5 Things Black People Need To Learn How To Do…Now
August 10, 2010 5 Comments
“You know how to swim, right?” my friend asked as soon as I entered the house. “Yes,” I replied, “I am a mermaid. Why?” I immediately think a swim party is in the works, instead she begins to express her frustration about a story she had read about earlier that day about 6 people, black people, that drowned in Louisiana at a family reunion. I shared her sentiments and was deeply saddened and frustrated. As opposed to the rapid violence terrorizing Chicago streets, this tragedy could have easily been prevented. As a result, I composed an immediate to-do list for black people to learn.
1) Swim: The history of black people not learning how to swim can be traced back to slavery, as slave masters feared that slaves would escape if they knew how to swim. Some even thought that slaves, if they knew how to swim, were capable of swimming all the way back to Africa. (I know,right?!!) For the slaves, memories of the Transatlantic Slave Trade and stories passed from one generation to another created an innate fear of large bodies of water. However, since then, blacks have learned to read, write, and run, all of which at one point all were also forbidden. There are and will always be exception to the rules, the rebels- the leaders. But at this point, what is the hold up on learning how to swim?? It is time. Drowning is usually preventable. Get lessons for you and your kids. The babies can learn how to swim as early as 6-24 months. When you teach them how to walk also teach them how to swim.
I refuse to believe, that we will let our children drown because we don’t want to get our hair wet…
2) Think Critically: The drowning mentioned happened at a family reunion with people watching helplessly. Deep sigh. We have to learn to look beyond what we can’t do and focus on what we can do. Black people, at times, seemed to be crippled by fear and unwilling to exercise their learned skill set to create new methods to achieve a desired result. For instance, if no one can swim, take off your shirts and tie them together to form a rope to throw in the water to pull the children out of the water. Grab some tree sticks, form a human chain, call 911 ask how to float, I’m sure there is an app for how to swim, take the table clothes to pull them in, grab the spare tires out of the cars and throw it out there for them to float on until help arrives. All possible and feasible solutions as supposed to do nothing.
Beyond that, we as a people need to stop taking information as is, without investigating the source, the motive, and the purpose. One of my favorite professors in college handed a student a book and asked him to demonstrate how he reads books to the class. The young man look puzzled and then proceeds to open up the book and flip through the pages until he reached the page where the story began. The professor asked him why he skipped through the first 10 pages or so. Like most of us, the young man thought the information prior to the beginning was useless. But perhaps that is the most important text in the all of the book. It gives the year published, which would be cross-referenced with world and local events of that time period, it gives city published, it gives publisher which should be researched to see what type of media are they known to put out and for what purpose. So with all of the background information it is easier to process and assess the information being presented in the actual story. So when President Obama and his administration were sent a sound bite of Shirley Sherrod speaking on white farmers, the source, the motive and the purpose should have been researched and assessed before acting.
3) Travel: The world is bigger than your hood, your city, your state, and your country, and Essence Festival. Move around, visit, and try things you never tried before. While I am on the fence in regards to the sushi wave that has hit the black bourgeois, it does expose black people to other cuisines that once were unappetizing to the masses. Traveling allows us to see how other people operate, live and thrive. This serves a two-fold purpose: 1) it puts things that don’t matter in the proper perspective and 2) it makes you recognize and value your strengths.
4) Live within means: Black people will go through great lengths and money to appear to have it all together meanwhile bills are past dues, car in repossession, and bank account on negative, but we look good. The fact is for most of us, living within our means does not include savings. It means spending as much possible until the next check comes in. You work hard, so pay yourself first.
5) Open businesses: I am talking about legitimate, “you need a permit and business license to operate” businesses. When asked, I always say one of the reasons I left Texas is because so many people were content with getting a “good” job and making $60,000 for the rest of their lives. That was the definition of success or making it. And while the money is not a huge issue, the complacency in working for others, specifically white people, until you can’t anymore just seemed to resemble slavery too much for me. And while I am not self-employed as of yet, it is something I am not only aspire to but making moves towards accomplishing.
My grandfather washed cars. It is what he loved to do and he did it well. So much so that when he opened Miller’s Auto Polish and Detail Shop in downtown Dallas, he was the first black business to open up a shop in that all-white area. He was also the only car detailing shop in the area. He had no degree, I am not sure if he even finished high school. But he had a business mind that kept his business open until he was no longer physically able to run and manage it. My grandmother did hair. She also had no college education, but when she decided to open Miller’s Beauty Salon she knew it would do well. And it did. It was open for business until the day she passed.
But that was two generations ago. The next generation, more educated in a westernized system, exchanged their family inheritance for 401K’s and health benefits and taught my generation to do the same. It has been a detrimental exchange economically, educationally, and politically.
There are and will always be exception to the rules -the rebels. The leaders. Let the recovery begin.
First and foremost, let me say that swimming SOOOO does not need to be on this list because I feel like it pushes off something that is MUCH more important. Self-love. Loving not just your actual self, but those who are likened to you is one of the biggest reasons some of these other problems exist. I feel like if you love yourself enough, you’ll learn to swim, because you’ll want to have a job that affords you the ability to travel the world and visit beautiful oceans in which you will want to swim. WHEW !!! That was a mouthful (Pause) but it needed to be said.
To that effect, I feel that everything else is spot on, but is a direct result of us as a people having nothing to work toward any more. Saving instead of spending is a newer phenomenon. When we were in the midst of the Civil Rights Era, you HAD to save so you could buy your way outta share cropping, so you could own a, well, anything. Now that we are “free” to do what we choose, we have to spend on things that we had no such luxury to spend on before. This is also why we can’t start our own businesses, if we don’t have the business mind to save what money we get now, how can banks be assured that you will pay them before you go out and pop bottles in the club?? And usually, if you have the mind to save toward your future you are more than likely going to be able to think critically. Its all intertwined, but we have no black leaders, Obama is an American leader, Jesse Jackson is just a dumbass. We have no united goal we are working toward, so that we, the privileged feel the need to help those who have not reach the same state of enlightened thinking.
In short, convincing “us” that we are free might have been the best way the White man has enslaved us. With that being said, I gotta go see about this Bentley right after I get off the phone getting a student loan deferment.
Dictated. Not Read. Respectfully,
Mr. Fantastic
You are right. In essence, I inferred that just like reading, education, running, that swimming too is part of “freeing” ourselves. However, i love your spin and how you equated loving ourselves with wanting to travel and experience what this life has to offer.
Then you preached a sermon! We need united goals and leaders. And we need to spread the word that we are indeed not free!
*raises fist*
The Movement will NOT be Retweeted…..
ha. that is actually a tee i plan on getting from my homie @ onustee.com. well sorta.
https://www.binarywerks.net/onustees-home/productdetail.asp?ssl=on&ProdID=85
Great Minds I suppose. Great minds.