Apologies

Hey guys!

I know you were expecting a piece on white privilege this week, but sometimes, life happens! And I hate to let you guys down, but with weeks exams, I am just unfinished with my research and interviews. I still have to transcript the interviews, as well. Don’t worry, though. It will be up next week, I PROMISE. I try really hard to create interesting and evocative content fro you guys, so I am never going to post something that I am not proud of or that is unfinished or has not fulfilled a purpose. With that being said, here’s the story I wrote for my Literary 9 weeks exam:

*the asterisks mean that a word was censored in order to be uploaded to this platform.

Fat Girl

Shame is an ocean I swim across. -Lambert, The Art of Shame

Babies are born “chunky”. You adore them anyway; nibble on their innocent cheeks. Blow raspberries on their full, voluptuous bellies. Feed them when they cry because their deafening sobs can only be the voiced agony of hunger. You must satisfy their needs with Gerber and Similac. Pat their backs; wait for a burp; pray the undigested Similac doesn’t come back up on your blouse. The blouse that fits “just right”. The one that hugs every curve and swell of your disproportionate body in a way that it seems seamless. The one that hides your arms and extenuates your chest. The one that looks perfect with your gold-chained necklace your aunt got you for your birthday last year. The one that makes your imperfect body feel perfect.

But say, you don’t have a baby. Instead, you will feed yourself because you are hungry. You’ve always been hungry; filled with the insatiable desire to feast. You can’t just have one potato chip. Or one cookie. Or one M&M. Whose ever heard of eating a singular baby back rib? You’ll eat the whole slab. You’ll eat the slab and the fries. And the mashed potatoes, too. Consume every starch without considering the damage they’ll do to your body. Forget, for a second, that feeling of being rubbed raw; that awkward walk your inseparable thighs make you have; the disgusting way your stomach hangs over your blue jeans. It only takes a second

And you won’t have a diet Coke with that. You’ll have the red labeled 24 ounce bottle of Coca-Cola. Feel the phosphoric acid eating away at your enamel. Feel the carbonation sliding down your throat. Wallow in it. Let your tongue savor every drop. And when you are done, you’ll have another. You can’t just have one of those either. 

And you’ll lay on the couch, wasting the day away, watching TV and obsessing. Flipping between America’s Next Top Model and Keeping Up With the Kardashians. Watching the perfect people live their perfect lives; envy them for having the things you never could. Watching their bodies pose effortlessly. Watching them strut and glide. Watch them and see. See the woman you’ve always wanted to be. You’ll hang on to their words and every everyday thing they do. Mimic every mannerism they own. Claim them. Make them yours.  

And when you are done, feel crappy*. Feel fat. Feel ugly. Feel worthless. Feel like the woman you are and not the one you want to be. Feel like you will never amount to anything. Feel unattractive and undesirable. 

But never let them know that it bothers you. Put on a smile. Put on makeup. Put on layer after layer of clothing, so that they never truly see you. Add hair extensions and say it’s because they make you “feel good”. Never let them know that you are weak, that you are modeling clay. Say, it’s just “life,” and move on. Say you don’t care when you know you do. Say none of it matters when you know it does. Pretend. Pretend you have not tried to mold yourself to model those around you. Pretend the world has not claimed you as its own. Pretend that you are fine. 

Go to work. Hide in your cubicle. Type aimlessly on your computer. Keep yourself busy. Pretend you aren’t wondering what you’ll have for lunch. Tell yourself you won’t go out. You’re done with carbs and you’ve ended your tumultuous relationship with sugar.  Eat a salad, coat it with a vinaigrette that will never taste as good as Hidden Valley ranch. Eat a sandwich— wheat bread, no mayonnaise or cheese. Eat tuna from a pouch. Watch your portions. Only have one pouch. Or don’t: go to the nearest vending machine that you don’t have to walk too far to get to, put in 4 colorless quarters. Choose B6: Lay’s Classic potato chips. Your mouth waters, and your eyes grow wide in anticipation, as you watch the spirals twirling their release on the object of your desire. Suddenly, they stop, and your potato chips teeter on the edge; the corner of their yellow bag gripped ever so slightly by the spiraling rings. 

You’ll sigh in exasperation. Tell yourself it’s a sign: you didn’t need them anyway. Think about their salty goodness on your tongue. Think of the pouch of tuna in your fridge. Shake the machine with maximum strength. Think of the golden crisps held captive by those evil black coils. Think about putting in 4 more colorless quarters. Because you know that the machine will inherently drop one bag and then another: one for a friend, you’ll say. Anything to convince yourself to give in and indulge. You’ve had a hard week. You’re a wreck, and that bag of Lay’s Classic potato chips is going to solve it all, you think to yourself as you insert the last 2 quarters. The spirals twirl once more, and down falls two bright, yellow packages with your name on them. Suddenly, that friend you thought about giving them to doesn’t exist anymore. You take the chips back to your desk. Eat one bag. Put the other in your purse, save them for when you are stuck in rush hour traffic. Self control, you say. That is, until you see the black and white lines of the nutrition facts etched on the back of the bag. One hundred ninety milligrams of sodium. One hundred fifty calories. Your head spins and you try to take comfort in the three hundred sixty milligrams of potassium— maybe you won’t have high blood pressure. Toss the half eaten bag of chips you worked so hard for in the trash can. Grab the cerulean blue pouch from your fridge, tear along the dotted line, analyze the packaging. Wonder who decided to make a blue tuna fish with a red beret their mascot: Was it supposed to make this garbage seem more appealing? Sorry, Charlie. Eat it anyway. It’s good for you. Take two bites, and realize that your lunch break ended twenty minutes ago. This your life: calorie counting and body contorting. Because a single bag of chips will go straight to your ass. A burger to your stomach. Add fries, and you’ll be saying farewell to your waistline. And those baby back ribs will take the fastest route to your meaty thighs. 

When you come home, proud of yourself for not devouring the chips hidden in your purse, while you were stuck in rush hour traffic. Draw yourself a bath. Take off all of your clothes, wipe away your makeup, take out your earrings; remove all of the things used to distract from your inordinance. Look at your reflection in the mirror; feel disgusted. Turn the knob until the water stops flowing. Stick one foot in, and then the other. Slowly settle in, let your body get used to the warmth. Drop in a cherry blossom bath bomb. Pour in Epsom salt. Feel the breeze on the tops of your thighs, the parts the water doesn’t cover. Pull them close to you. Sit there, arms wrapped around, head resting on your knees. Think about what you’ll have for dinner, the calories in red wine, and the dress you’ll wear on Friday. You want chicken cacciatore, 12 glasses of Cabernet, and that dress that makes your boobs look good. 

