Holistic Reading
Holistic Reading
Holistic Reading
HOLISTIC READING
We have left the land and embarked. We have burned our bridges behind
us- indeed we have gone farther and destroyed the land behind us. Now,
little ship, look out! Beside you is the ocean: to be sure, it does not always
roar, and at times it lies spread out like silk and gold and reveries of
graciousness. But hours will come when you realize that it is infinite and
that there is nothing more awesome than infinity... Oh, the poor bird that
felt free now strikes the walls of this cage! Woe, when you feel homesick
for the land as if it had offered more freedom- and there is no longer any
land.
- Nietzsche
Herman Hesse
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In this chapter I suggest a new method of reading, which I call holistic
reading. Building on the spiritual model of the Self offered by Jiddu
Krishnamurti and the psychological model of self offered by Dr.
Richard Gillett, I suggest that reading occupy itself with the task of
exploring the self, rather than exploring the other. I argue that in reading
we often do little more than use the book to confirm our pre-existing
beliefs, rather than interacting with what is actually before us. As such,
we are not letting ourselves come face to face with a text. Instead we are
consuming it and appropriating its voice. In order to create a different
space in which to read a book, I offer a different reading practice than the
one that most of us presently use. A holistic reading practice might entail
reading the same book repeatedly, in order to access the richness and
depth that might not be visible in a cursory reading. It also incorporates
meditation and mindfulness, for reasons I will explain in chapter 2. At the
end of the chapter I give a brief introduction of the self I will be exploring
in this text by explaining my own background, and giving the back story of
my relationship thus far with Kincaid and her texts.
the information that our eyes scan and our minds perceive when we read. This method is
interested in the reader, and hopes to articulate a way of reading that might lead the
reading as a mirror in which our Self might examine our self. This is the philosophical
Selfthe Agent, the Knower, the Ultimate Locus of personal identity, Godexamining
the shabby patchwork of beliefs and understandings we have crafted from scraps of
We dont often think of reading as something that has different ways of doing. At
first glance, its just words on a printed page that we scan from left to right. Not much to
it. And yet, if we think about it, we know that there are different ways of reading. What
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a 5 year old does with his mind while he reads is very different from what a 16 year old
does, which is very different from what a 45 year old does. Reading a steamy novel
while on vacation at the beach is different from reading the job manual your new boss
just set in front of you, which is different from reading a breakup letter left for you on the
kitchen table. Reading serves different purposes at different times or situations in our
lives.
my mentor, Santiago Cols, who has the same goal, I want to share a way of reading; a
way of approaching and engaging literature that feeds and is in turn fed by a way of
living, a way of approaching and engaging life (Book of Joys). Cols sees reading as
holding the potential to lead to joy by reinventing the practice through reconfiguring its
components. He underscores the capacity to take up the raw materials of the reading
process (text and reader and world, affect and intellect, complexity and uncertainty) and
on the readers relationship to the text. This method or way of reading is intended to
subtly shift the readers mental focus from the characters or the author to the construction
of self. Thus, reading becomes a self-centered exercise, one in which we think about how
we think. Books become passports to worlds that exist inside of us. We are able to get to
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This implies, perhaps asserts, that there is a way of living that might be
will also cop to a pragmatic belief that if the meaning of a given proposition is found
within the practical consequences of accepting it, then we might start at the end,
envisioning what we would like the end result to be, and then figuring out what we would
have to believe in order to achieve that end result. In Pragmatism, William James writes:
I think that the pragmatic method is a useful one for examining our own thought
processes. I have employed this method myself to examine which beliefs support my
vision of the world and which do not. I have also used the pragmatic model to examine
many of our cultural beliefsthe meta-narratives that presently have currency. Some of
the characteristics that I find negative and problematic in American culture are: the
materialism and the narrow view of success that it inspires; the unmediated and often
individualism; the unhealthy relationship to the body; the dichotomous, linear, univocal
thinking. These will be explored at length in this text. I am not prescribing blanket
happiness, but I am issuing a blanket invitation to self exploration, so that we might know
objective.
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Theory and practice are not separate spheres; rather, theories are tools and maps
for the practice of finding our way in the world. As John Dewey attests, there is no
conscious) practice versus stupid (or uninformed) practice. In recent times I have
undertaken the project of trying to produce scholarship that has resonance and relevance
beyond the academic, into the personal and the lived. William James writes, Our beliefs
are really rules for action to develope [sic] a thoughts meaning, we need only
determine what conduct it is fitted to produce: that conduct for us is its sole significance
(28-29). My academic project has been to think about what type of conduct I would like
to see produced- in the academy, in the United States, in the world, in myself- and what
thoughts and ways of thinking might bring about this conduct. If, as James asserts, all
realities influence our practice, and that influence is their meaning for us (29), I am
interested in how realities are constructed and given meaning in light of a given practice.
functional relation between parts and the whole. Rather than scrutinizing an object under
a microscope, we see it with a wider lens as a part of something bigger. With this lens
we are able to see that even our seeing becomes a part of what is seen. Thus, an
individual endeavor to understand and master the self has reverberations into our
families, our societies, and ultimately the entire world. We cannot change society
and ecologically sound living, the augmented awareness of the role of stress and nutrition
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in health, and even arguably the pull toward community that fuels social networking sites
like Facebook, Myspace, and Twitter as indicating that a re-education of sorts has already
been taking place. Dissatisfied with the meaninglessness, lovelessness and hopelessness
that Cornel West calls nihilism in his book Race Matters, many Americans have sought a
restructuring of their beliefs, values, and practices, and they have used holistic means to
foster this re-education. Spiritual, self-help, and New Age books frequently become best-
sellers, indicating that there is a market out there of people thirsty for a new
understanding of themselves, the world, and God. I am interested to see how holistic
thinking can be incorporated into academic learning. Of course, I can't set a moral
agenda for the nation, nor do I intend to. I am not advocating the enforcement of certain
or specific values. I do not see myself as endorsing swapping one fiction for another
fiction. Instead, I encourage each of us to cultivate an awareness of one's own values and
to bring mindful attention to where they come from, and what they enable and disable for
us.
The premise of this work is that oppression is not (only) a complex interweaving
are able to decolonize our own minds, as everyone from Ngugi Wa Thiongo to Franz
Fanon has implored us to do, then we can begin to navigate the landscape before us on
our own terms. In Rock My Soul, bell hooks writes, Used politically in a relationship to
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thought and behavior that prevent us from being self-determining (69). To do this
requires us as individuals to look within and examine our beliefs, and ultimately to
abandon those beliefs that are limiting. This is a difficult but very worthwhile practice, in
my opinion. To some this may sound like mind control. But I would argue that while we
cannot control circumstances, we can exercise control over our reactions to them. We
need not be at the mercy of our emotions. Through examining the numerous factors that
contribute to our beliefs, such as culture, race, family, genderto name but a fewI
think we are able to observe our own beliefs with less attachment and more objectivity.
In this work, I evoke concepts of identity and self. Identity is an umbrella term
threefold, consisting of a personal identity (or the idiosyncratic things that make a person
unique), a social or cultural identity (or the collection of group memberships that may or
may not define the individual), and a psychological identity (or a persons mental model
of him or herself, comprised of self image, self esteem, and individuation). My work
draws on the interconnections and fluidity of all three of these ways of looking at ones
around us. Identity is not a fixed thing, but rather floating, adaptable, and contingent.
Identity is not just what we know; it is also how we know. If we call on intuitive powers,
rational thought, gut reaction, dreams, if we are able to express ourselves through
drawing, through dance, through words, through song, this is also a part of who we are
and how we identify. From within our identity, from inside our world view and our
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of our mental computer, the set of processing systems that tell us what to do with the
If identity is the series of identifications that mediate how we know, the self is
perhaps who or what we are striving to know. I see the self as being a multi-layered
entity, and though I will try to give names to different elements of the self that I explore,
one must bear in mind that these are fluid and contingent categories that are in no way
hard, fast or definitive. Jiddu Krishnamurti writes his holistic version of the self:
You know what I mean by the self? By that I mean the idea, the
memory, the conclusion, the experience, the various forms of nameable
and unnamable intentions, the conscious endeavor to be or not to be, the
accumulated memory of the unconscious, the racial, the group, the
individual, the clan, and the whole of it all, whether it is projected
outwardly in action, or projected spiritually as virtue; the striving after
all this is the self (126).
When I unravel Krishnamurtis complex bundle, I see the self as having some
identifiable key components. There is, for example, the Self with a capital S. This is
the spiritual, philosophical Self within us that observes. Rather than the one acting, it is
the one observing the acting. It is linked, for some, to a concept of the divine, where this
Self might be seen as our God Self, our innermost consciousness that is linked with all
other consciousness. With the notion of the Self as God, where I am is God, our very
existence indicates our godliness. For others, a better image might be that the Self is
There is another self as well, the self with quotation marks and a lowercase s.
This might be seen as synonymous with the ego. It is a gross accumulation of positive
and negative beliefs about ourselves, from My Auntie always told me I had a nice
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smile to I have my fathers temper to Women cant be president to We are all born
Furthermore, it is the hidden beliefs that we do not even realize we have. It is what we
think everybody else sees when they look at us. Our self is constructed around and
within these various conscious and unconscious beliefs. Some of these beliefs come from
our immediate society, from our parents, friends, or members of our race, social class,
gender, or sexual community. Others are taught by our religions, schools, or by the
media. Others are ideas that figure into our national identity, the ways in which we
position ourselves globally and grow to embody on a personal level many of the things
we tell ourselves about our nation. Still others function on a preconscious level and may
be erroneous conclusions that we drew on our own based on the dynamics of our family.
Krishnamurti says that this identification process is the essence of the self (22).
These messages are tossed to us by friends and family, pushed on us in school and in
and is not possible, and for whom. Our self is formed in relationship to these imposed
beliefs. These beliefs end up creating the very limiting framework from within which
most of us operate, similar to Marilyn Fryes birdcage in her seminal feminist essay,
Consider a birdcage. If you look very closely at just one wire in the cage,
you cannot see the other wires. If your conception of what is before you is
determined by this myopic focus, you could look at that one wire, up and
down the length of it, and be unable to see why a bird would not just fly
around the wire any time it wanted to go somewhere... It is only when you
step back, stop looking at the wires one by one, microscopically, and take
a macroscopic view of the whole cage, that you can see why the bird does
not go anywhere; and then you will see it in a moment. It will require no
great subtlety of mental powers. It is perfectly obvious that the bird is
surrounded by a network of systematically related barriers, no one of
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which would be the least hindrance to its flight, but which, by their
relations to each other, are as confining as the solid walls of a dungeon. It
is now possible to grasp one of the reasons why oppression can be hard to
see and recognize: one can study the elements of an oppressive structure
with great care and some good will without seeing the structure as a
whole, and hence without seeing or being able to understand that one is
looking at a cage and that there are people there who are caged, whose
motion and mobility are restricted, whose lives are shaped and reduced
(176).
This is what happens to us all. All of us began life as children, bursting with
beginners mind. Beginners mind is the state of wonderment and awe that comes from
experiencing things for the first time (or as if for the first time, but more on this in
Chapter 2, Beginning with Beginners Mind). Within beginners mind is the joy of an
unmediated interaction in and with the present moment, the dizzying stimulation of
something genuinely new. We begin life thinking that anything is possible, full of
beginners mind, full of joy, but day by day, instance by instance, circumstance by
circumstance, we are taught and re-taught limiting beliefs about who we are and what it
means to be who we are. Wire by wire, the birdcage is constructed. There are mysteries
and magic everywhere for a child, but these slowly disappear as we grow up. As we
grow out of our natural beginners mind, we begin to think we know how things are,
we know how it is, we know how it goes. We become the ones who know, who
have figured it out. Wire of experience by wire of information, we construct our world
view, our understanding of how the world works, and our identity within that world, who
to our own bodies, we decide upon a personal meaning for everything in our universe,
based on our experiences and what information we have at the time. We make meaning.
