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making history November 5, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — radiofreebecky @ 7:21 am
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I wrote a letter tonight to the children I hope to have someday.

I hadn’t dared to hope that they would be reading in their history books about Barack Obama, the first African-American US president-elect – but now that I know they will be, I want them to have a firsthand account too. I want them to know what it was like to be here, the victory shouts and the tears, the prayers and the beautiful faces of the people to whom this meant everything.

I want them to be able to feel the excitement I felt, the inability to sleep, the knowledge that soon we’ll be waking up in a freer world. I want them to smell the air as the winds of changes shift.

And I want them to know why we felt this way, too. I want them to know how it was for us before, and how badly we wanted it to be different for them. I want to tell them how hard we worked – and that it was for them and their future that we did it.

 

women i love, part one October 9, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — radiofreebecky @ 4:07 am
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I just think Michelle Obama is the Most Awesomest super-classy woman of ever.

She never takes the political bait, always focuses on the big picture and rises above what’s going on around her. Not that I don’t love her husband as a candidate, but my dream ticket would involve Mrs. Obama herself for president.

To wit, her recent interview with Larry King, as reported in CNN:

McCain’s running mate, Gov. Sarah Palin, has lobbed some intense attacks on Barack Obama over the Ayers issue. “Our opponent is someone who sees America as imperfect enough to pal around with terrorists who targeted their own country,” Palin told a crowd of supporters this week.

King played the clip and asked Michelle Obama if that statement made her “mad.”

Obama replied, “I don’t watch it.”

“What do you make of her running for a vice president and having many kids and being a good parent and bouncing all the balls?” King asked.

“I think she provides an excellent of example of all the different roles that women can and should play,” Michelle Obama responded. “I’m a mother with kids and I’ve had a career and I’ve had to juggle. She’s doing publicly what so many women are doing on their own privately. What we’re fighting for is to make sure that all women have the choices that Sarah Palin and I have.”

So classy. Really, I just love her.

 

feminism June 27, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — radiofreebecky @ 11:11 pm
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“Feminism has fought no wars. It has killed no opponents. It has set up no concentration camps, staved no enemies, practiced no cruelties. Its battles have been for education, for the vote, for better working conditions . . . for safety on the streets . . . for child care, for social welfare . . . for rape crisis centers, women’s refuges, reforms in the laws. If someone says ‘Oh, I’m not a feminist,’ I ask ‘Why? What’s your problem?’”
- Dale Spender
 

masochism online May 31, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — radiofreebecky @ 6:58 pm
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God help me, I should have gone to Agnes Scott.

In a lot of ways, I’m dreading the thought of spending another year at the most closed-minded school this side of Bob Jones University.

And no, I don’t know why I keep tormenting myself by looking up course catalogues from women’s colleges. Okay?!?

 

new birth missionary baptist church May 31, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — radiofreebecky @ 5:41 pm
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Soulforce is a pro-gay Christian movement that is spending the summer sending delegate families to American megachurches for dialogue in something they’re calling “The American Family Outing.”

One of the churches they are visiting, New Birth Missionary Baptist, is right near here in Lithonia, Georgia (yes, the same town that is also home to one of only two liquor stores within 20 miles of my house).

One of the couples visiting this church, Steve Parelli and Jose Ortiz, also run a pro-gay ministry called Other Sheep.

A couple of months ago, I emailed Mr. Parelli to ask him to put me on the Other Sheep mailing list, adding that I really appreciated their upcoming visit to New Birth because I had grown up with friends from that church who felt very conflicted by its uber-conservative “prosperity gospel” teachings. He excerpted my email in the next Other Sheep email update. I was excited.

Tomorrow, Soulforce will be at New Birth (Carl, if you read this and are in town this weekend and going to church, please call me).

Yesterday, I had this in my inbox:

Dear Becky,
We will be in Atlanta this weekend. We leave on Friday morning and will be there for two nights. If you would like us to phone you while we are there, let me know by emailing us. We don’t have a cell phone.
Steve
Obviously I sent him back my number and said I’d be delighted to participate in anything they were doing, but I’m kind of confused by the wording here – what exactly would be the purpose of said phone call? It’s a mystery to me.
So all weekend I’ve been jumpily checking the phone to see if anything exciting is happening, while at the same time reminding myself that I really don’t have anything to offer this group that they couldn’t get from a million other people and therefore he’s not going to call me so I should just chill.
Awkward, awkward, awkward.
 

listen May 5, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — radiofreebecky @ 2:10 am
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Just now I kind of lost it over something as imbecilic as the fact that without official club status, we can’t have anyone enter the freaking Miss Berry pageant to raise awareness that we exist.

miss berry 08

It is always, always, always the stupid shit that hits me. I am such a child.