Look at the dove etched into your ivory soap. Feel the soft fibers of your washcloth against your skin, as the soap and water create a soft lather. Begin to scrub your skin like it is the icky, brown gunk at the bottom of the lake you visited as a child. Scrub as if you are peeling back the layers of your body and you start to shrink smaller and smaller. Scour away your stretch marks and your “extra”. The extra that does not fit in the bathtub when all you want to be is submerged; when your lunch breaks consist of arguing with a vending machine; when the baby you do not have spits up on the blouse that fits you just right; when your thighs are made up of cellulite and excess skin, when you are a fat girl living in a Barbie world.

And when your bath bomb has fizzled away and your skin has begun to prune, watch the water drain beneath you. Feel the cold air against your soggy, wet skin. Grab a towel and wrap yourself in it. It will not cover all of your parts, but nothing ever does. Dry yourself off, feel the moisture escaping your body. Put on your silky nightgown and fuzzy socks that are meant for Christmastime, but you wear them anyway because they are cozy and warm. 

The chicken cacciatore still floats around in your mind, but consider postmating Sonic and how good an Oreo blast would be. Google the calories in an Oreo blast. Google the calories in chicken cacciatore; rethink your whole night. Maybe you’ll have kale or more pouched tuna; inherently gag at the thought. Consider not eating. Consider going out with friends. Consider calling it a night at only 7 p.m. 

Consider what life would be like if you were thin, the freedom you’d have, to be able to eat whatever you wanted: a four pack of Cinnabon delights, sweet tea with no Splenda, unlimited breadsticks from Olive Garden. There’d be no more sugar free Jello cups or fudge pops. You could drink a Coke and feel no shame. 

To be thin, is to be shameless. To wear a bikini and not feel the stares and glares of society sitting in beach chairs. To go on a date with a hot guy and not be asked if he’s your brother. To go to the movies, order popcorn, and want extra butter without being asked, “Are you sure you want extra butter?” To have jeans that fit. To order any and everything on the menu. To actually eat “all you can eat” at an all-you-can-eat buffet. To not have a constant calorie calculator in your head. To be thin is to be beautiful.

When you are fat, you are not beautiful. You do not have such luxuries. You have oatmeal-colored Spanx and cottage cheese thighs. You have weight loss ads and metabolism pills. You have entire stores that do not carry clothing to fit your ugly. You have doctor’s visits that never fail to diagnose you as fat. You have severed belt loops and hip dips. You have a whole genre of jokes tailored to your excess. 

When you are a woman and you are fat, you’re hilarious. The chubby comical relief. When you are a woman and you are fat, you’re a world renowned vocalist. The belly of the ball. And it’s not over ‘til the fat lady sings, y’know. Except, you are the fat lady, and you have yet to sing. It’s not over. It’s never over when your body is the punchline of every joke; when being fat has become the only thing you are known for, when being fat means the only talents that you can possibly possess are the abilities to crack a joke or hum a note. When you are a woman and you are fat, you’re a preconceived idea that the world has claimed as truth. Nothing more than a body that takes up too much space. When you are a woman and you are fat, you are matter that does not actually matter. 

And when the self-loathing is over, you’ll make the decision to do something about it. Realize the absurdity of complaining about your reality when you’ve done nothing to change it. Go to the gym. Convince yourself that you want this. Get on the treadmill. Increase the incline. Increase the speed. Don’t make things easy on yourself. Turn your music up to the loudest setting. Never mind the warning notification that tells you that listening at high volumes can damage your ears. Look down at the buttons on the machine. Look at your feet. Look at your phone. Don’t look up. Don’t look in the mirror. You’ll only get discouraged. 

In that same moment, you only glance to your right, and see the two little boys snickering and pointing at you in the corner. Their mother is running next to you with her earbuds in. You try to let it go. They’re just kids, you say. Maybe they aren’t laughing at you. Maybe they’re laughing at her. She looks like she’s no stranger to the gym. The type to run marathons every weekend. You envy her, admire her. If she can raise two children, and be a regular at the gym, why can’t you? You are your only priority. She has two and probably a husband waiting at home. Maybe he takes the kids when she is running her marathons. Maybe they wait for her and cheer her on at the finish line. Maybe they do not teach their children respect. Maybe they think they are too young to understand. Maybe they don’t care. Maybe they don’t teach them at all. Maybe boys will be boys will be boys. The same ones that tormented you in high school and bully you at work. It is a never ending cycle of abuse. One you don’t even bother reporting because all you will receive in return is a voucher for a free Jenny Craig membership. Feel your stomach churning. Stop the machine, and head for the door. 

Go sit in your car. Sit and feel embarrassed. Feel ashamed. Feel like a failure. Wonder how those boys will grow up. Feel crazy for letting their ignorant teasing bother you so much. Vow that your children will never behave like them. Remind yourself that it takes “two to tango”. And who would ever want to tango with someone of your stature? Who could love someone so massive? Who could love all of you? Who would want to? They say, “Big girls need love too.” As if being fat means you shouldn’t be loved already. The only love you have are your love handles. You are a monstrosity among men. No one could possibly love a fat girl*.

Have a sudden change of heart. Drive to the nearest Taco Bell. Order 4 supreme soft tacos. Order a large Baja blast and the four pack of Cinnabon delights that you always force yourself not to get. Tell yourself you’ve earned it. Tell yourself no one is going to love you anyway. What’s a few moments of happiness in your insignificant life?

And when you’re done, take the final sips of your drink, hate yourself. Feel disgusting. Feel like the fat girl* everyone says you are. Feel your the contents of your stomach doing backflips. Roll down the window, and throw up every single bite you have just consumed. Feel the acid in your throat. Chase it down with water. Roll up the window as tears stream down your face. You’re pathetic. 

Go home. Put on your silk gown and fuzzy socks. Don’t bother taking off your makeup, your tears have washed away most of it anyway. Get in bed. Put on sad songs, only to add salt to the wound. And as you drift away to the soft melodic sounds and slip into a stream of subconsciousness, and you begin to dream. Dreaming about the life you wish you had. Dreaming about walking down a runway in Milan with your size 2 body and designer clothes. Your hair curled to perfection and eyes wide. No cellulite or gapless thighs in sight. Confidence exudes your pores. 

