JoCoWrites

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By Helen Elizabeth Hokanson

What does freedom mean to me?

Since this question of freedom was posed on the first of September, I’ve been struggling to articulate just what freedom does mean to me. Do I answer to the backdrop of BLM protests, and respond in the context of the larger world? Maybe write a poem about systemic racism and my relationship with it. Or do I focus on the personal? An essay about the irony of people telling me they just want me to have what they have, while being alternately ignored or screamed at by the spouse they pity me for not having. Why would I want that? Or is there something in between I might place under the microscope? So many ways to be free. So many ways to be bound.

As October crawls along, bringing prompts end, I still can’t quite put my finger on how to address this question no matter which way I turn it. It’s a problem even my insomnia can’t cure. Now there’s something I wish to be free from. I had given up hope that I would be able to post a response. Until this morning. I am Reading Rebekah Taussig’s Sitting Pretty: The View From My Ordinary Resilient Disabled Body, where she perfectly articulates this slippery, twisty concept.

It’s a long passage, and I hope Rebekah doesn’t mind me sharing it.

“When I was small and just learning how to do life in my body, I didn’t hesitate, didn’t hold back, didn’t worry how it would look, didn’t look for cues or ask for a line. My imagination ruled. I saw no incongruities in being both a puppy rolling around in the mud and a poised princess. I wore dress-up gowns on afternoon trips to the library and drew magic-marker purple diamonds across my forearms and shins. I didn’t wonder what dancing could or should be; I moved my body to music and called it dancing. I used the shelves and cabinets in the kitchen to climb onto the counter and crawled headfirst down the hardwood stairs at top speed. I scooted around the neighborhood on a red tricycle with streamers flowing out of the handlebars. I was entirely free to be, driven by the innovation my body inspired. This is the wild emancipation I wish for all of us – a world where we are all free to be, to move, to exist in our bodies without shame; a world that isn’t interested in making all of its humans operate in the exact same way; a world that instead strives to invite more, include more, imagine more. That world sees the humans existing on the margins and says, You have what we want! What barriers can we remove so we can have you around? What do you need? How can we make that happen?” <

I’ve now read this paragraph about ten times. More by the time you have read it and I’m gob smacked each time. Wild emancipation. Yes! Wild emancipation. Freedom to be can be nothing less.

By Molly McCluskey-Shipman

I wish for you to be free of…

The ties that still bind Of assumptions and false narratives Of guilty until proven innocent

Beginning where you’ve started Way behind Any starting line Where it’s not safe to imagine

Imagining a future because you may not survive Freedom from assumptions based on Your skin Your hair Hoodies Zip code

Freedom to visualize a future Beyond the ifs Not IF you’ll go to college but where Freedom from only lip service of a better tomorrow

Actions of worth for our kids Most deserving Underserved Constantly emotionally battered By history and present day

Attempting to withdraw From a bankruptcy of broken promises Freedom from labels “Poor kids” “Those kids” “Them” “The black kids”

Freedom to walk down the street Without scorn Fear Assumptions

A promise to be a kid Recognized As having promise

Freedom to BE To shine Soar Impact Shouldn’t that be Attainable For all of us?!?

(For my students, past and present)

By Joni Abilene

Freedom was presented to me in childhood as a commerce, an idea wrapped up with the flag like a striped candy wrapper. Freedom meant society coming together, to celebrate with picnics and fireworks on the Fourth—of beer and fried chicken and sucked-up cigarettes littered along gravel ditches. My mother sewed identical dresses for my sister and me-we two of compete opposition. Little wars in pretty dresses. The forcing of this did not feel like freedom to me. Later on, a music teacher spoke of man and music, of the fool creating sound as a means to entertain himself in our prefabricated, preindustrial world. Lips poised in an O, he or she produced song wherever they wanted: amid a field, a mountain, a forest. The simplicity of this meant true freedom to me. I loved the idea and held onto it like a salve when life turned complex and chaotic. Now I know that true freedom is not the absence of conflict, but the acceptance of it. Life taught me this. Freedom is the ability to be that simplistic music-maker amid the fray. To whistle and have the world scorn, but still whistle because it makes you happy. If every person did this they would know true freedom. Lauren Bacall said it best, “You just put your lips together and blow.”

By Chris

I Have No Answers

All are welcome here is a political statement.

So is Some are welcome here.

Why? Should they be? Who gets to decide?

Is the second a statement that highlights emphasizes corrects or excludes?

Is it a statement about the some or the not-some, the rest, the others?

Who gets to decide? The speaker or the listener?

Is what matters intent or impact?

Eighty years ago an establishment could post a sign saying “Coloreds not welcome” and the intent was clear: exclusion.

Would a sign saying “Coloreds welcome” mean the same: all who are not colored are excluded? Or would it mean the colored are included along with the rest?