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Our powerful drive to understand and make sense of the universe is the reason we
There is a third self I would like to define: the self, lowercase, no quotation
marks. I see this self as both the Self and the self, everything that falls under the
God by Neale Donald Walsh. In response to the question Who am I? God responds:
John Dewey once wrote that What man does and how he acts, is determined not
by organic structure and physical heredity alone but by the influence of cultural heredity,
embedded in traditions, institutions, customs and the purposes and beliefs they both carry
and inspire. Even the neuro-muscular structures of individuals are modified through the
influence of the cultural environment on the activities performed (30). Our life goals are
influenced by our view of who we are, what we are like, the way we would like to be (or
would like to avoid being), as well as our perceptions of what is feasible. These
perceptions impact more than just our goals, however. As psychiatrist and
psychotherapist Dr. Richard Gillett explains in Change Your Mind, Change Your World,
Our beliefs about ourselves and the world alter our perception, our memory, our hope,
our energy, our health, our mood, our actions, our relationships, and eventually even our
outward circumstances. (13) Thus, the self as a construct has far-reaching implications
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for behavior, self-esteem, motivation, and emotions as well as for interpersonal
When we look at the world around us, we often see and process information that
confirms our beliefs while rejecting or ignoring information that contradicts them (Gillett
53). It is hard to admit that our subjectivity is mired in the muck of our culture/s, our
family/ies, and our own preconscious inventions. It is difficult to acknowledge that what
we thought was objective thought is actually quite subjective. At times it is hard to even
see that we participate by observing. As Gloria Karpinski explains in When Two Worlds
Touch, Since the 1920s when Werner Heisenberg developed the uncertainty principle,
science has been showing us that there is no such thing as purely objective analysis. Our
observation of a thing is part of its realityand our own (25). Gillett points to physical
and mental limitations to explain the futility of thinking in terms of reality or truth.
He writes, There is no such thing as seeing the world realistically, because our very
sense organs and brain mechanisms are highly selective in the extent and quality of
information they handle (27). Furthermore, as Gillett explains, The way we see the
world is based on our senses, our language, our innate prejudices, and our personal
history (27). But there is freedom in acknowledging that our truth is not the Truth, but
rather it is simply one truth, and it can be a temporary one if it is not serving us. We
might accept Antonio Benitez Rojos assertion that, There cannot be any single truth,
but instead there are many practical and momentary ones, truths without beginnings or
ends, local truths, displaced truths, provisional and peremptory truths of a pragmatic
nature (151).
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We cannot see the truth because we cannot handle the truth, quite literally. The
so-called truth of what is contains too much information for us to rationally process.
We can see wavelengths of light only between about 400 and 700
millionths of a millimeter. This is a tiny proportion within the vast
band of electromagnetic waves, of X-ray, gamma-ray, ultraviolet,
visible light, infra-red, microwave, and radio wave. In other words,
most electromagnetic information simply passes us by. Our
hearing, too, is limited by the capacity of our ears, which hear only
wavelengths between 20 and 20,000 cycles per second, and have
limited sensitivity and discrimination. These examples illustrate the
relativity of our senses Since much of what we believe tends to be
based on trusting our senses, it reminds us to understand that our
senses, for all their magic, are limited and highly selective encoders of
information (28-9).
The capabilities of our senses place limits on what we can know of the
Gillett also points to the distortions of language as a reason that we cannot grasp
truth. The divisions and generalizations of one language create a different picture of
reality from the divisions and generalizations of another. (Gillett 29) He uses another
interesting example:
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Language simply becomes a coded frame, a filing system for the millions of bits
of information hurled at us. It is very difficult to see and understand beyond the limits of
ones language.
words for slight varieties of a thing in a culture where that thing is seen as important.
which language you speak, the divisions are matters of convention which determine how
we organize our thoughts and how we classify the world (29-30). Language functions as
an important lens that mediates our experience of the world around us.
Upon examination, we notice that what we consider reality is really quite subjective, an
can and will mean. Knowledge is, after all, an invention according to Nietzsche, as
Foucault says, behind which there is something quite distinct from it: an interplay of
instincts, impulses, desires, fear, will to appropriation (14). Thus, the framing itself
becomes part of the experience of the thing and, as such, the knowing of it. It is a fiction
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we choose, and as such we are free to choose differently.
READING
I contend that, for the most part, we read like we live our lives. We make
generalizations and then we filter our experiences so that they confirm the
square box. If life does not fit the box, we distort it until it does (31). While many
generalizations from experience are good and instructive, some generalizations may
become extreme and actually limit the believer. Gillett gives an example of this, showing
Similarly, when we read, we become readers who know how to read. After the
beginners mind wanes and wears thin, we read generalizations into the text that
correspond to our beliefs, and then we push the text to fit this contrivance. We come to
both life and texts with satchels of generalizations and stereotypes hanging from us.
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There are the ones that come from our given culture and country (or cultures and
countries), from our school and education, from our class, from and about gender, about
body image, wealth, power, about aging and death, just to name a few. We use this
information to confirm or justify our relationship to the text, which is often something
that we decided long before we ever opened the front cover. We participate while we
How to Read a Book, the 1970s revised version of the 1940 bestseller, explains in
plain language exactly what the title says. Mortimer J. Adler and Charles Van Doren
explain in detail the different levels of reading that exist (which they define as
different ways to read. The book explains the activity and the art of readinghow to
determine an authors message, how to criticize a book fairly, how to agree or disagree.
How to Read a Book might be seen as a book explaining what to do with the information
in a book, how to relate to a text, and even how to manipulate the text according to your
own needs. They outline a few concrete ways to configure the elements involved in
reading. I think that Adler and Van Dorens exploration of what one should do when one
reads offers a compelling springboard from which to launch my own suggestions of what
little more than a way to affirm what we already know of the world. We choose our
comic book, instruction manual, academic journaland we approach the text with a
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pretty good idea of what to expect, and what not to expect, from it. We do not anticipate
imagine finding a new hairstyle, for example, writ into the stories of the bible. We
anticipate new information from reading, but we generally expect for literatures to stay
true to genre. These expectations create the circumstances where we are hardly ever
Adler and Van Doren illustrate this phenomenon, seeing it as reading to gain
There is the book; and here is your mind. As you go through the pages,
either you understand perfectly everything the author has to say or you do
not. If you do, you may have gained information, but you could not have
increased your understanding. If the book is completely intelligible to you
from start to finish, then the author and you are as two minds in the same
mold. The symbols on the page merely express the common
understanding you had before you met (7).
The majority of reading that most of folks do in everyday life is this one, reading
We are not fumbling in the language, or struggling with meaning. They explain, Such
things may increase our store of information, but they cannot improve our understanding,
for our understanding was equal to them before we started. Otherwise, we would have
felt the shock of puzzlement and perplexity that comes from getting in over our depth
(9).
Adler and Van Doren make a distinction between reading from which one gains
Let us take our second alternative. You do not understand the book
perfectly. Let us even assumewhat unhappily is not always truethat
you know enough to know that you do not understand at all. You know
the book has more to say than you understand and hence that it contains
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something that can increase your understanding (7).
The authors reveal that what they are calling understanding is really an
analytical frame or paradigm, something that might throw a new and perhaps more
revealing light on all the facts he [the reader] knows (9). In this second sense of reading,
reading to gain understanding or to possibly reframe our existing understanding, the book
has more to say than the reader can comprehend. Adler and Van Doren point to an
inequality between the author and the reader as a prerequisite of such reading.
Here the thing to be read is initially better or higher than the reader. The
writer is communicating something that can increase the readers
understanding. Such communication between unequals must be possible,
or else one person could never learn from another, either through speech
or writing. Here by learning is meant understanding more, not
remembering more information that has the same degree of intelligibility
as other information you already possess (9).
In the academy reading frequently functions similarly, falling into the same two
camps but with different percentages attached to them. There is reading that is done for
information and reading that is done for understanding, and at times a mixture of the two.
texts often have more to say than we are able to hear. Many of these are hard theory
texts that we read together in graduate seminars. Others are literary texts that elude our
analytical nets like clever butterflies. Mostperhaps allare texts that we are
Adler and Van Doren ask a valid question- what to do with these texts you cant
understand?
What do you do then? You can take the book to someone else who, you
think, can read better than you, and have him explain the parts that trouble
you. (He may be a living person or another booka commentary or
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textbook) (7).
even use the work of others to help us understand what we ourselves think of a text.
Instead of enlisting the help of others, Adler and Van Doren suggest doing the
job of reading that the book requires (8). This is accomplished in only one manner.
Without external help of any sort, you go to work on the book. With
nothing but the power of your own mind, you operate on the symbols
before you in such a way that you gradually lift yourself from a state of
understanding less to one of understanding more. Such elevation,
accomplished by the mind working on a book, is highly skilled reading,
the kind of reading that a book which challenges your understanding
deserves (8, their emphasis).
there is just the reader and the text working with and on each other. This suggests
becoming an active and mindful participator with the book. In a sense, the reader
becomes the co-creator of the text. We are invited by the text to cast off our usual way of
thinking about things, in order to meet the book wherever it is. Rather than casting our
net of generalizations over the book, we let it fly free. And as the text soars about the
landscape, we are free to choose who we are in relationship to the soaring text, what we
are going to do about it, or with it, if anything. I am interested in what we can do in these
readings Adler and Van Doren recommend. How can we read in such a way that reading
enables us to get to know ourselves? What would have to change about reading itself in
order to create these different readings? Can we attempt to rearrange the elements of
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I believe that reading in a different way will produce different readings, ones that
ones that might invite us to challenge and question our limiting views of ourselves and
the world. Thus, reading becomes an exercise in freedom and an invitation to power.
There is a way in which we can read texts to live as Cols asserts in his work. There is
a way in which we can read texts not to dissect them or manipulate them to prove a point,
but rather to learn tools for life. These tools can range from the practical to the esoteric,
These readings also engender new ways of knowing, moving the notion of
knowing out of our heads and into our bodies, growing there to embody the
understanding that Adler and Van Doren describe. I call these alternative ways of
knowing feminine or Yin, because they call on more subtle and indirect
understandings that are very different from what we often consider knowing or
knowledge. Far from an essentialist reiteration of cultural stereotype, I draw from the
interdependent with its male counterpart. Gloria Karpinski is an author who is very much
in touch with forms of Yin knowing. She will describe a vision she had while meditating,
or even intentionally take a subject into meditation and report on her findings. She
trusts herself as a vessel of knowledge. One of the big myths of Western culture is that
knowledge comes from outside the body; her work confounds that idea and encourages
others to do so as well.
