I M Perfect lady


Never Questioned

There is much going on in our world today, it overwhelms the mind, saddens the heart and hurts my soul.  It is hard to find a thread to untangle my thoughts.  Yet, it feels familiar in its circular unending beat.

 

"Good People" doing evil deeds.

And, the victims are being unseen, unheard and unacknowledged by the lack of change.

 

The lack of change sets us up for a repeat performance.  

And, this is what beats us into depression, anger, rage and protests.  

There is no end in sight, NOTHING of great significance changes.

 

When the root cause isn't dealt with, actions will be repeated, it is just a matter of time.

The systems in place work for the outcome they want/need or were created for.  Until you change what the system works for OR whom, it will not change.

 

When I was learning about my sexual abuse, I expected it to be a shock to others as it was to me. I expected the systems in place to be built in a way that would not allow this.  However, after a few weeks, I quickly learned, that I was in a system that was created and geared toward protecting the perpetrator.

 

This can sound so surreal to some, but the bottom line is that our society was created for white male dominance.

 

It isn't until you actually need the system to see you and protect you, do you find this out.

 

My small interaction with church and state left me feeling unseen and unheard. I was a white girl in a strict religion who was abused. It didn't matter to the systems that be. I wasn't unique and special. I was just another one.  Another one to pretty much ignore. Life goes on.  Unchanged.  I had to find a way to live in that space.

 

I did. I changed.

And, I lost the innocence of believing in the society's systems doing what is right.

 

However, I was a product of this same system. Where I was taught to believe I was superior due to the color of my skin, and the church I was raised in believed we were the only ones going to heaven.  The chosen few.  

 

These beliefs messed with my eyes and brain and the way I saw the world.

 

Perhaps when the system I was part of didn't protect me, I saw the system with new eyes and those eyes then seen the world in a new way. 

 

I don't have answers for this horrible time we are in, but maybe we can all unlearn what we have been taught. And, we can change the system by our lack of belief in it.

 

Also, when no one saw me as valuable, I was able to find my own value. 

I know it is unfair to ask the victims to change the world, but I am pretty sure the ones who are benefiting from the system will not be changing it.  

I was born privileged in white skin.

I was taught of this privilege by how to see OTHERS.

 

When I think of the systems I was raised in, I was raised to see the white male as dominant and powerful.  

I was taught to fear black or skins of other colors.  Or at the very least see them as less.

I was taught to value me less.  

I believed that a woman didn't own her body. 

I believed that a good girl was nice and didn't live her truth.

I believed in a god who looked and acted like the white males in charge.

 

When I look at what is happening today, in who is supporting our president, I am appalled and affirmed.

 

Strict religious families are supporting a white male who they will not look at.

Not at his many faults.

For this is how they have been taught.

Those faults can and will be washed away with the forgiveness of sins.

 

I am just seeing today on a real broad scale what I experienced.

The faultless white male who is dancing with evil in a system that protects him – always.

And, the system in place is the blind followers – who have been taught since childhood to see the world through eyes of the system.

 

I am rambling and sounding like a crazy woman, but what I know to be true, is that the system in place is being seen finally for the insanity that it is.

When a white man can kill a black man in public and no one can stop him the system was on full in real life display!  IF you can't see it as being wrong, YOU are part of the problem.

You are in the system and it is working for you.

 

I only know, that if and when I have the opportunity to stand  between a person of color and the police I hope I can.  

I understand their frustrations, rage and anger. I get it.  What they want most is for the rest of us to see what they are experiencing. SEE IT and work to change the systems.

 

As Trevor Noah said, we all signed a contract as americans.  We signed a contract as humanity, and when one part isn't holding up the contract, we need to be outraged.  We are only as strong as the weakest link.

The cop who murder a black man in broad daylight as others watched unable to stop him, IS the system we all created.  

Until the world stops and a new system is put into place, this will continue to happen.

We each need to look around the systems we believe in.

Who do they support and why?

What equanimity do they give to all members?

Who is more valuable and how do you know?

Who has freedoms and who does not?

There are more questions than answers.

We each have to question our own systems in order to see where we are part of the problem or where we are wrestling to change old systems.

 

In our circle of influence, let us be the change we want to see in the world.

We each have a role to end this violence, most often it is just a belief we hold, that we never questioned.

 

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Responses

  1. Judy Avatar
    Judy

    This is amazing. Your nailed it on so many levels. Your comment about not expecting victims to change the world- yet the ones dominating it surely won’t- really struck a chord . This is a time of great upheaval in our country- after which – hopefully – will bring growth and an end to racism and white, male dominance.

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  2. Ann Avatar
    Ann

    So many terrible parallels—you wrote very clearly about them. I, too, was taught to honor, obey, and fear authority figures in my world. Fear and guilt were the twin ways to control all children—not just girls.
    My heart aches for the innocent people who lost their businesses in the riots. I do not believe protestors did the looting and burning—those people are terrorists and I am baffled when I try to understand what makes them tick.
    I hope somehow, a significant number of the people in Minn/St.Paul and beyond can rebuild their businesses and build strong neighborhoods. It will take money and lots of it to turn these people into survivors and not victims. When your business has been closed for months and is then, burned to the ground, what resources are you supposed to use to “pull yourself up by the bootstraps?”
    You are an amazing success story, Beth, and I hope I live to see many more.

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  3. Ann Avatar
    Ann

    More thoughts: I am now hearing rationalizations regarding the use of force to control George Floyd. What I saw was a handcuffed man, I do not know what went on prior to hand cuffing but even if Floyd was resisting, he was eventually handcuffed. Why foot restraints were not used is beyond me. Where is such a person supposed to go? What exactly could he do to harm others or flee?
    This situation could have ended with a very different outcome. The video takes all questions away. Officers have no place to hide on this one.

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  4. Beth Avatar
    Beth

    Thanks for your thoughtful response. I just know we can’t solve the problems on from the same systems that creates them. Sadly each of us will have to work towards deep changes.

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