Your body does not exude confidence. It radiates repulsion and isolation. You are the one no one sits with at lunch, the supporting role in all the best movies. You are second best, the one no one ever remembers. And you are never the lead role unless it is a movie about the risks of obesity. You are never the “hot girl”. You are the funny one. You will always be the funny one. 

And when you awake from your dismal dreams, decide to call in sick. Tell Becky that you just aren’t feeling well. When really, you just need a day for yourself. You need 2 more hours of sleep. A day to recuperate and rejuvenate; a little rest never killed nobody. 

So you’ll spend the rest of your day in your pjs. Watch the new episode of Law and Order. Water your plants. Do the laundry. Eat brunch: a tomato and avocado sandwich on wheat with exactly 4 potato chips. Check your mail. Pay the bills. Wonder what your life would be like if you had someone to share it with. Someone to make you breakfast in bed on days like this. Someone to hold your hand and make you feel safe. Someone to love you for all that you are. Someone who fancies your fat without fetishizing it. Someone who does not only see you as a conglomeration of body and flesh, but as beautiful. And not as beautiful as the thin ones, but beautiful gargantuan and wide; beautiful as you. 

But maybe you are better alone. Maybe your life is not meant to be shared. Maybe it’s simple: no one is capable of loving you, and not because you are fat, but because you are you. This world is not tailored to fit you. There’s not enough bolts of fabric to fit your surplus of a body. And yet, the notion that you are just simply unlovable has yet to cross your mind. Because the only reason a man can’t love you is because you are fat. 

Dear fat girl, do not let your circumstances be because you are not small. Do not let it hinder your happiness. You are better than that. You a capable of so much more than they’ll ever give you credit for, so you eat whatever the heck* you want. Devour it. Lick the plate clean. And when they ask you why, tell them because you want to.

 

Maleigh :)

Hey guys!

I know I usually post past work in between my big blog topics, but I’m switching things up! I wanna sort of let you into my world, so I am going to provide details and information that just tells you a little bit about me. I will also include pictures, so you’ll have a visual.

Fun Facts & Favorites:
  • Horoscope sign: Gemini
  • Color: Hot pink
  • Ice Cream Flavor: Coffee
  • Scent: Vanilla/Anything floral or girly
  • Hobbies: Crafting, Having conversations, & Shopping
  • Go-To Social Media App: Pinterest or Instagram
  • Food: Cheese pizza, Steak, & Broccoli (not all together)
Accomplishments (in no particular order):
  • MSA Literary
  • Morgan Crosby’s Junior
  • Published  in Call to Response by Write for Mississippi
  • All A’s Honor Roll 2008-now
  • Perfect Attendance 5 times
  • Created an annual food drive (at my previous school)
  • Recipient of the Citizenship Award 7 times
  • 3rd Floor & Junior Literary Representative
Role Models (in no particular order):
Photo Facts:
I grew up in the small town of Foxworth, MS. 

There, I got some of the best friends in the world.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I have ALWAYS been a cat lover

           

            

            

I am very BUSY and SUPER involved 🙂

                

  

 

 

MORE Facts About Me:
  • I prefer Coke over Pepsi.
  • I enjoy stuffed crust pizza without pineapple.
  • I put my cereal in before my milk, as any normal person would.
  • I put my socks & shoes on in this order: sock, shoe, sock, shoe. Don’t come for me.
  • I like taking ugly “grandma” shirts cutting the sleeves off, and making them look decent*.
  • I have an insane fear of heights & spiders.
  • I can’t swim, but I love being in the water.
  • I can’t drive, but I’m making progress.
  • I like makeup on a good day.
  • I sometimes think I’m lactose intolerant.
  • If I could go back in time, I’d be a baking prodigy, so I could be featured on Kids Baking Championship.
  • Law & Order: SVU will forever remain the best series in my 🤍.
  • If I had a superpower, I’d want to read minds.
  • My middle name is Arie, after India Arie.
  • I wish I were a natural redhead like Callie & Bri.
  • My mom is my favorite person in the world.
  • I am half Hispanic, and I LOVE that about myself.
  • No, I am not Hawaiian, but I do want to attend college in Hawaii.
  • I love journalism with my whole heart.
  • Mrs. Sibley is one of the best people I know, and I hope to be half the person she is
Random Pictures:

 


Next Blog Topic is……

White Privilege


Poll Time!

  • Feminism & Equality of the Sexes
  • Art Students: Should They Go For Something More Practical?
  • Fashion
  • Global Warming: Is It Happening?

Comment below!

Beauty Pageants: Are They Objectifying Women?

This week’s blog post is going to be a little different. Although I love doing interview-style blogs, it is sometimes difficult to find people that have experienced the topics I am delving into each week. Fret not, though, my friends, I am still going to be going into each topic wholeheartedly. I also think this will add some variety to my blogs, so that you all aren’t reading the same type each week!

Enjoy 🙂


Pageants in the Media

Everyone has seen the TLC series Toddlers & Tiaras at least once in their life or at least has heard about it. If not, this show is about children who compete in beauty pageants. The girls (and sometimes, boys) are from newborn to age 10. The show has created much controversy over the years. In 2012, a child that had been featured in the series was in a custody hearing in which a court-appointed psychologist was needed. “Children adorned with pageantry identities are not ‘playing’ or ‘pretending.’ Instead, they are trained to closely resemble their adult counterparts,” she says. Most of the negativity that stems from the show is whether or not the mothers who put their children in the pageants are expressing themselves through their children. As well as, the idea that the pageants are objectifying and sexualizing young girls. The TLC series has outraged many people over the world because they are “robbing children of their innocence for ratings”.

Furthermore, Netflix recently released an original movie called Dumplin’. The show depicts the story of Willowdean Dickson, a plus-sized teenager from a small town in Texas. Her mother is a former beauty queen and the director of the town’s annual pageant. As a ploy against her mother, Willowdean signs up for the pageant. However, her plan backfires, and she ends up starting a revolution with other unlikely girls joining the pageant with her. The movie shows how the pageant industry and her mother’s heavy involvement in it affected Willowdean as a teenage girl. In the end, however, she becomes more understanding of pageants and has an appreciation for them, in a sense.

