I want to be a woman who is not afraid of young Black men. I want to enter the subway platform like an alley cat flic-flac’ing her cold feet into lackadaisical safety. I’m an old woman who wants to love non-Anglo words bouncing off the curve of the tunnel—ping! pow! hitting the pulse of the collective-waiting-for-the-train with differing beats-per-minute.
Imagine if I accepted Black culture the way some accept Chinese culture. I’d stop trying to colonize Black names—it’s Na’Dia, not Nadia! I’d quit harping at the Walgreen’s cashier for her gold-plated elongated fingernails—how can you hit the keys with those? I’d accept rap and hip-hop, stop changing the words or the beat whitening it all up just to enfranchise my fragile birthright.
I’d walk down Lawndale streets, how-you-doin’, and ‘wassupin’, a welcome visitor looking for friends and food and local art. Next day I’d take you with me sayin’, meet Taneesha from poetry class and oh there’s Damari from tutoring. Hi Fam. Here’s my friends. I’d hear new language poppin’ outta my own mouth. Like they were my own words. Like they have to do when they walk white and talk white on Michigan Avenue, or else. Or else, the judge says, I can’t understand you. Speak proper English.
We’d gather all together and go to the movies, sit side-by-side transforming ourselves into subcutaneous doppelgängers. We’d be like, oh that’s funny or Girrrlll I feel ya’. All hands would open and close on popcorn from the same bucket. Afterwards we’d crowd the sidewalk two-steppin’ to No Diggity on our way to brunch. Everyone would get served and be safe.
My unearned whiteness is a blessing: I get to go out the door without rehearsing how to react when Macy’s security guards ask to see my receipt. And a curse: A white woman cried to the police there musta been 40 Black boys down there crowded in the red line and I’m helplessly guilt-ridden when the fact gets reported as 50 later that night. And 60 the next morning.
I’m an old white woman who wants to cuddle and cry with Black children maligned in that subway—not white women’s cries regurgitating Black boy history of false accusations and lynchings. No. No. God-the-Mother cries with tears that seep under my babies’ skin cleansing them of my control, my denial of their equality, my remarks about their hair.
I thought I was once a curious woman simply eavesdropping on human nature’s racial conversations. The constant banged-out message that my beloved Chicago is the most segregated city in the country woke me to know I’ve been a gagged participant all along.
My vow is to be the old white woman waiting in that subway, with you, emancipated from the fear of young Black men.

You see the things we all see but you also dare to say it as it is! And your heart is so big, Regan! When I see gold-plated elongated fingernails or anything of that nature, my recent approach has been to make a compliment — it’s amazing how quickly my inner judgment is replaced by a bridge of humility.
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well-said and so true. There are so many thoughts that go through my head that I never knew were racist. I want to be rid of them, but need to name them first!
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WOW! “Gagged Participant” and “Unearned Whitness “has got me thinking! Go Regan!
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Well done Regan Says it all please send to the New York Times and Wall Street Journal
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So honest. Did a class assignment prompt this? Or did you just sit down and write it on your own? Or maybe it was inspired by a class with Kevin Covall? (I’m enjoying the audio book, by the way!)Enter your comment
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The prompt was I Want to be a Woman who… or I am a woman who….Also inspired by Keven Coval’s writing and teaching. YCA encourages students to write the hard things and tell the truth. Thanks.
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Loved this post. Makes me examine my feelings.
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Brilliant!
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