 

on hold May 4, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — radiofreebecky @ 10:45 pm
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I’m working too hard on exams and papers (through the disappointed haze of a mistreated freedom fighter) to come up with enlightening blog posts… so here:

Halliburton Gang-Rape Cover-Up

Enlighten thyselves.

 

why i’m a feminist April 17, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — radiofreebecky @ 4:28 am
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It’s sexual assault awareness week here at Berry. I’m sure everyone has seen the great job the the Women’s Studies department, EMPOWER, the Sexual Assault Center interns, and Peer Eds, and everyone else have done with drumming up support and awareness for physical, sexual, and emotional abuse.

In all the information we get about these causes, it’s almost the nature of the beast that most of it is hard numerical data. It makes a big impact, and that’s good. But to balance that perspective and really understand the gravity of the situation, I think it’s also good to hear stories of personal experience. Especially from people we know.

Understanding that things like this can and do happen to people we interact with daily makes us more aware of and more sensitive toward these experiences. It helps us understand where people are coming from. And it helps us confirm in our minds that these things are real, and that they are common, and that social barriers have little effect on their prevalence.

Relationship abuse can happen to anyone, and it happened to me.

I don’t mean to be misleading here. I’m not working up to a tale of rape and battering. I have never been afraid for my life or my safety because of someone I dated. I’ve never been intentionally physically injured by another person at all. I have been lucky, luckier than many people, and I know it and am thankful.

What I’m talking about is emotional abuse: the invisible attacker. Most people who experience emotional abuse and manipulation never label it as such until it begins to co-occur with physical or sexual abuse. Emotional abuse is not tangible, but it leaves a mark, and often that mark is all the more painful for its hiddenness; it’s hard to heal a pain you haven’t acknowledged, and it’s hard to acknowledge a pain you can’t identify. But it’s there, for so many people, and we need to know. We need to learn to recognize it, because that’s the only way to overcome it.

When I was in high school, there was a person I liked a lot, who showed interest in me, and we decided to pursue a romantic relationship. [I'm deliberately vague about the details of this relationship or the identity of the person with whom I pursued it, because my purpose here is not to indict or blame anyone but to inform people; if you recognize something or someone please refrain from referring to such in the comments.] I was both excited and nervous about this relationship, because I was young and not very experienced, and I wanted very much for things to go well.

Things did go well, for quite a while. I was enthusiastic, maybe a little more enthusiastic than I should have been. I spent a lot of time with this person, and with this person’s family and friends, and I felt very privileged and adult, getting to do all these things. I made it my business to take an interest in the things that interested my significant other, and to become involved in these things so that they would be experiences we could share together.

I had all kinds of creative ideas for gifts and experiences, and I threw myself into them. Sometimes I felt like they weren’t received with the enthusiasm I had hoped for, but I told myself that I was just with someone who had a very hard time expressing emotions. The excitement and gratitude were there, I was sure, and it was my job to help them find their way out.

I felt that it was my duty to tease out those hidden emotions and help my significant other express them. I was sure it was just shyness that had set up these mental barriers, and I have to admit that the mystery of it was attractive to me. I was in high school and very into the dark, brooding hero – you know, the one who only needs the love of a good woman to become healed from his mysterious emotional wounds. Yes sirree, I had myself a real Byronic hero, and I was going to be Woman, the great emotional savior.

The more I tried to be a good girlfriend and met with little response, though, the more worried I got. It seemed that I was, if anything, an annoyance. Many times I would work hard on a surprise to have it met with criticism – little things, like misidentifying a football player, seemed to be incredibly irksome. But I was good. I learned from my mistakes – when any opinion of mine elicited contempt, I backed down. It was tough at first to swallow my pride, but I knew self-sacrifice was an integral part of a good relationship. It got easier to keep quiet, especially since speaking up usually meant that I would be made fun of for my silly ideas. Every once in a while, usually when I knew the correct answer to a subject being debated among my significant other’s friends, it would cross my mind that maybe I ought to be more assertive – but it was easier to dismiss my thoughts than be put down in front of others.

