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avalon's avatar

this, this, this. this. I have young memories too. i grew up in rural northern new york, and when i got to middle school, we started playing against schools on “indian reservations.” the level of cognitive dissonance was intense. the more questions i asked, the less sense any of it made. i remember riding the school bus home, confused by the brand new schools and the casinos. the word "reservation". i remember asking my parents and being told indians were lazy alcoholics with a poor work ethic.

it hasn’t been until this past decade that i’ve started to see how so much of what I feel traces back here for me too - the dissociation, the performance, the dismissal of the real problem, the willful ignorance of our very foundation. i thought my marriage had nothing to do with any of this. turns out it has everything to do with it.

adrienne maree brown was my doorway, which then opened me to Audre Lorde, Octavia Butler, and others.

thank you for continuing to talk about this. I'm not stopping either. it’s life-affirming to be in the presence of white people willing to face what’s actually ours. all of this history is alive in what we continue to choose to ignore, overlook, and stay inside of in our relationships. it is ALL DIRECTLY CONNECTED.

Marilyn Jean's avatar

As with so many of your pieces, this has landed deeply in my body, Alexandra -- drawing out so many memories and hums of recognition.

I remember being at a birthday party for the child of a woman my father was dating. I want to say I was maybe 14 at the time. The party may have been Disney Princess themed, or it could have been Pocahontas themed, as that was the most recent Disney release in the genre. However the case, Pocahontas came up.

I was raised in the '80s in a relatively progressive county in Virginia that didn't hide the horrors of its "founding" from children and regularly engaged educators from local indigenous tribes to balance out what the schoolbooks didn't name. I meticulously schooled a group of adults at that birthday party on oh-so-many reasons that the film, Disney, the corporate machine (likely not my exact words then, but leaning in that direction) were corrupt, inaccurate, zombifying, racist, sexist, and a betrayal of the history of the lands we were currently standing on. I can remember their faces vividly, and that moment helped cement the awareness for me that I would rarely find myself among allies.

I'm working to make my way back to the courage and conviction that blazed within me for so many years. Your writing inspires a lot in the re-membering. Thank you.

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