The Cis Gender Blues
Where's my colour on the rainbow?
I remember asking my social media tribe, "How do I stand in my privilege with grace and my disempowerment with hope?". I'm a bi-sexual women of colour marrying a heterosexual cis gender white man. I am also cis-gendered and look pretty Caucasian much of the time. I have a deeply violent childhood and deal with ptsd, but I'm also highly educated with a degree in developmental psychology and training in supporting and healing trauma. I identify in fact as a musician and travel in an industry that has extreme imbalances when comes to gender - lets just say it...the music industry treats women like crap. And also, I was trained for decades by powerful and loving masculine musicians and techs. In my heart simmers rage about the oppression and subjugation of women and also there is deep respect and love for the Men in my life. Still, on forums and debates about sexuality, I am dismissed for my privilege on one thread and then dismissed on another because of my gender and yet another because of my gender orientation. It's confusing to say the least. Being blamed for the mistakes of my ancestors seems to me as logical and hating someone because an person that is the same as theirs...a colour different than yours, did damaged to you. I get that hundreds of years of slavery and war can not be compared to my upset at being made the bad guy when I had nothing to do with my "white" great great great grandfather's generation of idiots who pillaged and plundered. Counter racism is a small price to pay for the war for liberation and equality. The pendulum is swinging hard my friends and collateral damage is piling up.
My question is, will it work? Will it work to rage and spit fire when, for example, a white man asked why he is considered "privileged"? When someone who personifies the normative majority becomes triggered inside their own abuse history or even their own struggle to survive in this chaos we call a society then asked what is meant by "privilege" how will it help to tell them they should already know and it's not your job to teach them? Will that work to effect positive change? Or will it just make them harden their hearts and think you're being a whiny baby? Who can better teach "them" than someone who has lived it? I don't understand how it serves the goal of equality to shut out the conversation? Will it be hard? Dam right? War is hard. Get in the game for real. Teach someone who is ignorant if you can or let them alone as each situation is, um...situated. Breath and work through your own trigger so that you can be heard and understood. What if loving each other, each one of the others even the assholes, is the way to create equanimity? What if..?
I think by the way things are unfolding right now, we are in a war that no one will win. Well, big pharma will certainly continue to make billions from our separation and misery. But I want to know, in this current climate of dedicated separation where each of us must be labeled specifically before we can feel accepted, when it comes to human rights, how do I continue to effect positive change when the very nature of how I was born and ultimately how I was conditioned, is the most negative category of human being next to a white straight man. Holy run on sentence!
My point? There is an energy of dismissive upset towards anyone who exemplifies normative culture. The rebellious teen ager has in it's grasp not merely rock & roll or sex & drug or running away with the circus. Now, the trend is about rejecting the normative sexual categories set in place by the majority. Genuine sexual confusion is pretty standard it's true and we have been dicks about the rights and privileges of those who are not white, cis gender, male and heterosexual. And yet. How do we make room for those who are inside the normative to learn, evolve, support and effect positive change. If "we" are the ones in places of power and who dictate the norm...shouldn't we find a way to create connection? All I'm seeing these days is anger.
Black's Blog