I define Yin knowledge as knowledge or information that comes from the inside
out, whereas masculine or Yang knowledge goes from the outside in. Thus, Yin
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knowledge would be found in intuition, dreams, experiential knowing, embodiment, and
various other forms or directives that come from within the individual. Yin knowledge
can also come out of the individual in different forms, such as poetry, myth, art, and
symbols. Yin knowledge, for me, encapsulates the many alternative ways of knowing
that falllike the black swirl in the yin/yang symbolinto darkness and outside of
normative ways of knowing. Yang knowledge, by contrast, includes what we are told,
what we read, and various other directives that come from outside of the individual.
knowledge, hierarchy, dominance, and possession, extremes that led to separations from
each other and the earth (43). The construction of knowing in the academy is more
maintained through more widespread and/or more deeply engrained cultural frames.
ideology that seems to breed a climate of fear. More subtle experiential or extra-
linguistic ways of knowing are given little currency because they cant be accurately
transmitted from within this framework, and the corporate/academic culture makes it feel
everything, though we might not always perceive that fact. Karpinski explains the
specifics of the relationship between Yin and Yang. She writes that The Taoists
describe the movements within wholeness as yin (feminine) and yang (masculine). The
one is always in process of becoming the other. We are not one or the other; rather we
are both. Yin and yang are movements of energies, not identities (53). Margo Anand
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confirms this, Each of us has an Inner Man that is associated with dynamic, active
energy; with setting and achieving goals; and with getting things done. This is what the
Taoists call the Yang aspect of our naturethe engaged, noncontemplative self. And
each of us also has an Inner Woman, a natural capacity for letting things happen, for
going with the flow of life without setting goals, for relaxing and being playful. This is
what the Taoists call the Yin aspect of our naturethe contemplative, intuitive,
reading in a way that incorporates the feminine as well as the masculine. Karpinski
reminds us that This [is] but an outer dramatization of the collective inner drama, a
Part of the difficulty we have been having with introducing feminine paradigms
into the academy is that we have been attempting to use masculinist frames and
cork in a display case. If we think that we can know the butterfly by observing it in the
case, we are missing out on most of its story. We have no idea of its starts as a
caterpillar, of the goings-on inside the cocoon. We dont know what its like to see a
butterfly in an open field. We dont even know that it flies (though we might assume so
based on wing-size and other assessments). Feminine ways of knowing, by contrast, are
Certain practices help to cultivate Yin knowledge. Two of these elements are
beginners mind and mindfulness meditation, which draw the attention inward and widen
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the lens so that we might see holistically. The way of reading I am advocatingand
practicingin this book takes the usual elements of reading and combines with them the
practice of mindfulness meditation and the practice of creative expression, which often
puts us in touch with our beginners mind. By cultivating different practices, we can
know things in a different way. Practice in this case becomes a revolutionary tool
because it is reiterative and re-inscriptive. One key to personal and global change is
cultivating a regularly recurring practice that corresponds to and confirms what one wants
to see existing in the future, whether that thing be world peace or a new car. This is a
literal spin on Gandhis words, Be the change that you want to see in the world. I am
not proposing that we abandon other ways of reading entirely. Rather, I am advocating
some people sometimes trying something different, ostensibly, reading such that the text
exploration.
believe that reading books gives us an opportunity safely and intimately examine our
beliefs. Books can take us all around the world, deep into different cultures, often seen
through the eyes of someone possessing a completely different belief system. They can
also take us into the deeper inner workings of lives of people we see as like us. The
most interesting thing that we encounter when we read is not the other, but ourselves.
Through our judgments, likes, dislikes, thoughts and emotionsall of which often come
out during readingwe are able to get a firmer grasp on what it is that we believe. Like
the meditation cushion, reading can create a safe haven in which our thoughts and actions
23
cannot harm another, but can be explored. I truly believe that the combination of reading
and meditation might engender some very different understandings of the self.
demonstrate in action how different practices enable new, more ethical frames and lenses
by reading a text in this way myself. I have chosen to perform this experiment using the
because I have a long and strange relationship with her. She functioned literarily/
figuratively for me as a big sister because I closely identified with her in my late
adolescent years. Yet with each novel, I felt more and more betrayed by the choices she
made in her life and in her writing. I have come to a point where I can honestly say that I
intensely dislike her and disagree with her choices. Because of this, I have not been able
to read her in a way in which I am actually open to what she is saying. When I have read
her in the past, perhaps I have read her to confirm my beliefs about her rather than to shut
up and hear her. It would be a really interesting journey for me to read her in an ethical
way.
Because I need to situate this reading for an audience, I work inter-textually with
her, drawing from many of her novels, her personal story (which includes a renaming of
herself, which I saw in the past as the moment when she posited herself as the center by
adopting the very same white, imperialist lens she so passionately opposed in her early
writings. It also includes a marriage to a white man and moving to Vermont, which I saw
in the past as basically whitening herself), and her essays. But my focus is on reading
one text by her, My Garden [Book]:, repeatedly. I will read with different lenses and
different objectives, but I will be reading the same words in the same book three times.
24
The text is the mirror in which I will take a good, honest look at myself. The text is
MY READING PRACTICE
My practice will be: meditating for 5 minutes, reading for 45 minutes, meditating
for 15 minutes, then doing automatic writing or doing something creative for at least 10
mind by taking me out of the familiar and into the unknown. I will do this 6 days a week
until I have completed three different readings of My Garden [Book]:. Each reading will
have a different focus. The first will strive to cultivate beginners mind in relationship to
the text. I endeavor to come to it as something completely new. The second reading
strives to read the text as Self. In this reading I endeavor to find points of commonality,
to develop empathy, and to understand what of myself I see in the text, good or bad. The
third reading is one in which I employ differentiation to engage a dialogue with my Self.
I am able to better understand my own beliefs and values by looking at what I judge in
the text, and examining what those judgments tell me about myself. Finally, I will try to
embody growth by being the crossroads at which this text, My Garden [Book]:, can be
Self and other, or not Self. Hopefully, this growth will include a better relationship
25
difficulties. We do not confront prejudices, ignorance and resentment
which seek to silence our voices and prevent our development by
pretending to operate within the same intellectual constructs which have
long served male control of the world. Disclosure becomes, then, a vital
political touchstone of our work, and a means of bringing to the open
many hidden aspects of experience which are the secret referents in any
conversation, any judgment passed, any alliance made.
- Carol Boyce Davies
Before I can talk about Jamaica Kincaid, perhaps I need to tell you about myself.
That way you will, perhaps, understand the magical way that she came into my life, an
older sister figure, wiser about the ways of the world than I. You will understand,
negotiating what those labels might mean to us. You will see, perhaps, similarity in our
book-wormy childhoods and later in our struggles to assert our independence from our
mothers. But there you will also see the start of small cracks, growing over time into
small rifts between us growing over time into a gaping chasm. But you will at least
understand the roots of the resentment, even as I undertake to heal this divide. In the
style of John Stuart Mills Autobiography, and the style and spirit of Gloria Anzaldas
as a teacherto bear on some of the themes I will be exploring. Foucault said, Each of
my works is a part of my own biography (59), and I hope to use this opportunity to tell
my story, what I see, how I see it, what I experience, and how I experience it.
was searching for the language to articulate what was wrong with it, since I had received
what would be considered a great education at a magnet school in New York. Hunter
College Campus School is a specialized public school funded by Hunter College, which
26
is a part of the City University of New York (C.U.N.Y.). While there is no tuition,
Hunter remains one of the best high schools in New York and in the country by
approximately one hundred eighty students are chosen to enter the seventh grade. Fifty
of the hundred eighty are students who attended Hunter Elementary School, like me.
kindergarten level. Although their education has been geared toward a successful
transition into the high school, the sixth graders too must take the admission test.
students who have previously had academic difficulty at Hunter are strongly dissuaded
from remaining there. Although I never really thought much about race as it related to
continuing in school, I realize now that many of the African-American and Latino
students from elementary school did not go to the high school. At least 10 minority
students out of the 50 total students in sixth grade, chose to attend junior high school
elsewhere, though I am unsure as to whether that was their own decision or the strong
Hunter is located on the affluent upper east side of Manhattan. Nestled between
Park and Madison Avenues on 94th Street, it is the last predominantly White
neighborhood before East Harlem. The building is a renovated armory and resembles a
brick castle (so much so, in fact, that it was used as one in the film The Fisher King),
set not unremarkably between the apartment buildings and brownstones that are common
to the area.
27
Although Hunter High School is a public school, the racial make-up was far from
diverse when I attended. My class of one hundred eighty graduated fourteen African-
Americans and far fewer Latinos. The African-American and Latino communities were
also the ones with the poorest retention rates. The students belonging to these
communities could seemingly slip through the cracks, unable to survive without
were white and Asian. The white students were primarily of Jewish descent, although
there were a small number of Catholic students. Most of the students seemed to be
upper-middle class, with a few students above and below that mark. Most of the student
body, were they not at Hunter, would most likely be in private school. The parents of the
white students were college educated, and many had continued their education past the
undergraduate level. One of my best friends from high school, in fact, was the daughter
of a Nobel Prize winning scientist. It would not be a stretch to assume that academics
were stressed in these households. That these students would go to college was generally
taken for granted. Many parents were in a position to pay for it, as they had saved
The Asian student body appeared to be more diverse. There were students whose
parents were immigrants as well as second and even third generation Asian-Americans.
The economic status of these students ran the gamut from lower to upper class. Their
Asian students choice appeared to be more difficult, because that student was placed in
competition with his Asian peers. The Asian students at Hunter seemed to prefer Ivy
League Schools, but were put in direct comparison with the rest of the Asian students
28
when applying to them. I recall a friend of mine who was highly upset after receiving her
SAT score of 1560 out of 1600. I told her that I thought it was a great score, but she was
still upset. One of her Asian peers who was applying to the same school had scored a
1590. She neednt have worried- they both happily enrolled at Harvard that fall.
American parents had finished high school, and many had completed at least some level
of undergraduate study. They were, for the most part, professionals, often teachers or
among themselves than their Asian counterparts, but in some ways I think we were
allowed to be. We were already aware that we would be coveted by many schools and
would most likely gain admission to at least one of our top picks. We too tended to
choose Ivy League schools. Small liberal arts schools ran a distant second, while
historically Black schools might pull one or two students every couple of years.
The academics at Hunter were highly rigorous. The eighth grade curriculum was
actually New York Citys required ninth grade curriculum. Students have finished all but
one gym requirement for a Regents diploma from the city by the end of eleventh grade,
but the vast majority continue through their twelfth year to earn their Hunter diploma. By
the time one finishes eleventh grade, one has taken at least four years of English, four
years of French, Spanish, German or Latin, four years of science, two years of music,
both history and theory, two years of art, both history and practice, one and one-half
years of American history, one year of European history, and one semester each studying
two of the following: African, Asian, Latin American, or Russian history, or economics.
29
The only tracking that occurred at Hunter was in the mathematics department. In
eighth grade, the students were given a test which determined the course of their
mathematics study. The students were placed either in E math, meaning experimental,
or R math, meaning regular. E math was considered two years ahead of the New York
City curriculum, whereas R math was only one year ahead. The students in E math,
therefore, did not have to take the citys mathematics Regent examination at the end of
ninth through eleventh grades. E math geared students toward taking advanced calculus
their senior year, while R math prepared students for introductory calculus. Although it
was fairly easy to switch from R to E, or to move down from E to R, most students stayed
where they were placed. Students joked about the two levels, not really implying that
How much of a tip should we leave? one student would ask his lunch partner in
the continent of Africa and the continent of Asia, we were taught that Africans lived in
huts and wore grass skirts and drank the blood of animals in ceremonies (whereas Asians
created elaborate Kanji, beautiful paintings, Confucianism and Buddhism). Our studies
of Africa, Asia and Latin America were done in a very cursory manner and with an
ethnographers lens, making us feel like white observers of an ethnic and cultural other.
This education was also done quite early in our academic careers- seventh and eighth
grades- which made it difficult for us to truly engage it on a critical level. Our European
30
and American history courses were taught from a white male perspective, rendering
Native Americans, Africans, Asians and women obscene, making only short guest
appearances in this white male his-story show. Yet I dont think the social studies
department had much say in what was taught and when. Unlike most other departments,
there were three Regents examinations (which determine ones eligibility for a New York
diploma) given to specific grade levels on specific subjects in social studies. It was the
job of the department to prepare us as much as possible for these exams. They worked
within that structure as best they could to give students the best learning experience
possible.