I grew up with the song “Jesus Loves the Little Children.” All the children of the world the lyrics went Red, brown, yellow, Black and white It spelled it out, that “all.” It listed the skin tones to emphasize their inclusion.

If I sing a partial lyric— “Jesus loves Black children”— does that merely highlight a part of the song, emphasize or make note of a part of the whole? Or does it make a new song and cancel the rest? If I say the song mentions Jesus loves Black children does that imply he hates red, brown, yellow, and white?

Assumed exclusion; implied negation. If I say “I love dogs” does that mean I hate cats? If Mozart is my favorite is Beethoven then slandered? When I savor a steak do I debase all salad?

Who gets to decide whether I have and what my words mean? Is my intent behind them all that matters? Or do others determine the impact regardless of what I meant?

Some say wearing a mask to prevent the spread of Covid-19 makes a political statement about those who don't or can't or won't. Does it? Some say saying “Black Lives Matter” makes a political statement about lives that aren't Black. Does it? Do you get to decide the meaning behind my intent? Do I get to decide for you? Are these things personal? Individual choices and freedoms? Or are they political, attempting to influence who we are together? Who gets to decide if I'm being personal or political? Some, all, or me?

If I am your host and you feel unwelcome by my Black Lives Matter pin am I at fault? Am I failing as a host? Do I need to “correct” my behavior to change the way you feel?

If I have a library or school or public space that is intended as welcome to all and I display a Black Lives Matter sign meant to particularly indicate inclusion and you feel it means something different, that others are less welcome than Black in comparison, have I done something wrong? Who owns your perception? Is my intent or my impact decisive?

(Because in similar but reverse situations, when you intend something harmless that I perceive as racially harmful, I would say the impact outweighs the intent.)

(If I attempt to restrain you and you die have I committed murder?)

I'm sure there are professionals who study this kind of thing, philosophers and ethicists and the like, who have formal systems for determining answers to my many questions, who know how to weigh one benefit against another, one harm against another, one intent against another, one freedom and right against other freedoms and rights, when they compete against each other, when one would cancel the other, and reach decisive conclusions.

They are not me. I'm stuck in my questions, unsure how to proceed. Chances are, they are not you. How do we negotiate this, me and you?

I'm not sure who gets to decide. Are you?

September/October 2020 Prompt

What does freedom mean to you? What does it mean in this country? What do you want to be free of or from?

Submit your piece here

and, Read other responses here


Thanks for all the thoughtful responses you submitted to our August prompt!

By Chris

To be kind is to notice. To perceive. To see, hear, feel, understand. To feel kindness is to feel recognized. To be acknowledged and comprehended.

Respect. The root “spect” is for seeing. Spectacles. Spectator. Inspect. “Re” is again. To re-spect is to look and then look again, closely enough to see carefully. Accurately. Truly.

Kindness is attention. It is paying attention with a desire to understand, without judgment or conditions or self-interest. It is accepting the other on their own terms.

Random acts of kindness are small moments of attention. . . .

By Helen

Working the Math

How does the arithmetic of one small kindness work against one small unkindness? Are kindness and unkindness one-for-one? And if not, how does that math work?

Are they equal in weight? You can lob an insult. If you lob a compliment does it hit in the heart or the solar plexus?

Are occasions of goodwill one step forward, hostility two steps back? Or is it the other way ‘round? Acrimony versus affection; anvil or lifeboat.

Small kindnesses make the world go ‘round and they matter. How many does it take to make up for one One small meanness?

By Kathryn

“I love your...” is one of the phrases women hear from each other on the street in reference to their clothes, hair, or accessories. Having your appearance admired is great, but one of the greatest kindness we women can do for one another is let each other in on our own fashion/style secrets.

Whenever someone mentions that they like the shirt I am wearing or like my purse, shoes, etc., I make a conscious effort to tell them about where I acquired the item. Shoot I will even share where I get my nails/hair done or how I did it myself. It is a simple kindness that is easy to do spur of the moment and does not take a huge amount of effort.

Kindness isn’t always about doing big elaborate things for people that require you to spend time and money. A lot of the time the little things that can be seamlessly incorporated into your day are the best.

August 2020 Prompt

Write a story about the power of small acts of kindness, given or received. Is kindness always a “doing” or is it more nuanced than that? Does kindness from a stranger have more impact because it’s less expected?

Submit your piece here

and, Read other responses here


Thanks for all the thoughtful responses you submitted to our July prompt!

By Diane H

Words What are words? You can use words to say anything you want, And expect people to believe you just because you said it. You don’t believe me? Let me explain with more words, leading you here and there, Down pathways of similes and analogies, Wherefores and therefores and henceforths and soforths, And it’s the Truth I’m speaking so listen to me. Over here, not over there, Not what the others are saying. I have the good words, The right words, The words that will enter your brain and persuade you. What a tangled web of words we weave, Trip you up if you’re not looking. And suddenly, you’re in the middle of a sentence with no idea how you got there.