So sad.

I'm angry too.

How the hell did this happen?

I mean, I'm that parent whose intentional with what my child takes in. I'm that parent who refuses to buy Disney princess memorabilia or Barbies or white dolls. I'm that parent who colors brown the dozens of smiling, white faces on the toys she gets from people who don't know my rules. I'm that parent who goes out of my way to point out beautiful Black women to her. When, where, how and why did my kid, at age 4, get the idea in her little head that white is right?

I'm angry because it seems hopeless. Who will fight for our little brown girls? How can we ever dream of saving their self-esteem and helping them to see their own value as little Black women, if with even the most intentional monitoring and teaching, they still pick up on the idea that they are somehow less than because their skin is a shade of beautiful brown? And who will teach them that their only fate in life is not to be somebody's wife and somebody else's mother? If my daughter refers to Tyrone, the orange moose from the Backyardigans, as her husband one more time...

But this is just a vent. I will not be giving up the fight. Afterall, she's only 4. There is much more time to instill a love for self - a love for her blackness, womanness, and plain ol' selfness - in the years to come.

Anyway, I just wanted to say I feel you Rebecca... boy do I ever...

Friday, January 02, 2009

On Why I'm Locing My Hair...

I've decided that in 2009, for my 25th year, to mark a change, I am going to loc my hair.

I'm so excited.

I've started telling people about it and they always ask why. Why am I locing up? Well, it's not a decision I came to all willy-nilly. It's something that I've put a lot of thought into. So here goes...

I'm locing my hair because I want to go back to school. In December of 2006, I dropped out of school. It was a break that was necessary for my mental, spiritual and emotional body. I had planned for it to be one quarter, but life happened and honestly, I'm glad, but now it's time to return. I want 2009 to be the year that start back.

I'm locing my hair because I'm a dreamer. According to Myers-Briggs I'm an INFP, which means I live in a vivid innerworld of dreams and passions. It's true. I have all these things that I want to accomplish. I'm a writer - I want to write books, essays, articles, screenplays, etc. I dream of being able to live off of my writing. I also dream of being a professor Black Women's Studies. I dream of creating an environment for myself and my child, that is affirming and creative and artistic and communal and loving and beautiful and feminist. I dream of surrounding her by strong women and men who can show her what it means to go after and achieve one's dreams. I dream of being happy.

I'm locing my hair because the second half of my twenties have got to be better than the first.

I'm locing my hair because I want to be more intentional in my life. I don't want to live my life reacting to everything, because reacting takes control from my hands and places it into those of whatever/whomever I'm reacting. I worked at a parenting center that stressed the importance of intentional parenting and how it is important as parents to not just react to our kids' behavior, but to think of each moment as a chance to mold this kid into the kind of adult you want her to be. I think that applies in all aspects of my life. I feel like I've been a passenger in my own life, and I want to take the chance to jump in the driver's seat.

I'm locing my hair because I love myself and I want to continue to love me... Beautifully human, flaws and all.

In essence, my locs will be a visual reminder of all of these things I'm writing today and more. Everyday, when I look in the mirror, I want to have a visual reminder of who I am and what I want to do. that reminder will be my locs.

Thursday, January 01, 2009

On Pride and a Sound Mind and Living Inside the Glow...

"...I love you more than I love life itself, but I need to find a place where I can breathe... " India.Arie "Beautiful"

Every year I make a New Year's Resolution. Every year I put a lot of thought into it, and I list all of the things that I want to work on myself to make me the best me possible. It's quite cathartic actually. This year, I didn't actually write down what my resolutions are, but I've been thinking about them nonetheless.

And I've been thinking, I am so damn proud of myself. I really am.

I can honestly say that 2008 has been one of the hardest, if not the hardest year(s) of my life. But at the same time, I can say that it has been one of the best in many different ways. I can see so much growth in the me I was on 1 January 2008 and today on 1 January 2009. And I am so proud I'm moved to tears.

I think it's that balance of the good and the bad, and my being able to take both, without cracking, that makes me so proud. When I ended 2006, which had seemed like it was going to be one of the best years of my life, I was so depressed. I was having anxiety attacks and getting myself so worked up about what other people thought of me and my life, that it was affecting me physically and mentally. I was in a relationship that seemed to be draining my soul. No lie. And I felt like I was in a gray cloud and couldn't see my way into the sunlight again. Even now, when I think back on that period of my life, it looks gray (guess you'd actually have to be in my mind to see/know what I'm talking about).

Today, I am so proud.

2008 was filled with some of the hardest things that I have ever had to deal with. I had to face my biggest fear and deal with some issues that honestly I'm still dealing with. I've never made this much at a job, and I've never struggled this much financially. I don't know if I've ever lost as many friends and loved ones in one year as I lost in 2008. Every time I made a step forward, it felt like I was taking 2steps backward.

But I'm proud.

I'm proud because sometimes I get down, but never have I gotten to the place I was in 2006/07. I want to live. I'm proud that as terrible and difficult as 2008 was, I've made it through with my sanity - no depression, no anxiety. I'm proud because as much as the bad has gotten me down, I've been able to appreciate the good. I'm proud because though I lost some relationships, I've made some new ones that I think will sustain me in a way those old ones never could have. I'm proud because I love myself and it took a damn long time to get to this point...

So, I chose to quote those lyrics by India.Arie because a few years ago, a friend and I were talking about that song and what exactly it meant. She'd heard an interpretation that has stuck with me forever. She said this song wasn't about India outgrowing a romantic relationship, but instead outgrowing herself. She said that the song was talking about how much she loved herself and the place where she was, but that she yearned for more, for growth, and though it pained her to leave who she is for who she will be, she had to do it. She had to find a place where the new India could breathe and flourish and be given light and love.

I love that.

So, I wish I could've written/posted this on December 31st, but it didn't work out that way. No regrets though.

I'm so proud of me and I'm breathing...