Similarly, the 2000 movie, Miss Congeniality, goes into the investigation of the Miss United States pageant. In order to get intel, the agents must go undercover. Gracie Hart, being the only female on the team that “looks the part” has to be the one to go undercover and participate in the pageant. Ironically, she is a tom-boy and has no interest in being a beauty pageant, as they go against her feminist beliefs. During the pageant, Gracie teaches a self-defense method and tries to stay true to her beliefs, but later, when asked if she thought pageants were “outdated and anti-feminist”, Gracie responded with, “Well, I would have to say: I used to be one who thought that. And then, I came here, and I realized that these women are smart, terrific people who are just trying to make a difference in the world. And for me, this experience has been one of the most rewarding and liberating experiences of my life.” Although the movie is fictional, I think it speaks to how society has these negative ideals that beauty queens are all beauty and no brains, or that they do, in fact, objectify women.

Body Standards in Pageants

Pageants are a big part of the beauty industry in that, to enter a pageant, or to even have a chance at winning, you have to have a certain body type. Now, there are plus-size pageants, but they aren’t as commonly known, and there is also no integration of body diversity in a single pageant.

In 2017, full-figured model, Ashley Graham, hosted the Miss Universe pageant, but that didn’t keep her from criticizing the event for not having any curvy contestants compete in the international competition in the 60 years of its existence. She says, “I think it’s important that we continue to show diversity of all sizes, ethnicities, backgrounds, and religions, so, for me, I’m here to show diversity of size. Because not yet have we had a curvy girl in Miss Universe or even in the Miss USA pageant.”

In addition to the body standards placed upon women to compete in pageants, there is also usually a swimsuit portion of the competition, in which women are judged for their body and how physically fit they are or aren’t. As well as, judging them for their makeup and overall outer facial appearance. This is added pressure for women to be “perfect” which is objectifying women.

However, that is not all that pageants focus on. Some pageants require many essays and/or interviews, so participants do have to have the “brains”, as well. Unfortunately, most of the time, they are coached to say certain things in order to win, despite their actual beliefs. For example, the age-old “world peace” cliche. Many women don’t believe that is actually achievable or the biggest issue to change. But there are some pageants that are also scholarship programs, which in some cases, may be the only way a girl can pay for college. However, pageants are so expensive to win that it basically defeats the purpose of making it a scholarship program.

Pageants That Hit Closer to Home

I did extensive research on the beauty pageant industry, but I figured that insight into the local pageant world would further the relativity. I sat down with fellow MSA literary, Kerri Bland, a former pageant participant, to discuss what they are like on a more local level.

What has your experience with pageants been like?

“The pageants I did were in junior high, around 7th or 8th grade. I had to go to training. Essentially, there’s a certain you have to carry yourself. For me, personally, I had to go to a training session with a person who competed in their younger years. I would have to put on heels and walk in circles and lines, just basic things. I even learned how to wave my hand the right way. She also once told me that some girls would put Vaseline on their teeth to keep them smiling. It’s so physically straining to wear both a form-fitting dress, heels, all of it. The physical effects are so negative.”

How was the actual pageant and competition?

“The actual pageant itself wasn’t bad even backstage. I’ll admit, it was a very social experience. I do not have any bad experiences behind the stage. On stage, you could tell the audience was filled up with a fanbase for certain people. Anytime a certain girl walked across stage, her boyfriend and his friends would scream, or the families. You could the families that were a little bit more supportive or overbearing, in a “if they don’t win, I’m about to throw a trophy across the room” kinda thing. And in the end, the winner was the same people who had won the previous year, and the year before that, and the year before that. But all of the pageant girls were very accepting toward me. I got to meet a lot of people that I, otherwise, would not have talked to, and they were very assuring.”

What do you think the judging system is based on?

“Whether it’s based on beauty, I don’t know. I know some people believe there’s a bribery system involved or favoritism. In a school pageant, I can’t really tell you. There’s many things involved in that. Larger scale pageants, though, I am not as familiar with those.”

Was it a diverse group of girls?

The majority of them were white and skinny. Not all of them were white, but then again, I went to a predominantly white school.”

I know that you now do cosplay and compete, how does that mimic or differ from beauty pageants?

“It’s really the same with few exceptions. With cosplay pageants, instead of buying a dress, you’re making an outfit. You’re putting in the actual production and design technique. Even then, you still have to learn how to carry yourself across the stage. They’re really basing you off of your talent, but instead of going up and tap dancing, you are showing them progress pictures of the things you’ve designed and made.”

Do these pageants build a community?

When you put yourself out there, people are getting to know you and you’re getting to know them. They’re getting up close and personal and seeing all of what you’ve put in. Yes, it is a community. They’re not judging you either. It’s not judging a book by its cover, it’s judging a book by its contents.”

Do you think beauty pageants build a community in the same sense, or is it just girls competing with each other?

“No matter what you’re in, there’s always going to be a competitive aspect to it. There’s always going to be someone that feels like they have to win or they’re not good enough or that pageants are their life or that if they don’t win, they’re a failure. For the majority of people, specifically in pageants, I think they are doing for the love of that. Not because they want a crown, but because they love getting up on stage. Or at least, just for me, because I don’t do it for the crown. I do it to meet people, to meet judges, and for the overall experience.”

Are Beauty Pageants Objectifying Women?

The very question that started this conversation. Whatever your opinion is on the matter, the fact is: beauty pageants are mainly focused on the superficial qualities of women. However, pageants aren’t some mandatory requirement of being a woman. It is a choice. To compete in a pageant is a lot of hard work, time, and money. It’s a big deal, and women should think long and hard before entering one. But again, at the end of the day, pageants are a choice. If pageants make just one woman happy and gives her the confidence to be herself, then there’s no problem. I do, however, think there’s a problem within the system of pageants. From swimsuit evaluations to facial appearance ratings, the system is flawed— just like the seemingly “perfect” women that pageant judges fish for.

An Open Letter to Mixed Girls… Like Me

Your caramel-colored skin glistens in the sunlight and the dark tendrils that hang from your head are beautiful—as I am sure you are reminded of often. Do not take these things for granted. But remember, these are not all that you are. You are more than your silky smooth skin and kinky curls. You, my dear, are gifted beyond measure. And though it may feel like a constant battle within yourself, this fight has given you a mighty power: the propensity to bridge the gap between cultures. Two worlds completely at your dispense. You have tried for so long to keep these worlds apart, but you have come to realize that they are better together. You have seen the beauty in the culmination of these two worlds. That culmination is you. Two greats came before you and made it all possible, but now it is your turn. 

