The “Right to Comfort” is a characteristic of white supremacy culture.
Please understand that I use the word supremacy lightly.
Watching a genocide live streamed on a device created by the exploited labor of Congolese children has caused me discomfort, to say the least.
Humanity has broken my heart in ways that my mind can’t comprehend.
As a result, I sit in my car and rage scream on a daily basis.
I’m often advised to “take a break” or “check out” when I need to from the constant horrors. To that I say, absolutely the fuck not.
Do what works for you.
As for me, that’s not how I’m built. Those aren’t the people I come from.
May I have the privilege to bear witness to injustice. May I be consumed in discomfort for the rest of my existence. May their pleas and screams haunt me to take continued action towards liberation.
I regularly drive past places in Ohio that I know were once plantations, I physically feel the heaviness in my chest. I see certain types of trees and instantly remember the brutal ways they’ve been used against bodies that favor mine. I live with this grief in my bones.
All that to say, I’ll never look away. I’ll never place my own comfort over the cries of the oppressed.
Please, please do what you can to your capacity.
I’ll leave you with words from writer and transformative justice activist adrienne maree brown.
the effort, the weight
By adrienne maree brown
“the efforts you make to silence tomorrow are so loud – only prayers can reach through time
may we share the fire of bisan, the honey of plestia, the embrace of motaz, the balm of hind, the grace of wael, the bravery of ahed, the sweet flame of ola, the steel of suheir, the tenderness of devin and ayman, the poetic precision of hala and mosab and the echoing magic of mahmoud
may we catch the tears of muhammed and each stranger we have witnessed in monstrous, private and broadcast grief
may we strike the bullseye like lara, teach with the warmth of anees, sustain the survivor’s wit of mohamed, nourish with the abundance of sijal, play with the mischief of tasneem
may we speak with the clarity of those gazan babies
may we share the heart of the grandmother who counts the olive trees amongst her wards, the eternity of her body around child trunk when the bulldozers come
may we remember the way home like diasporic palms full of key, may we return everything to love
(please no one tell me who owns land – i only care who loves it, i see who kisses the bark, who bleeds into the roots)
may we have the urgency of an imprisoned parent trying to find their future buried under the weight of house and apartheid and fear so voracious it argues for genocide
may we lift the weight of each hush, each overreach, each pressure, each lie used to execute this evil; may the stench and stillness of this mass grave anchor our stance: freedom for all life
stillness steadiness endurance. but not silence – we will never be quiet again. you will always know: we see you
cover our mouths. avoid our eyes. ban our shadows. condemn yourselves.”
Liberation to those who are oppressed, ourselves included.
#FreePalestine
JaneA, thank you for sharing so openly. I’ll never critique folks for creating boundaries and limitation to protect their own mental health. I honor all action. I sincerely believe every bit of it makes a difference. Grateful that you’re able to do what you can to your capacity. With you in solidarity.
🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