In most English courses we would cover only one token book by an African-
American author (Black Boy, The Invisible Man, The Bluest Eye, I Know Why The
Caged Bird Sings, A Raisin In The Sun, and The Color Purple) or other non-whites (I can
only recall reading Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston) per semester. In these
books the protagonists invariably seemed to lament their non-white existence (with the
exception of The Autobiography of Malcolm X, read in 10th grade history class with
hippie rebel teacher Mr. Steinfink, which opened me up to the possibility of hostility and
usually felt excluded from, and yet represented by those few black voices in those few
black texts, feeling that the conflation of race and class and the use of texts by non-whites
own. These texts, read almost ethnographically, were nestled awkwardly among the
lavish scenes laid out in The Great Gatsby, The Bostonians, Pride and Prejudice and the
like. I got a distinct sense thatby the bookthere were some people who counted and
31
some who didnt. As a black girl descendent of primitive, blood-drinking savages,
inheritor of an entire literature of poverty and oppression, I didnt. Most often the people
who mattered were white, most often male. More than anything, I was aware of being
other- not white, but also not enslaved, not poor, not miserable in my blackness, as
I think that schools miss out intentionally on the opportunity to educate students
about race when they choose not to open dialogue between students about race and
racism. I wouldnt have been as frightened of racism and its power if it wasnt hidden
and embedded in our educational system. All in all, perhaps Hunter was an excellent
education, in that it prepared students for entry into high ranking schools, generally
paving the way for students to enjoy a level of social mobility and a diverse spectrum of
career options, from which I have greatly benefit. The education itself stressed critical
engagement and inquiry over factual memorization and learning by rote, which benefitted
me as well. And yet I have always felt that there was a creepy, insidious way that race
was instructed there, that racism, even when absent from the instructors, was lurking in
the curriculum, seeping into students and teachers alike like the asbestos of our countrys
history, embedding itself in our young minds and hearts. While my educations liabilities
less schools like the ones described by Jonathan Kozol in Savage Inequalities, they were
no less crippling.
bell hooks describes this feeling in her memoir of childhood, Bone Black:
She has learned to fear white folks without understanding what it is she
fears. There is always an edge of bitterness, sometimes hatred, in the
grown-ups voice when they speak of them but never any explanation.
When she learns of slavery in school or hears the laughter in geography
32
when they see pictures of naked Africansthe word savage underneath
the picturesshe does not connect it to herself, her family. She and the
other children want to understand Race but no one explains it. They learn
without understanding that the world is more a home for white folks than
it is for anyone else, that black people who most resemble white folks will
live better in that world. (31)
My life at the time felt very small. Except for dance classes, I spent most of my
time after school watching situation comedies on television by myself until my mother
got home from work. I lived a very sheltered life, but still had fruitless crushes and a few
close friends from jazz chorus. I read a lot of teenage romance novels and fell in love
with romantic love, something I had never seen in my one parent home. I got my first
experience in which I felt that I had no choice, one where I was left questioning if I could
consider it rape if I said "no" and "I don't think we should" only a few times and without
much authority, and then froze up until it was over. My boyfriend assured me that it
All the while I was pursuing God on my own by starting to regularly attend
church with a friend of the family. I knew that my relationship to God could include more
than saying grace before meals and prayers before bed, but that was all the religious
instruction I received at home. The rest I was forced to pursue on my own. Though I was
God- whoever or whatever God was. The very much unwanted burden of sexuality
coupled with my recent blossoming into attractiveness and mild popularity at school,
with a variety of "selves" which I performed contingent upon the situation. I could play
the good daughter, the dedicated student, the flirty pretty girl, the sexual girlfriend, but in
33
reality I was none of these things. I had no integrated self, no true voice, and lacked even
In high school, I became more keenly attuned to both the social elements of race
as they played out in my own life, and the subtle but firmly institutionalized racism of
both the curriculum and the way in which we were taught. Though I never had anyone
by the institutional racism of my secondary education. I was also wounded by the painful
alienation I felt directed toward me from both Black and White people. High school was
also a time when, socially, I didn't belong. I was an honorary member of many cliques,
but never really an integral part of any community. I was frequently accused of talking,
thinking, dressing, or acting like I was white, an indictment that I could never fully refute
because I wasn't sure what being black was. I was someone who existed in the margins,
often rendered inauthentic by others based on my unique conflation of race and class.
My high school years were fraught with feelings of alienation from my education
as well as my peers. I was consistently left feeling like what I was being taught was the
history, literature, art, and logic of the important people of the world, and that the
important people were not like me. I have always looked to reading as equipment for
living. I always thought that was the purpose of reading - that the books I read were
supposed to instruct me, either directly or through a fictional protagonist, on how to live
my life, how to govern and conduct myself in this world; or, if not, that my interaction
34
with these books would be mediated by a learned way of understanding them which
The assumption [of traditional education] is, that by acquiring certain skills and
by learning certain subjects which would be needed later (perhaps in college or
perhaps in adult life) pupils are as a matter of course made ready for the needs and
circumstances of the future. Now preparation is a treacherous idea. In a certain
sense every experience should do something to prepare a person for later
experiences of a deeper and more expansive quality. That is the very meaning of
growth, continuity, reconstruction of experience (47).
education was meant to be, what exactly my instruction was meant to provide and how
American woman, my experience of the canon offered few livable models of ways of
Tall and cool, stylish and older, full of poetic cynicism and a refreshing post-
colonial angst, she cut a dazzling figure in my teenage imagination. I too was tall and
awkward, beginning to fill out, but still possessing the graceful self-consciousness of a
young dancer. I imagine I must have been around 14 or 15 when I first read At the
Bottom of the River, a collection of lush and lucid short stories. I imagined Kincaid to be
only a few years older because, though she is actually 25 years my senior, her
35
protagonists voice in this first book was closer in age to my own. She too seemed to be
growing reluctantly out of girlhood. She was deeply conflicted about her identification
with her mother. I felt similarly, smothered by my own mother in some ways, neglected
in others, yet loved overall. I was at the age where my mother was first beginning to see
that I was my own person, and that she wasnt going to always like who that person was.
Though we butted heads from time to time, I was a mamas girl struggling with the heavy
So, it seemed, was Kincaid, in the shoddy guise of her fictional protagonist. In
At the Bottom of the River, Kincaid devotes a full chapter to her relationship to her
mother, whose presence is already felt throughout the text. Though Kincaid adds layers
of meaning and imagery by endowing the mother and daughter with supernatural,
mythological powers, it is obvious that her main concern is a disconnect between them.
She writes:
Immediately on wishing my mother dead and seeing the pain it caused her,
I was sorry and cried so many tears that all the earth around me was
drenched. Standing before my mother, I begged her forgiveness, and I
begged so earnestly that she took pity on me, kissing my face and placing
my head on her bosom to rest. Placing her arms around me, she drew my
head closer and closer to her bosom, until finally I suffocated (53).
Even the thought of wishing my mother dead seemed so over-the-top radical and
impossible that Kincaid really seemed like a rebel to me. She was angry and passionate
and bold and ballsy. Her prose was humid, dense, sensual, and challenging.
And she was Caribbean-American, like me! Well, not like me exactly. She was
from Antigua, but relocated to New York, then to Vermont. My father is Haitian and on
my mothers side, my grandfathers parents were from the Dutch Caribbean. Yet my
36
mother and grandmother. My grandfather died the year before I was born, and my
mother split from my father while she was pregnant. Ive met my father only a few times
in my life, to my recollection, and Ive never been to Haiti. I spent a lot of time in the
Caribbean though, on St. Maarten, where my grandfather had built a house, and other
islands. Kincaid was Caribbean-American as I was, and her writing evoked a Caribbean
that was familiar to meits beauty, its intensity, its strangeness. For the first time,
There is a very unique pedestal that teenage girls put other girls on. It is similar to
a crush on a boy, and yet has at its center a much deeper and less self-conscious love that
comes from identification withyet agonizing differentiation fromits target, the other
girl. Moments of obsession ensue as the teenage girl realizes that no matter how much
time, attention, and love she puts into her object of affection, she will never achieve the
result she desiresbeing that other girl. The other girl can serve as a mirror, but the
teenage girl can never merge with the image in the mirror, she can never be the other that
This association deepened when I read Lucy. I imagine I read it around its time
of publication in 1990, but it might have been anywhere from then to 1992. That would
put me in the age range of 16-18. I think my friend Anne lent the book to me, though I
have no idea if this is true. Anne was one of my artist/activist friends, the one with the
Nobel Prize winning dad. Lucy was angry, bitter, hateful, sarcastic, mocking of white
privilege. I loved it. I was so angry myself, on the inside. I felt very misunderstood and
wronged because of my blackness. I grew more and more quietly outraged at the wealthy
37
white people that surrounded me. I resented the ease with which white people were able
to navigate life, partially because of race and partially because of class. I resented the
lavish sweet sixteens and bas mitzvahs, the country houses. My invitation to these ftes
myself made me an outsider. The $45 Guess? Jeans they would outgrow by summer, the
$200 CB ski jackets, the $100 Doc Martinscool kids always wore expensive uniforms
Kincaid fashioned herself as an outsider as well. She captures this feeling most
eloquently at the end of Lucy: I was alone in the world. It was not a small
accomplishment. I thought I would die doing it. I was not happy, but that seemed too
much to ask for (161). Her desire for this kind of separation is evident from the
beginning of the text. She describes the reason that the family gives her the nickname
The Visitor:
It was at dinner one night not long after I began to live with them that they
began to call me the Visitor. They said I seemed not to be a part of things,
as if I didnt live in their house with them, as if they werent like a family
to me, as if I were just passing through, just saying one long Hallo!, and
soon would be saying a quick Goodbye! So long! It was very nice! For
look at the way I stared at them as they ate, Lewis said. Had I never seen
anyone put a forkful of French-cut green beans in his mouth before? This
made Mariah laugh, but almost everything Lewis said made Mariah happy
and so she would laugh. I didnt laugh, though, and Lewis looked at me,
concern on his face. He said Poor Visitor, poor Visitor over and over
(13-14).
Although Kincaid represented herself as isolated in several other texts, the time in
her life chronicled in Lucy seems to be the first time that she comes to terms with it. A
way of coping with her perceived rejection by her parents and her own choice to alienate
38
herself from the family for whom she worked, Kincaids acceptance of her aloneness
I loved Kincaids anger, directed toward her mother, her brothers, Antigua,
colonialism, white and male privilege, and her employers, Mariah and Lewis, but I felt
like a lot of it was misdirected. Lucy, for example, was living with a perfectly nice
family, and her behavior toward them was just short of cruel. She judges them, their
words, and their actions in order to build a case in her own head of her own superiority.
An example of this from Lucy occurs in the second chapter, entitled Mariah:
One morning in early March, Mariah said to me, You have never seen
spring, have you? And she did not have to await an answer, for she
already knew. She said the word spring as if spring were a close friend,
a friend who had dared to go away for a long time and soon would
reappear for their passionate reunion. She said, Have you ever seen
daffodils pushing their way up out of the ground? And when theyre in
bloom and all massed together, a breeze comes along and makes them do a
curtsy to the lawn stretching out in front of them. Have you ever seen
that? When I see that, I feel so glad to be alive. And I thought, So
Mariah is made to feel alive by some flowers bending in the breeze. How
does a person get to be that way? (17).
I imagined Kincaid felt the same hostility at the privilege of her employers that I
did at the privilege of my peers. Her phrasingSo Mariah is made to feel alive by some
flowers bending in the breezebelittles the perceived frivolity of such a way of being. I
can relate to Kincaids experience because this is a very charged and traumatic moment,
when one experiences the master narrative as a lived reality and, as such, fear that it is the
only reality available. This is the feeling of suffocation on the margin, combined with the
envy of the ease and luxury of the center. Kincaid confirms this perspective at another
39
Mariah says, I have Indian blood in me, and underneath everything I
could swear she says it as if she were announcing her possession of a
trophy. How do you get to be the sort of victor who can claim to be the
vanquished also?
I now heard Mariah say, Well, and she let out a long breath, full of
sadness, resignation, even dread. I looked at her; her face was miserable,
tormented, ill-looking. She looked at me in a pleading way, as if asking
for relief, and I looked back, my face and my eyes hard; no matter what, I
would not give it.