There were more signs, things I missed along the way that I would immediately recognize now. My significant other was incredibly bothered that I was, by an inch, the taller half of the relationship. I put my platform flip-flops away and wore flats. Very little of our time together was spent around my friends or family. During our time alone, I never chose the movie or where it was watched. Certain acts were requested of me but never reciprocated. I internalized the unspoken rule that I was not to interfere when my significant other’s friends or video games beckoned.

Things escalated. My significant other thought it was funny to make me watch clips of violent films; during one party I spent an hour in the bathroom humming to drown out the noise of a Tarantino movie I had begged that we not watch. Occasionally my attempts to divert attention from first-person shooter games to myself resulted in harsh insults or having pillows thrown in my direction. They rarely hit and didn’t hurt, but the anger behind them brought me to tears. I did everything I could think of to fix whatever error of mine I believed to have led to each of these situations – and there was always a different problem in myself I could blame – but nothing seemed to work. Trying to talk about it made things worse – tempers flared and I would drive home late crying with no goodnight kiss.

I didn’t know how to fix whatever I had done wrong. I withdrew from spending time with my friends, wanting to make myself available on the off chance my significant other should call and want to see me. I slept a lot – I would come home from school and just curl up on the couch in the guest room until dinnertime. I was always cold and always catching whatever virus came around. I felt physically weak, cried easily, and didn’t eat much. I had a hard time concentrating at school – I told myself it was senioritis – and I felt less engaged in the classes I had previously enjoyed.

I knew, of course, that things weren’t going as they should have, but I was convinced it was my own fault. I needed to try harder and be a better girlfriend, and if I could do that I would once again have the affection and attention of the person whose approval I wanted so much. If I saw, on a subconscious level, that something deeper than my own failings was at play, I never acknowledged it. I was afraid, but the fear was for the possible end of the relationship, for the loss of someone I thought I needed, rather than because of the effect being with that someone was having on me.

The only time I remember being afraid for the right reasons, the flagpost experience I both hate to remember and hope I won’t forget anytime soon, came on a winter night when I was watching my significant other and one of the friends play video games. I had been sitting off to the side since the friend had showed up, hoping it would soon dawn on someone that I wasn’t included or having any fun, and occasionally trying to interject myself into the conversation but every time being rebuffed. A few times the friend would humor me and try to include me, but my statements were consistently shot down by my significant other. Eventually I became frustrated and began to cry. When angrily asked why I was crying, I managed, “Because you won’t listen to me!” I saw a hard look come across the face before a hand reached out to smack my arm with a discarded leather glove. It didn’t leave a mark, but for a flash I saw things clearly, recoiled, and gasped for breath between tears that were suddenly those of betrayal and fear. For just an instant before going back to my haunted existence I knew the depth of the wrong that was being done to me, was shocked that I had allowed things to get to this state – but at that point it only served to make me more sure that I was no longer the smart and competent girl I had thought I was. I was miserable.

I didn’t leave. I understand why, although the person I am now sometimes gets impatient with the person I was then. Not long after that, I was diagnosed with clinical depression and began treatment. Not long after that, I was dumped over the phone and came the closest I’ve ever been in my life to suicide, so hard was it to escape the captive mentality I had imprisoned myself in.

This story has a happy ending. My antidepressants worked. My friends were more than willing to let me pick up where I had left off with them after months of neglect. I channeled my energy into running with the dog and got fitter than I’ve ever been. I went to college and became a feminist. I fell in love with a guy who wanted to learn from me as much as I wanted to learn from him, and we built a relationship on the foundation of a friendship built around outdoor activities, hymns, and social justice. I chose a major I was good at, found a job I loved, and became involved in politics and religion. I took a public speaking class. I learned not to apologize for my thoughts or for my needs. I became happy.

I don’t tell this story to upset you. I don’t tell this story to make you feel bad for me. Although this story is a part of me, it is a part I accept and understand as a source of strength, of resistance. I have a civil acquaintance with my former significant other, whom I still see on occasion when I’m at home, and I don’t hold a grudge against an individual for being swept up in the societal problem of relationship abuse any more than I now blame myself for allowing it to happen.

I tell you this story because there is power in knowing. Know that it can happen. Don’t live in fear; live in awareness. You have the power to call the shots in your life; you also have the power to understand and to not condemn if you or someone you know calls them wrongly. You have the power to see things for what they are. You have the power to help and the power to heal.

 

we need more fruitcakes March 29, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — radiofreebecky @ 4:35 pm
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va-jay-jay. March 10, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — radiofreebecky @ 3:25 am
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I was in the Vagina Monologues, by the way.
vajayjay
It was fun.
I read way too quickly; I wish I could learn how not to do that.