 

Go forth into this world. Use your gift; use it to create unity and peace, but be vigilant, because there are people who do not want these worlds colliding. They will stop at nothing to tear you down; demean your entire existence through vile name-calling and empty threats. You will not understand why, but it is not you, so don’t take it personally. They simply cannot understand who you are. Their ignorance is their fatal flaw, so they will try to convince you that you are no good so that you will lose all faith in yourself, so that you are broken down and weary, but you mustn’t listen. You are too powerful. You contain a strength to carry a nation. You are a bridge.

 

A bridge between the oppressed and the oppressor. Between victim and victimizer. You have gifts like no other. You have your mother’s soft smile and your father’s wild temper. The blood that runs through your veins has withstood many trials and tribulations of this Earth. It has made you malleable. It has made you golden— lustrous and precious. And you must remember this; it is crucial that you know how much you are worth. You are worth more than gold, more than the stereotypical features that people love about you, more than the checkmark in the “other” column, more than you can possibly understand. 

 

In time, you will come to know. It will be a moment, a movement, but you will know. You will feel it inside of your heart and it will no longer feel like a war zone inside your soul. The intricate pieces of yourself will fit together perfectly. 

 

Until then, continue to bridge the gap, to break down the barriers of humanity. You are a small part of something much larger than yourself. It is hard to see the bigger picture when you are so close, but soon, you will travel the distance and you will see. But do not give up; do not give in. Hold your head up, sweet child. Your time is coming. 


The next blog post topic is:

Are Beauty Pageants Objectifying Women?

😉


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The next topic choices are:

  • White Privilege
  • Feminism & Equality of the Sexes
  • The Arts: Should Students Go for Something More Practical
  • Pineapple on Pizza
    • Comment below what topic you think I should do for my next blog post!

The N-word: Creating a Community or Repeating a Cycle of Hate? Part 2

In 2014, journalists at the Washington Post conducted a study on the history of the n-word. Here’s a video they created: https://www.washingtonpost.com/video/national/the-n-word-through-history/2014/11/09/0c3b6a08-669a-11e4-ab86-46000e1d0035_video.html

After watching, I started thinking. We all know where the n-word came from, or at least most of us do (if you don’t, I highly recommend watching the video I linked above). But what about our history and background? A person’s upbringing plays a big part in who they are and what they believe. For instance, I grew up in a multicultural home with a black mother and a Hispanic father.  The n-word was not a word I heard either of them use. In fact, I didn’t hear the word until I was in middle school, but I had no clue what it meant or the history behind it. However, I still didn’t say it. I knew that there was a reason that my parents never said it, so I assumed that I shouldn’t say it either. I realized that maybe the reason I don’t say the n-word is because of the way I was raised. I wanted to know if others’ upbringing correlated with why or why not they say the n-word or not. So, I asked:

Does your background have anything to do with why or why not you say the n-word and/or does it depend on your culture?

Azya Lyons says, “Being mixed, I grew up around the most ghetto black people and the most preppy white people, but I just picked up a lot of the attributes of black culture.”

Yes, in the black community, there’s so many different cultures. There’s a bunch of black people who don’t say the n-word or people who grew up saying it but don’t anymore. I respect black people who don’t say it, and I wish I didn’t grow up in a community that used it so loosely. I’m kind of on the edge of the fence though. I relate to saying it because of the community I grew up in; I didn’t see the issue at first, but now I can kinda see it, but it’s also just something that I’ve been comfortable with, so I think that it’s the community and the people that you hang around. I mean, I know Hispanics that say the n-word because they grew up in a black community. They were treated as black people, so it wasn’t a big deal. But I’m not gonna go around saying, ‘I’m gonna go get my chaclas’….that’s weird. I’m not Hispanic. And I know that’s not a derogatory word, but it’s out of place. That’s not my culture. So while it isn’t cultural appropriation, it kind of is, if you get what I’m saying,” adds Carter Skipwith.

The next question I asked was:

Is the n-word significant to you or your culture?

To me, it’s not just a word. Simply because of the times we’re in now. Personally, I think we shouldn’t say it at all because I don’t wanna decode what you’re saying or try to decipher how you intended the word to mean. Because that word can switch between meanings, and it’s not what you say, but how you say it,” said Elijah Karriem.

Skipwith says, “I try not to give it power. I don’t prefer any other races say it. Because with white people, they get called a cracker, but there’s literally no meaning behind that. It’s nothing serious. I mean if you get offended at the word cracker then why can’t I get offended at the word nigga. Because it does have many meanings. The way that I use it is like friendly. I feel like when I use it, I don’t give it that much power; it’s just a word I’m using. But I’m trying to stop using it because I’m looking at it differently now. Now, I view it as a word of entrapment. A lot of people in the black community call themselves the n-word, saying that they are one. And I’m like, No, that’s not what we are. We’re black. We’re not n-words. You know what I mean? So, personally, I think that it can mean something loosely, but it’s also rooted with hate. It’s a very hateful word if you use it the wrong way, and it’s a very risky word to use. And that’s something I’ve had to realize as I’ve gotten older.” 

In 2018, The Washington Post furthered their dive into the n-word by creating a video project consisting of 10 videos. The videos explore the n-word with the interviewing of people of all races including college students, athletes, talk show hosts, and even KKK member, Byron De La Beckwith Jr. It features topics like ‘the n-word being used in hip-hop/comedy,’ ‘how the n-word will be used 30 years from now,’ and more. The project is powerful and evocative. The videos are great in number and very lengthy. They also have explicit language such as the use of the n-word, but this is to be expected. Therefore I do not presume that you’ll watch the entire project, but I do urge you to watch at least 2 or 3 of the videos that pique interests.  https://www.washingtonpost.com/video/national/introduction–the-n-word-project/2018/12/28/50efb214-5c9c-4e17-be48-f1d809e59154_video.html

Inspired by the project, I asked my peers some of the same questions that were asked in the videos. I was really interested to know what people thought about the change in spelling the n-word has had over the years and if the meaning changed with it. I asked:

Do you think that by taking the -er off and replacing it with -a has made a difference in what the word means?