I said, All along I have been wondering how you got to be the way you
are. Just how it was that you got to be the way you are.
Even now she couldnt let go, and she reached out, her arms open wide, to
give me one of her great hugs. But I stepped out of its path quickly, and
she was left holding nothing. I said it again, I said, How do you get to be
that way? The anguish on her face almost broke my heart, but I would
not bend. It was hollow, my triumph, I could feel that, but I held onto it
just the same (40-1).
They wanted an au pair, they got a self-proclaimed devil (Lucys mother told her that her
name is short for Lucifer). She was in their space hating them, a dynamic she would
later warn against and chastise tourists for in A Small Place, hating the native inhabitants
of a space. Lucy seemed to be taking out her anger and hostility against the entire white
race on a few unlucky individuals. This seemed unfair to me. I react very strongly when
people withhold love from me, and for Lucy to withhold love from her ignorant
employers and their innocent children seemed wrong. There is no redemptive resolution
offered by Kincaid at the end of the novel; instead, Lucy seems vindicated but unloved,
womanhood. So was I. She was confronting class and questions of worth. So was I.
40
She was challenging whiteness, holding up a mirror in which whiteness and privilege
were not shown as idealized norms. I wanted to do that too. I wrote faintly imitative
stories, but could only express my frustration circuitously. I lacked the language to
express myself. I remember reading The Bluest Eye around the same time in High
School English and feeling a sense of indignant shame that Toni Morrison was telling my
white classmates that black girls (like me) wanted to have blue eyes. In Mirror Mirror,
Marcia Ann Gillespie succinctly paraphrases the drama of The Bluest Eye:
In Toni Morrisons first novel, The Bluest Eye (1970), a little dark-skinned
girl, her hair short and nappy, looks in the mirror and longs for blue eyes.
She is a Black child called ugly to her face and behind her back, devalued,
unloved, sexually abused, longing to be physically transformed. Blue eyes
symbolize all that she is told she is not, all that she does not have. If she
had blue eyes, shed be thought beautiful, like the dolls with the pretty
dresses and bows. Her hair would be long and silky if she had blue eyes.
Shed be loved and happy like the children in the storybooks. Were this a
fairy tale with one of those they-lived-happily-ever-after endings, the
people around her would be transformed, suddenly able to see her beauty
and their own. But it is not. Black does not become beautiful, the white
goddess of beauty continues to reign, and a little girl is forever lost. (184).
hoping that 20 years of educational progress has thwartedthat of minority texts being
groupsI found that language failed me when I tried to explain that I wasnt forever lost.
I didnt want to be white. Yes, I wouldnt mind appropriating certain material goods, nor
perhaps the ease with which white girls could style their hair, with its flatness, sheen, and
the ability to look exactly the same every day. Those things did seem cool. I might even
love to have green eyes, or hazel ones. But I did not want blue eyes. I did not want to be
white!
41
I remember having my grandmother come to speak to that English class, my
desperate attempt at making those white folks understand that I didnt harbor any desire
to be white. My life was just fine, black as it was. My grandma spoke of her experiences
in life, being the second generation in our family to go to college, flying around the world
with my grandfather the pilot, attending Lyndon Johnsons inaugural ball. I can now see
that a large part of what was bothering me so much was the conflation of race and class.
I was unwilling to buy the meta-narrative that all Black Americans are poor and
oppressed, particularly when my own life and experience were pretty firmly grounded in
the upper middle class. I could feel the lenses of my peers zooming in and out, trying to
resolve the lack of clarity. Was I Nicole, one of them, or was I Black, other?
The best way I could express my feelings of frustration, anger, and injustice was
by stealing. I became a thief. I shoplifted mostly, things like lipsticks and eyeliner that
would fit in the sleeves of my blue wool Gap jacket. I resented the suspicious eyes of
shopkeepers, and yet they were justified in watching me warily. I wanted them to know I
wasnt a statistic, I wasnt a demographic, I was a person and I had every right to shop in
their store. And all the while I was pilfering all that I could, padding my blue bomber
jacket with all kinds of cosmetics that seemed both wildly exciting and a bit beyond my
means. This was before the days of $30 products in drug stores. These were things that
cost maybe $6 dollars tops. I felt entitled to them. I felt like I deserved to have those
things and it wasnt fair that I couldnt afford them. So for years I stole, out of anger, out
42
had reported times in her life when she stole books from libraries both in Antigua and
The next book I read by Kincaid was 1998s A Small Place. In this slim volume,
Kincaid lets loose a vicious diatribe against tourism, whiteness, Englishness, corrupt
Antiguan government officials, and just about anything and anyone else that crosses her
path. Whereas, as Moira Ferguson points out in Jamaica Kincaid: Where Land Meets the
Body, By her own admission, Jamaica Kincaid views her first publication, At the Bottom
of the River (1993), as the text of a repressed, indoctrinated subaltern subject: I can see
that At the Bottom of the River was, for instance, a very unangry, decent, civilized book
and it represents sort of this successful attempt by English people to make their version of
a human being or their version of a person out of me (7). By contrast, A Small Place is
fierce, bold, and unapologetic. It seems to be coming from someone who has obviously
thrown off any mantle of racial or gender inferiority. She calls European slave-owners
human rubbish (80) and asserts over everyone in Antiguawhite and blacka
sanctimonious superiority. However bitterly, Kincaid does tell some important truths
about the realities of colonialism, postcolonialism, and decolonizing the mind. I loved her
brutality in A Small Place, even though it did scare me to an extent. There are not many
black people who speak this candidly in front of a mixed audience, particularly not a
predominantly white one, as I imagine her readership might be. We might have choice
words about racism and hypocrisy, but they are rarely directed at the perpetrators of the
racism and hypocrisy themselves, and if they are they are rarely as eloquently indicting. I
also felt betrayed that she did not spare Antiguans her wrath. Instead of identifying with
them, she staked out a place for herself wherein she is able to fall outside of Antiguan
43
identity. She established from the outset that she wasnt a team player, she was out for
self, and it was she who would decide just who this self was.
This sanctimonious, superior being that narrates A Small Place seems to be the
one that Jamaica Kincaid morphed into when she changed her name from Elaine
Richardson Potter. She named herself Jamaica Kincaid in 1973. This was, according
to one of her biographers, J. Brooks Bouson, an act of self-creation that also served as a
self-protective disguise (6). She didnt want her family to laugh at her if she failed as a
writer. She also wanted a protective mask from behind which she could write the stories
of her family. I wanted to write and I was going to say brutal things about myself and
my family and I did not want them to know it was me. (Wachtel 63) As we see in A
Name Is To Possess. It is important to note that Kincaid chose her own name, having
been Elaine Potter Richardson previous to her reinvention. In Lucy we see the
protagonist receive a fountain pen and a notebook from her employer as a parting gift. At
Then I saw the book Mariah had given me. It was on the night table next
to my bed. Beside it lay my fountain pen full of beautiful blue ink. I
picked up both, and I opened the book. At the top of the page I wrote my
full name: Lucy Josephine Potter. At the sight of it, many thoughts rushed
through me, but I could write down only this: I wish I could love
someone so much that I would die from it. And then as I looked at this
sentence a great wave of shame came over me and I wept and wept so
much that the tears fell on the page and caused all the words to become
one great big blur (163-4).
44
As Brita Lindberg-Seyerstead describes, She writes her name at the top of the
first page to claim it as her own book, and so, the reader surmises, she begins to set down
her story, a heartbreaking one which causes the first few words to become blurred by
tears of longing and shame (136). I imagine that in this moment of watershed Jamaica
Kincaid is born, and these words are to become her literary career.
Kincaids feelings about her birth name are strongly linked to her feelings about
her mother. This becomes apparent in Mr. Potter, the novel about her biological fathers
And Mr. Potter did not move toward his death swiftly and inexorably, and
he did not leave Mr. Shouls employ in that way either. It was in Mr.
Shouls household that he met my mother, Annie Victoria Richardson,
where she worked as the nursemaid taking care of Mr. Shouls children;
one of them, a girl, was named Elaine, and my mother, to demonstrate to
this small girl her power to transform the world, said that she would bear a
child, a girl, and name that girl Elaine. And without knowing any of this, I
hated my name and planned to change it every day of my life until the day
I did do so. And now I do not hate the name Elaine, I only now, even now
still hate the person who named me so, and that person is now dead. My
mother is dead. And she moved toward her own death swiftly and
inexorably even though she was alive eighty years (162-3).
Kincaids name is seen as coming from the relationship that her mother had with
another child, rather than as a definition of herself. Her mothers reason, to demonstrate
to this small girl her power to transform the world, seems boastful and arrogant. It is not
portrayed as a name given to honor the young girl, but rather to show off her mothers
power. Kincaid does not give the reason for hating her own name, but offers this as
explanation of why she is justified in that hatred. This hatred, both of her name and of
her mother (or, more aptly, of her identification with her name and her identification with
her mother), fueled her choice to write about her youth with such graphic bitterness. As
45
Laura Niesen de Abruna remarked about the reception of Kincaids book Autobiography
of My Mother, In the New York Times Book Review, Cathleen Schine claims that this
is a shocking book in which the narrator is intoxicated with self hatred, providing a
truly ugly meditation on life (181). This hatred alludes to one of the crucial problems
She chose the name Jamaica Kincaid for herself when she decided to live her
dream of being a writer. I like the way Bouson describes these bohemian New York days
for Kincaid:
She dressed up in bizarre thrift store clothes, shaved off her eyebrows, and dyed
Being very thin I looked good in clothes. I loved the way I looked all
dressed up. I bought hats, I bought shoes, I bought stockings and garter
belts to hold them up, I bought handbags, I bought suits, I bought blouses,
I bought dresses, I bought skirts, and I bought jackets that did not match
the skirts. I used to spend hours happily buying clothes to wear (Cudjoe
216).
As Bouson notes, Kincaid would also spend hours getting dressed as she decided
which combination of people, inconceivably older and more prosperous than she was
that she wanted to impersonate on any particular day (19). She stopped sending
money home to her family, seeing her brothers as her mothers mistakes not hers.
Instead, she bought crazy fashions so that she could be someone else, this Jamaica
46
Kincaid that was in the works. Part of me can totally relate. I am a Goodwill shopper
myself. It seems weird to me to spend more than six dollars on an article of clothing.
When I get a shopping itch, I head to thrift stores. I have often been very imaginative in
what I felt was a great find at Goodwill, coming home to proudly show off my 1950s
thinking, how selfish that your family is struggling in poverty and you are more
concerned with your wardrobe. This shows Kincaids departure from a more communal
concept of her life to an individualist one. Fuck them, her actions say, Let them eat
cake. And yet she cant shake her family. They haunt her, they fill her books. Without
her unending life story, she would have no writing career. Without her contested family,
Along with this new look and new name came a new vocation. Kincaid says I
changed my name, and started telling people I knew that I was a writer. This declaration
went without comment (Putting Myself Together 94). I find the various
corroborate with the suspicion I havethat Jamaica Kincaid is not black. Elaine
Richardson Potter was, but in her reinvention, Kincaid tossed off blackness as she did
I too struggled with my identity. When I left for college, it was not to embark on
a quest for my own voice, but rather to study economics and Japanese. Marketable
knowledge from a prestigious institution, I hoped, would pave my way to some sort of
well paying job, maybe even a really well paying job. I wanted access to those things I
47
felt cut off from. My senior year quote in the yearbook was from a song by Sade called
Jezebel. It read:
I poured over The Preppy Handbook, dreaming of being a have rather than a
have not. I can even confess to picking my college based on its aesthetics, which
reminded me of the TV show The Facts of Life and a book series I had enjoyed, The
Girls of Canby Hall. Both the show and the book series had a lovable Black character, so
I felt there was hope for me. I wanted to matter, to be among the counted, the ones who
counted.
