I
woke up this morning with a feeling of uncertainty and fear so bottomless, so
stark, it’s kind of giving me vertigo. I haven’t felt this level of sheer
despair and impotence since I was forced into a plane, with no saying of my
own, to come to the United States.
I
feel I am having PTSD flashback of that moment, when I refused to cry and the
tears and terror were choking my throat and making it hard to breathe. I stared
at the back of the seat in front of me with unrelenting focus, knowing that if I
blinked, or thought, or spoke, I would break.
In
the fourteen years, I’ve lived in this great country I have been called a spic
to my face once. I have gotten mean comments on my blog calling me a beaner,
but to me internet trolls don’t count. Maybe because of that I never truly
believed that Trump would be elected. His vitriolic words, his rampant sexism,
his ugly view of all Muslims, his mockery of the disabled was so over the top
that I thought, naively, that those feelings were not reflected in the heart of
others.
It
makes me wonder what feelings people had been hiding when they look at me. Do
they wish to say “go back to your country” and knew it was not PC and therefore
bit their tongue? Do they feel now that they can do it, since the President
Elect of this country so freely does?
I
am scared. I am scared because all these years I have felt safe in the
knowledge that this country was a shelter for all, I am scared for my mother,
whose immigration process has yet to be completed. I am scared for my cousins
who are also in the process of legalization. I am afraid for my rights as a
woman and what laws that protect me will be the first to be repealed. I am
afraid that there are so many, many people who saw all this hate pandering and
saw it as inspiring.
Was
it silly of me to think we all want to be united, together, as one, no color or
race? Have I been listening to too much Imagine by Lennon? Was I burying my
head under the sand, ignorant of the rotting core of this country? It’s not the party I am against. I lived
through one Bush administration with no problem. It’s the name calling and the
wall-building, and the fear mongering and the seeds of racism and bigotry that
are sprouting in the hearts of others.
I
am afraid for the state of the relationship with my husband who fails to
understand in all his straight white man privilege that HE has nothing to fear,
but I DO. The same way he belittles that fear we all woman have of walking in
dark alleys because we are conditioned since infancy to fear a predatory attack
from a random man. A fear my husband feels is exaggerated and does not
understand because empathy is a concept he never grasped. The same way so many
other people in this country apparently don’t either.
There
is a weight in my soul, not because Hillary didn’t win and we didn’t get our
first woman president (which would’ve been awesome), not because Trump won…but
because he won the way he did, spouting divisiveness and hatred and racism and
bigotry.
Now
they say we must rally behind him, but is he going to rally behind us? The
people he mocked and threatened? The millions he put down and called rapists,
the ones he sees as property to maul and inappropriately touch?
The
truth is, he doesn’t scare me, he doesn’t worry me, he isn’t the one breaking
my heart. The people who I share this country with, my neighbors, the ones
around me who voted for him, those are the ones who scare me, who worry me, who
made me feel like I can’t trust because I don’t know what is festering in their
heart.
I
will try to focus on the 2% difference. The small 2% that cost the election.
That is a big number of people, who fight for good and inclusiveness and what
is right.
I
wonder how long it will take for this feeling to dissipate. I remember what
shook me off my stupor when I first got into this country, it was a very small
moment, listening to music from back home in a Sears store. Maybe something equally insignificant will
shake off this feeling of dread.
I
will go home and hug my cat and my dog who have no idea what is going on and wait
for hope to rekindle in my heart…for now, it’s pretty fucking bleak there.
2 comments:
I pray to God you are not dealing with a white supremacist you call your husband. For some reasons I've been hearing of a lot of interracial relationships now being strained because (if they are in a relationship with a white person) all of a sudden they start spewing out racist rethorics and act so "clueless" and refuse to understand why minorities are butt hurt, upset, and over emotional.
I am deathly afraid of my nieces who are biracial.
America after all these lies hasn't been progressive. White supremacy hasn't gone anywhere, it's just been hiding ... hence your silent majority.
Also, let me make this clarification.... white people are NOT white supremacists, but there are white people that are white supremacists.... including latinos, and other non whites who share that same mentality.
Stay well, if anything, I'm glad this topic got you start posting again.
Goodness, if my husband was hiding white supremacist inclinations I would consider myself the dumbest person ever to not have seen it coming.
He is just...not getting it. Not getting why I worried, not getting why I'm scared, not getting why I'm grieving. The new reality of our country does not affect him, his reality hasn't shifted, for the rest of us it has.
I want to continue fighting and I hope this kick in the ovaries brings forth the most rabid, fiercest, ass kicking generation of women this century has seen. I hope we band together, us minorities who so threatened the power of the small minded.
I am not quite there yet though. I am still in the reeling stage. Haven't read a piece of news. I am going to avoid reality for a while, until my heart stops shaking and I stop hurting.
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