Karriem said this, “To me, it’s all the same. It originated from one word. It’s like a tree: you start from the bottom and progress to the top, but you’re still on that same tree. And if the word has changed, then let others of different ethnicities use it too.

I also wanted to know what people thought about the connotation of the n-word.

Do you think that the n-word has a negative or positive connotation? Has it changed over time? 

To this, Karriem said, “A black person once told me that I “act white” because I am educated and self-educated. I just don’t get that. To say that I act of another race, that puts down on our race, but uplifting the other race. So, to say that, you are putting not only me but yourself down. Like now it’s more common when you think black people to think: ratchet, sagging pants, and uneducated— you think of the n-word. So yes, it is negative.”

“The word was originally used to degrade us. It means thug, so if someone is acting like that then, yeah, I will use the word. But as a term of endearment, I can’t do that because that’s basically saying someone is my property. That word does not mean anything good. It’s a racial slur! You can’t make that into something positive.”

My former classmate said differently. He says “I don’t think it should be socially acceptable because it was once degrading, but no, I don’t think it holds the same connotation anymore.”

That’s a difficult question. I think that it originated in a negative way, but now is being used positively. Not by everyone, but I use it as a term for ‘friend’. It just depends on how you use it— like most words,” says Stephyne Weathersby. 

The n-word is used widely and frequently. However, where is it that it is used most commonly and where people seem to hear it most? The answer is simple: music. For many years, the n-word has been used in the lyrics of so many artists and rappers— many of whom who are against people of other ethnicities using the word. This prompted the question:

What do you think about artists and rappers who release music with the n-word in their songs?

Skipwith says, “With rappers, that’s their art, and they’re letting you enjoy it. People can say whatever they want, but it still doesn’t make it right. Rappers and artists make music as a form of expression. If a person of another race says ‘nigga’ in a song, I’m not gonna like make a big fuss, but c’mon now. That’s someone else’s culture. Don’t overdo it. But that’s like when you’re in the car with your parents and you hear a curse word, you ain’t gone say it, you gone skip the word. Why can’t you do that with the word nigga? That’s my take on it.”

However, Karriem disagrees. He says, “How can you release a song to the public and tell people not to use a word written in the lyrics? Or say that other audiences have to replace it with something, just don’t use it at all.”

Similarly, Cedrick Smith states, “I remember watching Oprah and Kanye West was on there, and they had a discussion on why he used the n-word in his songs. And he said he was taking the word back and making something postive out of it. First of all, the music that he makes is not empowering black people. It is tearing them down.”

The n-word is a word with many meanings and significance. How you choose to use the word is up to you. However, I challenge you to ask yourself why or why not you use the n-word? Is creating a community? Are you a part of that repeating cycle of hate? I hope this delve into the n-word and its many layers made you realize things that you have before.  Ask yourself these questions, and make a choice, a change, or a correction.

 

[the poll results of the next topic will be up next week!]

 

 

 

The N-word: Creating a Community or Repeating a Cycle of Hate? Part 1

According to Tolerance.org, the n-word is “the ultimate insult— a word that has tormented generations of African Americans. Yet over time, it has become a popular term of endearment by the descendants of the very people who once had to endure it.” To me, it is a derogatory term that I don’t use. However, when this topic first arose, I instantly wanted to know more about it. As a person of mixed race, I felt that— to talk about the issue— I needed more insight into the people of the black community who use the word. I interviewed my fellow students right here at MSA as well as a former classmate at my previous school. Here’s what they had to say:

Do you use the n-word?  Why or why not?

“No, I don’t because I find it very degrading,” says Elijah Karriem, an MSA vocal.

Another vocal student, Cedrick Smith, agreed with Karriem’s response, saying that the word derives from hate. However, there are many other students who do use the word for a variety of reasons.

For example, Carter Skipwith, an MSA literary student, said:  “Yes, I grew up in an all-black neighborhood. It was the ghetto, I guess. Also, my school was majority black. My friends said it, my classmates said it, a lot of adults in my life said it, so I said ‘Okay, this is common’. Now that I’m older and around different groups of people, I have to understand that not everyone takes it as lightly as me. I probably use it the way people use crap, like ‘oh crap!’. That’s just how I was raised. My mom doesn’t say it though, but my grandma says it and she’s like my second mom.”

Stephyne Weathersby, MSA literary, says this about the word: “I never say it as a demeaning word. The way the word originated is horrible, but I think the black community turned the word from something that was demeaning into something you can bond with; it’s a connection among black people, ya’know? It’s so beautiful how we’ve transformed this word.”

Weathersby’s response prompted me to ask the very question that this piece is entitled.

Do you think that the n-word is creating a community or repeating a cycle of hate?

Smith says, “Racism is in the DNA of America, and words like that are what keep racism in the threads of America. If we keep using it as a free slang word, we are basically whitewashing our own history. So, it is repeating a cycle of hate.”

On the contrary, Skipwith says, “I feel like it just depends. I feel like it could build a community if people weren’t so hateful, but it all depends on what you’ve been taught. If people didn’t teach hate with that word, I believe that it could build a community. It would break a racial barrier; it would break a cultural difference, but there are still people in the world teaching and rehearsing hate. Honestly, though, we could just get rid of the word in general— there’s so many possibilities.”

However, a student from my former school said this, “Well, I am white, which shouldn’t make a difference, but no. However, I believe that it was once used to degrade a community, so I wouldn’t recommend affiliating it with one.”

Because this student is not a person of color, I asked the controversial question:

Do you think that people of other ethnicities should use the n-word?

He says, “I believe that, in a way, that’s using something that was once used against the oppressed to oppress others, which I can understand, but I don’t believe is okay. It’s still oppression, just less direct. I believe everyone should use the word or no one.”

Similarly, Smith says, “It’s a word that’s used so freely that most people don’t understand the severity of it. The way the black community uses the word makes other people feel like they can use the word, as well. And if you say that the word is being used for good now, then you can’t tell others they can’t use it because then what good is that doing?”