I got a C in first year Japanese and never ended up taking an economics course,
but the biggest slap in the face came from realizing that there was a lot more out there
than I realized, a lot more ways of thinking about things and a lot more possibilities than I
had ever been offered previously. I was dumbfounded by the idea that language encodes
our perception, that our beliefs are actually choices that we make. I was shocked to find
that the voices of people of the African Diaspora were many and came in different
understand what it was I was looking for. I wanted to figure out what I believed- not what
my parents had taught me, what my education had enforced, or what I had learned from
I spent my college years experimenting with ways to be, not very aware of the
beliefs that must have produced my actions. I played rugby, I enjoyed the popularity that
being considered one of the "hot chicks" on campus afforded me, I fooled around a lot
48
and slept around a little, I sang as a soloist in various groups, I got my first hangover,
tried my first drug, smoked my first cigarette. I also had some very real experiences of
God while singing with the gospel choir. I never found a church home in college, but my
experiences in the gospel choir confirmed and strengthened my belief in God. I was
ambivalently embraced by the black community of Amherst, only to reject them myself
in the end because I felt their concept of blackness limiting. I struggled off and on with an
eating disorder, with feelings of loneliness, of being out of control, of being inferior.
Sometimes it felt that we minorities were at Amherst only to give the paying white
Without really knowing or noticing it, I began to divorce myself from the larger
Amherst community, favoring the small co-op community where the closest things to
hippies at Amherst College frequently resided. I didn't like the sport-dominated dining
hall culture at Amherst, where who one ate with was a very political decision. I also
didn't like having so many unhealthy eating options available to me, a bulimic, and
wanted to start to set some healthy boundaries with food. I developed some strong bonds
in the co-op, became a little healthier, a little happier, and a little more aware. This was
I dont recall re-encountering Jamaica Kincaid again until my senior year. I took
a class on creative writing with a visiting writer, a Caribbean man whose novels had
sleeping with the captain of my rugby team, or so the rumor went. He invited other
writer pals to come and speak to the class. While it was very interesting to visit with
Grace Paley and Scott Turow, I felt this was more a gesture of him flexing his muscles to
49
impress the college, and padding some of his writer buddies pockets all the while. I
disliked him intensely, not just because of his pompous Britishness, nor simply because
he carried himself as if he thought he were much more attractive than he actually was. I
also disliked him because I, like just about every rugger on my team, had an Angelina
Jolie-esque crush on our captain, the coed he was purportedly porking. In his class, I
interviews with her for the first time and found out that she was really just narrating her
own life story. He didnt like the paper and gave me a C+ in the course. I felt that this
was unfair and contested it, going so far as to meet with the dean. He wouldnt budge. I
noticed recently that he wrote one of the endorsements on the back cover of one of
Kincaids books. Turns out that he glowingly reviewed one of her books for the Los
Angeles Times Book Review. I guess he didnt like what I had to say about her.
But I didnt really like what I had learned about her. I didnt approve of the
ridiculous getups she donned to garner attention, in order to make herself a writer. I
didnt approve of the way she just ditched her family, completely absolving herself of
any responsibility for them. I didnt like that she chose the name Jamaica. As a person
from a small island, myself, I personally resented the way in which Jamaica got to claim
most of what was considered Caribbean culture for a long time. At least in New York,
Jamaicas voice was for a long time the loudest Caribbean voice heard. I didnt like that
she chose the surname Kincaid. Kincaid once described herself as part African, part
Carib Indian and a very small part Scot (7). Although she claims that she chose the
last name Kincaid because it seemed to go with Jamaica and she liked the sound
(Bouson 7), commentators have noted that Kincaid sounds like a Scottish name. Allying
50
herself with the alleged Scot part of her heritage seemed strategic. Perhaps this was
where she was getting her superiority from. Perhaps Jamaica Kincaid was actually white,
as her chosen surname indicated. It certainly wasnt her slave name, nor an African
name, nor an X.
commencement ceremony. I felt a Lucy-esque derision at this, the obnoxious ease with
which she was able to simply show up and receive something for which I worked
decently hard and paid a lot of money, most of which I had yet not even earned. How
does a person get to be that way? I asked myself, echoing Lucys repeated question
about her employer, Mariah. My teenage crush was over. I had no love for Jamaica
Kincaid anymore.
51
CHAPTER 2
BEGINNING AGAIN WITH BEGINNERS MIND
eagerness, and lack of preconceptions when studying a subject, even when studying at an
advanced level, just as a beginner in that subject would. The complete involvement of
the senses, heightened focus, excitement, revelation, attention and care are all part of
what is considered beginners mind. In Zen Mind, Beginners Mind, Buddhist monk and
know what we are doing. This isnt meant in an ignorance is bliss way, but rather in a
way where you give your full attention to something, drinking in the nuances experienced
52
by each of the senses in the present moment. Suzuki explains, Suppose you recite the
Prajna Paramita Sutra only once. It might be a very good recitation. But what would
happen if you recited it twice, three times, four times, or more? You might easily lose
your original attitude towards it (1-2). The original attitude would be an awareness not
only of the words, but of ones self in relationship to the wordsthe feel of the words
tangling or slipping from the tongue, the meaning of the words as taken at first glance
rather than after deep interpretation and reflection, an awareness of the sound and timbre
of ones own voice alight, of a dry or scratchy throat, the size of the font, the glare or
warm-casted shadow from the light in the room. After that first recitation, some of these
elements would be lost or changed, ones focus shifted to new things that the new level of
familiarity enables.
Beginner's mind is able to recapture the mind-blowing nature of a first trip to the
circus for a child (or the strip club for an adult)with its colored lights and awesome
sights, frights, heights and delights. It is able to bring back the firstness and newness of
experience, even if you yourself are the clown (or the stripper). I ask you, reader, can
you remember the first time you did something? Rode a bike? Went on an airplane?
Finger-painted? You had no idea what you were doing, but you were intently focused on
figuring it out. Your senses were picking up on everything around youthe wind against
your face as you pedaled faster, all the buttons to push in the armrest of your window
seat, the gooey swirls and streaks following your fingers every move. You were at once
53
approaching or re-approaching a subject of investigation You can learn something new
even if it is a subject you have already explored. If you keep looking youre bound to
see something new, this in itself can be very exciting, wonderful, and awesome (Iron
Palm). Buddhist Abbess Zenkei Blanche Hartman says that It is the mind that is
mind is just present to explore and observe and see things as-it-is (Chapel Hill Zen
Center). Gloria Karpinski calls beginners mind The teachable mind, empty of opinions
and sureties and therefore empty of limitations (91). Karpinski's notion of a teachable
mind is an important one. A teachable mind does not know the thing it is being taught
and it is willing to learn it. It is what in Buddhism is sometimes called dont know
mind. This mind is open to any possibility because it does not know what to expect and,
as such, has few or no expectations. Most of us want to have teachable minds. We want
to continue to learn, continue to be taught, surprised, and awed by life and the world
around us. We want to discover new things about ourselves, about our friends, family,
and lovers, about our work and our passions, so we can add depth and richness of
Children, naturally, are full of beginners mind. They walk around, excited and
curious, exploring their surroundings with their eyes, hands, tongues, endeavoring to
experience everything around them. Spending time with children is said to give adults a
second childhood because they are able to experience things from the childs
perspective. They are able to laugh at bubbles or smell and taste a blade of grass as if for
54
the first time. This is because they are cultivating beginners mind simply by witnessing
a child brimming with it. Abbess Hartman confirms this idea, saying that to practice
beginners mind is to engage a childlike (though not childish) attitude toward the world
around us. I think of beginner's mind as the mind that faces life like a small child, full
of curiosity and wonder and amazement. I wonder what this is? I wonder what that is?
I wonder what this means? Without approaching things with a fixed point of view or a
prior judgement [sic], just asking what is it? (Chapel Hill Zen Center).
Earlier this week I was having lunch with Indigo, our small child at City
Center. He saw an object on the table and got very interested in it. He
picked it up and started fooling with it: looking at it, putting it in his
mouth, and banging on the table with itjust engaging with it without any
previous idea of what it was. For Indigo, it was just an interesting thing,
and it was a delight to him to see what he could do with this thing. You
and I would see it and say, "It's a spoon. It sits there and you use it for
soup." It doesn't have all the possibilities that he finds in it (Chapel Hill
Zen Center).
Roshi1 was pointing to that kind of mind that's not already made up. The mind that's just
investigating, open to whatever occurs, curious. Seeking, but not with expectation or
grasping. Just being there and observing and seeing what occurs. Being ready for
whatever experience arises in this moment (Chapel Hill Zen Center). This type of open
mind bespeaks an engagement with the present moment, rather than the neurotic past or
the wistful future. The objective of beginner's mind is to draw oneself back into the
present moment.
1
Roshi is a word meaning teacher in the Japanese Buddhist tradition. She is referring to Shunryu Suzuki
55
Krishnamurti describes awareness, which is seen by him and by Stephen Levine
Being aware does not mean learning and accumulating lessons from life;
on the contrary, to be aware is to be without the scars of accumulated
experience. After all, when the mind merely gathers experience
according to its own wishes, it remains very shallow, superficial. A
mind which is deeply observant does not get caught up in self-centered
activities, and the mind is not observant if there is any action of
condemnation or comparison. Comparison and condemnation do not
bring understanding, rather they block understanding. To be aware is to
observejust to observewithout any self-identifying process. Such a
mind is free of that hard core which is formed by self-centered activities.
(125)
beginner's mind there are many possibilities, in the expert's mind there are few (1). By
having a beginners mind, one does not close off possibilities, nor judge one choice better
than others, because one is aware that one does not know what on earth is going on. Or if
one does, it is with the awareness that it is simply a shot in the dark, trial and error.
Beginners mind helps create a space in which to experience, to be, promising that life is
not a nihilistic existence without objective meaning, purpose, or intrinsic value. The
to know-it-all. Abbess Hartman explains that even children start to want to be know-it-
alls. She writes, Children begin to lose that innocent quality after a while, and soon they
want to be the one who knows (Chapel Hill Zen Center). She feels this drive is
understandable, but very limiting. Part of the problem with being one who knows that
56
We all want to be the one who knows. But if we decide we "know"
something, we are not open to other possibilities anymore. And that's a
shame. We lose something very vital in our life when it's more important
to us to be "one who knows" than it is to be awake to what's happening.
We get disappointed because we expect one thing, and it doesn't happen
quite like that. Or we think something ought to be like this, and it turns out
different. Instead of saying, "Oh, isn't that interesting," we say, "Yuck, not
what I thought it would be." Pity. The very nature of beginner's mind is
not knowing in a certain way, not being an expert As an expert, you've
already got it figured out, so you don't need to pay attention to what's
happening. Pity (Chapel Hill Zen Center).
is described by Vietnamese Zen luminary Thich Nhat Hanh as knowing how to observe
and recognize the presence of every feeling and thought which arises in you (37). This
is done by bringing all of ones attention to the present moment, observing without
judgment what one is doing, feeling, and thinking. It is through being uniquely in the
present moment that one can ascertain beginners mind, for one can grasp that this
moment is truly unlike any other. Mindfulness, Hanh reveals, confirming Levine and
Krishnamurti, is the life of awareness: the presence of mindfulness means the presence
of life, and therefore mindfulness is also the fruit. Mindfulness frees us of forgetfulness
and dispersion and makes it possible to live fully each minute of life. Mindfulness
Walking meditation helps to break down habitual automatic mental categories, "thus
regaining the primary nature of perceptions and events, focusing attention on the process
while disregarding its purpose or final outcome." Similarly, performing a simple task
57
such as washing the dishes can become an exercise in mindfulness. Hanh describes this
While washing the dishes one should only be washing the dishes,
which means that while washing the dishes one should be completely aware
of the fact that one is washing the dishes. At first glance, that might seem a
little silly: why put so much stress on a simple thing? But thats precisely
the point. The fact that I am standing there and washing these bowls is a
wondrous reality. Im being completely myself, following my breath,
conscious of my presence, and conscious of my thoughts and actions If
while washing dishes, we think only of the cup of tea that awaits us, thus
hurrying to get the dishes out of the way as if they were a nuisance, then we
are not alive during the time we are washing the dishes. In fact we are
completely incapable of realizing the miracle of life while standing at the
sink. If we cant wash our dishes, the chances are we wont be able to drink
our tea either. While drinking our cup of tea, we will only be thinking of
other things, barely aware of the cup in our hands. Thus we are sucked into
the futureand we are incapable of actually living one minute of life (5).
One can see mindfulness as a kind of meditation, or as meditation off the mat, bringing
to everyday life and the outside world the attention and care that one brings into
"thinking" mind. It is recognized as a component of almost all religions, and has been
practiced for over 5,000 years, but it is also practiced outside religious traditions. Thomas
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In study we can be content with an idea or a concept that is true. We can
be content to know about truth. Meditation is for those who are not
satisfied with a merely objective and conceptual knowledge about life,
about Godabout ultimate realities. They want to enter into an intimate
contact with truth itself, with God. They want to experience the deepest
realities of life by living them. Meditation is a means to that end (43-44).
relaxed and peaceful frame of mind (Wikipedia). Meditation has been defined as: "self
regulation of attention, in the service of self-inquiry, in the here and now" (Wikipedia).
Different techniques of meditation vary in their focus. In most forms of meditation, the
object or process (usually the breath, but also a sound: a mantra, koan or riddle, a
focus. In their work "Meditation: Concepts, Effects and Uses in Therapy, Alberto
The meditator, with a 'no effort' attitude, is asked to remain in the here and
now. Using the focus as an 'anchor'... brings the subject constantly back to
the present, avoiding cognitive analysis or fantasy regarding the contents
of awareness, and increasing tolerance and relaxation of secondary
thought processes (Attracted Actions).
form of meditation that is frequently used in varied religions and spiritual practices.
flows of energy (Qi) in the body. Other meditative traditions, such as yoga or tantra, are
common to several religions, but can also occur outside of religious milieus (Wikipedia).
59
ZAZEN AND NON-DUALITY
The practice of meditation aids in the development of beginners mind and the
quality of mindfulness. Meditation can take place sitting, lying down, or walking. In
Japanese Zen Buddhism, seated meditation is called zazen. The aim of zazen is just
sitting. That is its sole goal. If you sit, you have done it. Suzuki says, These forms are
not the means of obtaining the right state of mind. To take this posture is itself to have
the right state of mind. There is no need to obtain some special state of mind (25).
The traditional posture of zazen is seated in lotus position, with folded legs and an
erect but settled spine, but one may modify this position with a meditation bench or even
sitting upright in a chair. Sitting in the full lotus position is done for a good reason,
When you sit in the full lotus position, your left foot is on your right thigh,
and your right foot is on your left thigh. When we cross our legs like this,
even though we have a right leg and a left leg, they have become one. The
position expresses the oneness of duality: not two, and not one. Our body
and mind are not two and not one. If you think your body and mind are
two, that is wrong; if you think that they are one, that is also wrong. Our
body and mind are both two and one. We usually think that if something
is not one, it is more than one; if it is not singular, it is plural. But in
actual experience, our life is not only plural, but also singular. Each one
of us is both dependent and independent (25).
thinking and understanding them for what they areusually false and often destructive.
Through zazen we begin to hold the contradiction of something being both two and one
60
makes it true. Others can disagree, but the experience of it makes it necessarily true for
us. In zazen, it is the experience of non-duality that is embodied in the posture. One
need not be able to get into lotus position to enjoy zazen, however. There are several
The most important thing in taking the zazen posture is to keep your spine
straight. Your ears and your shoulders should be on one line. Relax your
shoulders, and push up towards the ceiling with the back of your head.
And you should pull your chin in. When your chin is tilted up, you have
no strength in your posture; you are probably dreaming. Also to gain
strength in your posture, press your diaphragm down toward your hara, or
lower abdomen. This will help you maintain your physical and mental
balance. When you try to keep this posture, at first you may find some
difficulty breathing naturally, but when you get accustomed to it you will
be able to breathe naturally and deeply. You should not be tilted
sideways, backwards, or forwards. You should be sitting straight up as if
you were supporting the sky with your head (26).
This is not just form or breathing. It expresses the key point of Buddhism.
It is a perfect expression of your Buddha nature. If you want true
understanding of Buddhism, you should practice this way. These forms
are not a means of obtaining the right state of mind. To take the posture
itself is the purpose of our practice. When you have this posture, you
have the right state of mind, so there is no need to try to attain some
special state (26, my emphasis).
beginning, it is not something to be gained at the end. Although one often thinks of
enlightenment as the goal of meditation, Suzuki reminds us that the real goal of
way for a certain amount of time on a regular basis, giving the practice as much of our
full attention as we can. He reminds us that we do not need to know Zen in depth, in fact
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The most difficult thing is always to keep your beginners mind. There is
no need to have a deep understanding of Zen. Even though you read much
Zen literature, you must read each sentence with a fresh mind. You
should not say, I know what Zen is, or I have attained enlightenment.
This is also the real secret of the arts: always be a beginner. Be very
careful about this point (22).
Breathing takes on a more meaningful role during meditation, though the process
of inhaling and exhaling does not really change. The breath becomes a conscious
connection with and an understanding of the ways and workings of the universe. Without
the breath, we cannot be. Our bodies would cease to function without breath. And yet
the breath is a function largely independent of our will. We do not consciously regulate
it. It simply, elegantly, is. We know that we are poised on the brink of a momentous
The embodiment of this experience renders the practitioner not just an observer or
a thinker but a participant in and an example of the beliefs. On breathing, Suzuki writes:
When we practice zazen our mind always follows our breathing. When
we inhale, the air comes into the inner world. When we exhale, the air
goes out to the outer world. The inner world is limitless, and the outer
world is also limitless. We say inner world or outer world, but
actually there is just one world. In this limitless world, our throat is like a
swinging door. The air comes in and goes out like someone passing
through a swinging door. If you think, I breathe, the I is extra. There
is no you to say I. What we call I is just a swinging door which
moves when we inhale and when we exhale. It just moves; that is all (29).
Breathing too is a tool for fostering understanding and embodying the idea of
Our usual understanding of life is dualistic: you and I, this and that, good
and bad. But actually these discriminations are themselves the awareness
of the universal existence. You means to be aware of the universe in the
form of you, and I means to be aware of it in the form of I. You and I
are just swinging doors. This kind of understanding is necessary. This
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should not even be called understanding; it is actually the true experience
of life through Zen practice (29).
In Peace is Every Step, Thich Nhat Hanh explains one pragmatic reason why the
While we practice conscious breathing, our thinking will slow down, and
we can give ourselves a real rest. Most of the time, we think too much,
and mindful breathing helps us to be calm, relaxed, and peaceful. It helps
us stop thinking so much and stop being possessed by sorrows of the past
and worries about the future. It enables us to be in touch with life, which
is wonderful in the present moment (11).
What conscious breathing does (on one level) is train the mind. The mind is like
a playful puppy that we must train through repetitive instruction of not that, this so that
he can happily coexist with us. Left to its own devices, our minds, like a playful
innocuous puppy, can destroy our happiness and peace, leaving mental piles of dog shit
and shredded shoes of emotion. In training our mind through conscious breathing, we are
bringing our minds, whenever possible, gently back to the present moment. We are most
often thinking about something in the past or future, very seldom focusing our attention
and energy on what is actually going on right now. If we are arguing with our partner in
this moment, also present are the unresolved issues of yesterday and worries about the
future. Sometimes we are looking to the past for meaning, hoping our understanding in
the present will help in the future. Other times we are looking at the present through the
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lens of the past, leaving little hope and limited options for the future. We are very rarely
cognizant of what is actually going on in the present moment, of what actually is. Hanh
promises that "If we keep breathing in and out this way for a few minutes, we become
quite refreshed. We recover ourselves and we can encounter the beautiful things around
us in the present moment. The past is gone; the future is not yet here. If we do not go
back to ourselves in the present moment, we cannot be in touch with life" (12).
non-attachment simply by sitting. To take the posture itself is the purpose of the practice.
Even the crossing of the legs in the lotus position, we have seen, is construed as
embodying non-duality. These concepts will be invaluable for us on our path, whether
our goal is a spiritual one or simply a wish for better health and more fulfillment.
Whether this awareness occurs while sitting, doing yoga, or walking, alone or in a group
setting, the ultimate purpose of meditation is bringing its practitioner to the awareness of
now. There is only one now, only one present moment, lived and experienced in myriad,
The first thing you might notice in meditation is thatlike a rocketyour mind
takes off in about a thousand different directions, each taking you further and further
away from the present moment. It seems almost impossible to quiet the incessant chatter
in your head. Although Suzuki tells us If you want to obtain perfect calmness in your
zazen, you should not be bothered by the various images you find in your mind. Let
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them come, and let them go (32), its a heck of a lot more difficult than one might
imagine. His counsel is based on his assertion that concentrating on something is not true
Zen. The true purpose is to see things as they are, to observe things as they are, and to
let everything go as it goes. (33). His reasoning is also practical. When you try to stop
your thinking, it means you are bothered by it. Do not be bothered by anything (34).
water:
When you sit down to practice you will almost certainly find that your
mind is in a condition like boiling water: restless impulses push up inside
you, and wandering thoughts jostle at the door of consciousness, trying to
effect an entrance on the stage of the mind (66).
One might say that the thoughts of the self obscure the light of the Self. The
noise of internal dialogue brings our attention to the different activities of the conditioned
mind, or the mind attached to its beliefs about what is and what should be. This mind is
unable to pull itself out of its attachments and suffers because of it.
So our problem is that our thoughts wander all over the place, and
naturally we want to bring about order. But how is order to be brought
about? Now, to understand a fast revolving machine, you must slow it
down, must you not? If you want to understand a dynamo, it must be
slowed down and studied, but if you stop it, it is a dead thing, and a dead
thing can never be understood. Only a living thing can be understood. So
a mind that has killed thoughts by exclusion, by isolation, can have no
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understanding, but the mind can understand thought if the thought process
is slowed down (4).
engage with our thoughts. We do not have to have nor examine our thoughts in real
time. Instead, we can examine our thoughts, turn them over, trace their history, and
ponder their future. We can create a space between stimulus and action in which we are
Levine explains the basic concept at the root of all thoughts of this conditioned
mind:
This dissatisfaction renders the present moment imperfect, filled with lack and
dissatisfaction. At the root of this satisfaction is desire for things outside of the present
We discover there are many ways that desire causes this dissatisfaction.
There are, for instance, things we want that may never come our way, or
things we only get once in a while, or which dont stay for long. There are
also things we get, and, after we get them, we dont wantwhich is really
disconcerting. Sometimes I see this with my children. They will want
something so badly that well go from store to store until we find it. Then,
we get it and an hour later theyre saying, I wish I hadnt gotten this I
wanted the blue one. Thats really a heartbreaker. And, thats in all of
us. We want and we want and nothing can permanently satisfy us
because not only does the thing we want change, but our wants change
too. Everything is changing all the time (15).
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Equally disappointing is the realization that because everything is changing, there
is no such thing as lasting satisfaction stemming from things outside of us. Levine
The next thing we discover is that nothing we want can give us lasting
satisfaction because everything is in flux and nothing stays forever.
Whatever it may bethe finest food, the most gratifying sex, the greatest
sense pleasurenothing in the universe can give us lasting satisfaction, it
will all come and go. It is this condition which gives us that subtle, queasy
dissatisfaction we carry about with us most of the time, even when we get
what we want, because deep down we know eventually it will change.
We dont see reality. We see only the shadows that it casts and those
shadows are our concepts, our definitions, our ideas of the world (10).