However, Weathersby says, “I wish we could go back to the time where that word didn’t mean what it means, but it does. There’s no changing that, so respect has to be given. I’d feel so uncomfortable if a white person was talking to me they called me a nigga like that’s hands-off because that makes me feel like they’re talking above me because that’s what the word meant. So, that’s just how I feel about white people saying it. I don’t think they should say it. And the white people who think it’s fun and cool to say, I look at them in a certain way because that’s not fun or cool for them to say because they don’t know the background of it, ya know? And there’s some white people who don’t think it’s a big deal, but you have to make them realize that it is a big deal. Because some schools haven’t even ever really taught black history, so they really don’t know. Like you know Martin, you know Malcolm, but you don’t really go into it, and that’s a problem. That’s a real problem.”

The n-word has been desensitized. It is a word that’s used so commonly and freely that most people don’t know the history of it, like Weathersby and Smith said. So, I asked another MSA student what they thought.

Azya Lyons, a literary arts student, said this: “It does, but it shouldn’t make them too comfortable to where they feel like it resonates with them. It shouldn’t because it just doesn’t.”

Furthermore, Skipwith says, “I think that the n-word has been desensitized to us as a way to get rid of “racism”. People will try to say that we shouldn’t dwell on that, but it happened, and it’s still not fixed. Saying the n-word so loosely has been implemented in the black community which makes others think that it’s okay to say it. But I think it started as a way to try and eliminate racism, but it’s not working. And the word still has underlying racist tones. And we’re trying to use something that was hateful before to make peace and it’s just not working. It’s just black people saying, ‘That’s our word and we gone reclaim it, but you best not’.”

 

[Part 2 coming soon]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Update!

Hey guys!

If you follow me on social media, you probably saw that I posted a poll last week asking my followers to vote for the topic of my next blog post. The choices were: pineapple on pizza, ‘Body-Shaming pt. 3’, or the use of the n-word. I tallied the votes, and my next post will be on…. (*drumroll*, please) the use of the n-word! I wanted to have it posted this week, but unfortunately, despite how diligently I have been working, I am just not done. This is a very broad topic that I do not want to tread lightly on, so I am going to have it posted next week! I think that with this added time I’ll have to develop it, you guys won’t be disappointed.

Because of this setback, I have decided that I will post a piece based on the topic you guys vote on here and on social media every other week. The weeks in-between I will post either a poem or something I’ve been working on along with updates and the reveal of the upcoming blog post topic.

Since the topic of the n-word is so extensive, I will most likely make it into two parts, but there are no guarantees. So, if it is split into two separate posts, it will be two weeks before the next topic reveal & update, and three weeks before next blog post. Because I am already posting this update, I am including the topic poll, but once I get started with the routine, I will post the poll at the end of the previous blog post. Essentially, it will be a topic blog post with a poll attached, then, the next week, an update blog post with the poll winner, then, the next week, a topic blog post with the winning topic and a poll attached, and so on and so forth. I really hope this makes sense! Comment any questions you have below 🙂

Now, without further adieu, the next topic choices are:

  • Pineapple on Pizza
  • White Privilege
  • Are Beauty Pageants Objectifying Women?
  • The Great Straw Debacle (#save the sea turtles, hahaha!)
    • Comment below what topic you think I should tackle for my 3rd blog post!

Here’s a short essay I wrote in English Comp. about how I want to be remembered:

Powdered Doughnuts

If you ask my friends to describe me, they would use words like: kind, thoughtful, happy, or bubbly, while these words are true. The question was, “How do I want to be remembered?” Well, the answer is simple. I want to be remembered as someone who wrote you cards on your birthday every year, someone who always made you feel loved, someone you could always count on.

When I was a little girl, my mother would pick me up from preschool every afternoon and take me to the gas station. I thought this was simply to get my afternoon snack, but it was for her to get her daily nicotine fix. Either way, we left the store satisfied with our purchases. I would get mini powdered doughnuts (sometimes the chocolate ones, on a bad day) and Mother would get her to Doral shorts in the gold box. On the ride home, I’d ask her the same question every day: “Mama, how are these doughnuts made?” and she’d answer with a story about the doughnut makers at the doughnut factory. This was our routine. Now, Mother doesn’t smoke anymore and I’ve put my doughnut eating behind me, but those days made me who I am today.

I am someone who hates the smell of cigarette smoke and has struggled with her weight her whole life. I am someone who apologizes when an apology isn’t necessary; someone who cares enough to write you cards on your birthday and makes you feel loved. I am someone who you can count on. This is me. This is who I am, and this is how I’d like to be remembered.

***

Thank you guys for being patient with me as I navigate this new world of blogging. Don’t forget to vote for the next topic! See ya next week with “The N-word: Creating a Community or Repeating a Cycle of Hate”.

Body Shaming: Part 2

Ashley Graham
ILLUSTRATION BY LAUREN TAMAKI

In 2016, Ashley Graham was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated’s Swimsuit Issue. Graham was the first plus-sized model to appear on the cover of this magazine. In the issue, Graham stated, “It’s time to finally have a variety of beauty because there’s not just one standard.”

Even though Graham did something trailblazing in the beauty industry, people still ridiculed her. YouTuber, Nicole Arbour, responded to Graham’s accomplishment by saying, “Sports Illustrated swimsuit models are supposed to be the mecca of physical perfection when it comes to modeling.”

Arbour’s response implies that because Ashley is a size 16, she does not embody “physical perfection” which is what she claims is Sports Illustrated’s whole brand. Unfortunately, Arbour didn’t stop there. She went on to tear down the workout videos Graham posts saying, “Taking health advice from a fat person is like taking movie advice from a blind guy.”

Personally, I don’t understand why would you demean anyone who is trying better themselves? And also, as a bigger girl, I would rather take workout advice from someone who is closer to my size than someone who isn’t. I disagree with Arbour wholeheartedly. However, her claims inspired me to ask some questions; here are the responses of Kathryn Chapin & Hannah Hays:

What would you say to those who body shame? 

“I would say that my body doesn’t dictate how much I can do; it doesn’t dictate my mind or my worth, so why is it such a big deal to you?” questions Chapin.

What would you say those who defend body shaming by saying they’re concerned for your health?

“I’m sure that they are aware that they’re overweight and that they are at risk. I’m sure they’ve spoken to their doctor. They don’t need you to come up to them and say, ‘You’re going to die.’ But you also don’t know a person’s story or health just by looking at them. That’s none of your business anyway,” Hays says.

“You do need to check up on your friends because eating disorders do exist, but you need to know your place. You need to be close with someone or let someone who is close with that person know you’re concerned. And then, after that, you don’t need to know anything else about it. Gossiping about someone else’s health or body is not okay,” adds Hays.

What Hays is talking about is very serious. Eating disorders come in many shapes in sizes, but the most common are anorexia and bulimia. I wanted to know more about these disorders and how body shaming affects them, so I sat down with another student at MSA. Here is what she had to say:

“Growing up, I was always, like, really small and my friends would make fun of me for it. They would say, ‘You don’t eat anything’ or ‘You’re too skinny’. That was in the 4th grade; I weighed around 58 pounds. It was really bad. At that point, it didn’t really bother me though. I mean, I knew I was skinny, but that’s how I wanted to look,” confessed the student.”It was in the 9th grade when my friend said something to me and that was when I realized this was an unhealthy way of living,” she continues, “But even still, when I started to eat a lot; it didn’t really change anything. I’d still get called ‘too skinny’ and it’s really just impacted my life because I’ve always been body shamed for not being the weight society tells me I should be.”

When people think of body shaming, they often think of fat shaming, but thin shaming is very real. I sat down with Alexa Counsel, a MSA media arts student, to discuss the issue more.

“People would always pick on me for how small I am. They would try to pick me up all the time. It’s something that’s just been happening since I was little,” Counsel explains, “I’m about 90-something pounds and I assume when I turn 21, I will, maybe, be in the hundreds.”

How have your experiences with body shaming affected you?

“It’s made me feel ugly, very ugly. I still have problems now. I only wear baggy clothes and hooded jackets, and you’ll rarely ever actually see my arms.”

Has it changed the way you view yourself?

“Um, it used to, but honestly, now, I don’t really care about it as much thinking that I should gain weight— because I know that I can’t. That’s just how my body is,” Counsel says. 

In our lives, most of us have all faced body shaming. It has made us feel unworthy and hate our bodies, but we are taking back our power. We are saying “No” to body shaming. Your body is beautiful and it is valid. You are valid. Don’t you ever feel anything less.

 

“There is no wrong way to have a body. We are more than the sum of our  parts; we are more than someone else’s expectations of us.”                                                                                          -Whitney Way Thore, Founder of No Body Shame

 

The reason that there is a body positive movement is because we’re celebrating our bodies for the magic that they are and the beautiful things they are capable of.                                                                                                                                                                                            -Mary Lambert, singer-songwriter & poet

I hope this empowers you.

-Maleigh 🙂

 

 

 

 

Body Shaming: Part 1

When I decided to make my first blog post about body shaming, I originally titled it “Fat Shaming & What It Means”. I took to news articles and did research about the heinous people who body shame. I watched a video of a woman who spent 30 minutes of her day recording herself tearing down the bodies that weren’t like her own. She then uploaded the video to YouTube and called it “comedy”. I, like most human beings, do not find her saying that fat people give off the aroma of sausages to be very funny. She then goes on to discredit the idea of fat-shaming, saying that it was made up by fat people to excuse their overeating.

I was furious by the hurtful and poorly factuated things that she was saying. So, initially, I was going to write a response to her video, but I decided against it. I figured that it would resonate with more people if it were something they could actually relate to. My good friend, Hannah, gave me the idea to interview people on their experiences with fat-shaming, so I  went to my peers, here at MSA, and asked for their truth. In doing this, I changed the title of my piece again. It is now titled “Body Shaming: Parts 1 & 2”. This because people are not only shamed for being fat but for being skinny, for being tall, for not being. Also, I needed to split it into two parts for the simple fact that the subject is so broad that I felt that it would not have fulfilled its purposes without a second installment. So, I hope that in reading this piece, you will know that you’re not alone and that your body is beautiful.

Body Shaming: Part 1

What Is Body Shaming?

The Oxford dictionary defines body shaming as “the action or practice of humiliating someone by making mocking or critical comments about their body shape or size.”

“Body shaming is when people say horrible things about someone’s body that they can’t necessarily control or don’t reflect them as a person,” says Kathryn Chapin, a visual arts student at MSA.

While these definitions of body shaming are true, I wanted to hear more in-depth opinions on the issue, so I asked another question: “Have you ever been body shamed? If so, how did it make you feel?”

I got responses like: “Ugly”, “Horrible”, and “Awful”.

Brianna Cox, a literary student at MSA, opened up about the first time she’d been shamed for her body “I remember the first time I felt that I was fat. I was in the third grade and I wore the same outfit every single day: a khaki skirt and a white shirt with ruffles on the sleeves. And I remember a kid saying to me one day, ‘Brianna, you’re bigger than most people.’ And I was like, ‘I didn’t notice.’ But then, I started thinking about it until I just thought about it every day.”

Cox has carried this experience her whole life. One moment or incident is all it takes to change someone’s entire perception of themselves. 

Have you ever looked in the mirror and thought of yourself as too skinny or fat or ugly? If so, do you think that’s body shaming?

Chapin says, “Oh yeah, at least once a day, but I feel like it is a result of body shaming. But it isn’t body shaming itself because I wouldn’t think those things unless I hadn’t been told to think those things, so while it is body shaming, I don’t feel like it is the body shaming that is stereotypically thought of when we think of body shaming.”

However, Cox states, “I definitely have. Although encouraging yourself in a tough way can help you, especially if you’re not the size that you want to be, it is still body shaming when you call yourself fat.”

I pondered Cox’s statement. I thought to myself, I call myself fat too often, yes, but on the BMI scale, I am considered “obese”. I am not the weight that I am supposed to be based on my height, so, therefore,  I am fat. That is just the simple truth.

I wanted more thoughts on this, so I sat down with my friend, Hannah, and she said this, “A lot of people use fat in a negative way. And I feel like we need to get rid of that. I mean, we really do— that whole stigma. It is such a nasty word now, the way that we use it. Everybody uses the word “fat”, but now, people are using it as this ugly word to just describe anyone that they don’t like.”

I really understood what Hannah had to say about that. The word “fat” has such a negative connotation, but the definition of the word is “having a large amount of excess flesh”.  Society has turned this word into this awful thing when it really just means you got some extra skin. I mean, no one really enjoys being called fat, but it is nothing to be ashamed of. Your body is beautiful.

“You can be both [fat and beautiful]. Being fat does not define your worth.” -Hannah Hays, MSA literary.

 

[Part 2 coming soon]