Levines proposed strategyto become an observer of the wanting rather than the
wanterdivorces the person from their identification with the wanting (as the wanter)
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and places them in the more powerful position of observer of an emotion called
wanting. As wanter they can choose only wanting, but as observer they might
associating with the identity of wanter, the person is able to see beyond the wanting.
Krishnamurti, as I mentioned, also asserts that the process of slowing down ones
thoughts brings order to ones mind. It enables the mind to be something called
understanding:
If you have seen a slow motion picture, you will understand the marvelous
movement of a horses muscles as it jumps. There is beauty in that slow
movement of the muscles, but as the horse jumps hurriedly, as the
movement is quickly over, that beauty is lost. Similarly, when the mind
moves slowly because it wants to understand each thought as it arises,
then there is freedom from thinking, freedom from controlled, disciplined
thought (4-5).
Zen teacher and author Katsuki Sekida also notes the importance of deepening our
awareness of our inner landscape. In Zen Training, he explains the relationship between
Man thinks unconsciously. Man thinks and acts without noticing. When he
thinks, It is fine today, he is aware of the weather but not of his own
thought. It is the reflecting action of consciousness that comes immediately
after the thought that makes him aware of his own thinking. The act of
thinking of the weather is an outward-looking one and is absorbed in the
object of its thought. On the other hand, the reflecting action of
consciousness looks inward and notes the preceding action that has just gone
by, wrapped up in thinking of the weatherstill leaving its trace behind as
the direct past. By this reflecting action of consciousness, man comes to
know what is going on in his mind, and that he has a mind; and he
recognizes his own being (108).
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This watching of mind divorces us from our usual attachment to thoughts and
that what we are seeing is not really self at all, but rather our subscription and
adherence to the melodramas of life. The objective of this watching is simply to see what
The non-action of seeing and watching gives us access to the roots and complex
processes that underlie our beliefs and actions. We are able to simply regard what is,
without an attachment to a certain way of thinking or doing. We can watch the internal
practicing acceptance:
The more we accept of ourselves, the more fully we experience the world.
The more we accept our anger, our loneliness, our desire systems, the
more we can hear others and the more we can hear ourselves (53).
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As Levine explains, removing judgment ultimately enables the emotion to move
out of the shadow of our self and be observed and understood for what it is: simply, what
is. The objective is not to create more pleasing sensations and moments, but to realize the
impermanence inherent in both the pleasing and the displeasing moments, and ultimately
some of the ills of the world. You are ready to sign up, whip out your credit card, call
now, or whatever it takes to get this thing called beginners mind. After so many
infomercials, so many advertisements promising you that to be what you wish you need
only to buy their product, you are used to being able to purchase pills, books, DVDs, or
what have you. You are not used to being asked to do something. There is no time to
do something! you exclaim, pointing at the unopened workout DVD, the unread must
Yet I argue that there is time to do something. Lets create more meaningful
practices in our lives! At first glance, our lives may feel too chaotic and too busy to add
anything else to them. We so often forget that we do the things we do because we choose
to do them. Deepak Chopra writes that You and I are essentially infinite choice-makers.
In every moment of our existence, we are in that field of all possibilities where we have
access to an infinity of choices. Some of these choices are made consciously, while
others are made unconsciously. But the best way to understand and maximize the use of
karmic law is to become consciously aware of the choices we make in every moment
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(40). Each item on our to do list is chosen by us, even though it seems at times like we
have no choice. But it is easier to think that we have no choice than to see ourselves as
powerfully controlling our lives. From household chores to social engagements to work
understanding that we are always free to choose differently that we find power. Chopra
asserts that our present day situation is the result of our past choices, and that our future
will be the result of todays choices. This is easy to see when talking about something
Whether you like it or not, everything that is happening at this moment is a result of the
choices youve made in the past. Unfortunately, a lot of us make choices unconsciously,
and therefore we dont think they are choicesand yet, they are (40).
If I were to insult you, you would most likely make the choice of being
offended. If I were to pay you a compliment, you would most likely make
the choice of being pleased or flattered. But think about it: its still a
choice. I could offend you and I could insult you, and you could make the
choice of not being offended. I could pay you a compliment and you
could make the choice of not letting that flatter you either.
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these are still choices that we are making in every moment of our
existence. We are simply making these choices unconsciously (40-1).
Similar to Hanh, Levine, and Krishnamurti, the course of action that Deepak
prescribes is simply to step back. If you step back for a moment and witness the choices
you are making as you make those choices, then in just this act of witnessing, you take
the whole process from the unconscious realm into the conscious realm. This procedure
of conscious choice making and witnessing is very empowering (41-2). This witnessing
meditation. It helps create and maintain a space between our thoughts and feelings and
how we choose to respond to them, between the stimulus and the action. This mental
space gives us more of a chance to intentionally choose our reactions. When we are able
to divest our thoughts of their immediacy, we are able to exercise greater choice in how
we will respond.
our cultures meta-narratives of expertise and our own been there, done that ennui,
academics in particular occupy a space in our culture where we are supposed to know
more than others. Wow, you must be pretty smart! is the typical laypersons response
to finding out one has or is obtaining ones Ph.D. If others think they know it all,
academics are the ones who actually might. Or so we tell ourselves, building our egos
fallutin adjective floats our boats. We become experts, often these days in random,
obscure sub-subjects that no one else really cares all that much about. This is done in the
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effort to create a niche and write original scholarship in an increasingly specialized job
market. We pride ourselves on our expert mind, seeing it as wise and efficient. Cornel
West confirms this view of academics in his dialogic book with bell hooks, Breaking
degrees, as elitist, arrogant, and haughty... It is important to break down that kind of
Its not (only) our faults; the commodification of education and the focus on
gaining transferable skills and knowledge have mandated the performance of the role of
course. The exorbitant prices students pay for their university degrees, coupled with a
version of globalization that privileges market value, makes education no longer about
joyful exploration or discovery. bell hooks comments on what she calls the banking
knowledge that could be deposited, stored and used at a later date (5).
This was not always the case however. Education used to be seen as something
other than a commodity. As John W. Moore notes in his article Education: Commodity,
Come-On, or Commitment?
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is flagging. Many students, teachers, and administrators view education as
merely a way to enhance personal prosperity (805).
The narratives of civic duty and service no longer ring as loudly and clearly
through the hallowed halls of our colleges and universities. Nor do models of mentorship
and apprenticeship proliferate. We have been encouraged to accept a very small version
Commodity, William Tabb notes the ways in which globalization(s) change the
Today we are often told that education must be made more efficient by
being forced into the market model, moving away from the traditional
concept of education as a publicly provided social good. This
neoliberalismthe belief that todays problems are best addressed by the
market, and that government regulation and the public sector should both
be as minimal as possibleis not unique to debates over education: it
dominates economics, politics and ideology in the U.S. and most of the
world.
Tabbs philosophy has at its foundation problematic beliefs about the role and
wonder, will this leave the study of literature? Poetry, according to the Latin poet Ovid,
and literature in general, according to Englishman Sir Philip Sydney in his Apology for
Poetry, has as its mission docere delictendo, or to teach by delighting (Barry, 22).
How does such delight fit into this neo-liberal educational prototype? Are there ways to
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standardize pleasure, or turn it into a marketable skill? Is the goal of education today to
within the academy, a result of this banking model of education. He writes, It is not
hard to see why professionalism often carries a negative charge and seems at best a
necessary evil, that interferes with and constrains intellectual activity (the red-tape,
education that asserts that education itself has little to do with bringing about integrated
difficult" (9). He goes so far as to blame education at least partially for hindering one's
development. He writes:
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The complicity of academics with the institution makes us part of the problem
rather than part of the solution, I might note here. We become the upholders of its
somewhat arbitrary rules and regulations, participants in its schemes. From the first
bluebook exam to the dissertation defense, educators enforce the often arbitrary laws and
guidelines handed down from the institution. Well, what else would you have me do?
you ask. Cultivate beginners mind! I respond enthusiastically. For in the beginners
mind there are many possibilities, but in the experts there are few. We might see things
differently if we were able to look upon them with new, unjaded eyes.
beginners mind, we may see and enable other possibilities besides been there, done
that. Henson reminds us that, It may be true that you have been there, and you may
have done that, but perhaps your conception of reality was not the whole concept, the
big picture if you will (Iron Palm). He uses as an analogy the story of six blind men
encountering an elephant for the first time to illustrate his point. Each man touched a
different part of the elephant. One touching the trunk, another the body, another the tail,
another the ear, and so on. Each man felt that he understood what the elephant was
based on his experience. Henson asks, what if the above happened to one blind man on
six different occasions? Each time his concept of an elephant would change, grow and be
enhanced. Yet he still would have more to learn about the true essence of an elephant.
But if our hypothetical blind man stopped after the first visit, "Been there - Done that,"
his concept would be stuck at a lower level of understanding. He would miss out on the
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In academia, we reinforce the privileging of thought and word, leaving
experience it, but rather to have read and written about it, or listened to someone else talk
about it. This creates disembodied, inexperienced knowers working under the misled
assumption that they have acquired knowledge or attained mastery without this key
experiential component.
In order to cultivate beginners mind, Henson says that To begin, we must all
empty our cups of all the preconceived ideas, concepts, techniques and methods that
prevent us from receiving the new. This seems like a simple thing to do, but can be quite
difficult in practice (Iron Palm). In the case of academics, this requires the challenging
shift away from our quietly prized stature as know-it-alls. There seems to be a lot at risk
by cultivating beginners mind, particularly for academics. A peek behind the curtain or
role of educational overseer, cracking his whip over his ignorant slaves. Its a step I am
not sure every academic would be willing to take. The idea of being a beginner takes
some of the wind out of the letters that sail brightly behind y/our names. Furthermore,
part of the role of professor requires (or at least seems to require) the adoption of the
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stance of the master, fully competent, knowledgeably guiding the less advanced in their
achievement. How can I be a teacher, and a beginner? one might ask oneself.
Being able to hold a space for this type of seeming contradiction and even to
embrace it, enables new possibilities for both the teacher and the student. Jennifer
Ouellette writes about the importance of this practice, citing her personal experience as a
case in point:
Several years ago I earned my black belt in jujitsu. Before tying the belt
around my waist, the grand master had me don my old white belt, which
designates a beginner. He then instructed me to look into a mirror and
reflect on what it had been like to walk onto the dojo mat for the first time.
The reasoning behind the ceremony is that in order to effectively teach a
beginner any given technique, an instructor must be able to break it down
into its most basic components. Ergo, its vital to remember what it was
like to know nothing about the technique at all (Symmetry Magazine).
This is perhaps the most practical and basic reason for a teacher to cultivate
beginners mind. Many professors do not present material as if their students are learning
from scratch. But if they themselves can cultivate beginners mind, recapturing the
excitement, confusion and joy they felt when they first were introduced to the concepts
and ideas they now know so well, they might gain invaluable insight into the minds of
their students. The ability to empathize with someone who is seeing something for the
first time is a powerful tool, and one we will need if we want to build a brighter and more
meaningful world.
Education should, I believe, offer students tools necessary to succeed and have a
positive experience of life, regardless of race, gender, or creed. As Roshi Philip Kapleau
points out in Zen: Merging East and West, A vital problem for teachers of Buddhism in
North America and Europe has been how to accommodate to our Western psyche and
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culture a Zen heretofore expressed through Asian cultural forms. (?) What I am
interested in is how the tools and practices of Zen can be applied to American life,
academic practices, and social thought in order to enhance and supplement what I see as a
painfully limited perspective of the world and its workings leading to a debilitating
subjectivity that leads few to the success of self realization and even fewer to genuine
happiness.
Usually academics urge us through texts to think as they do, and this coercive
accord is the main action their work intends to inspire. Through their artful language and
persuasive rhetoric, many authors endeavor to sway their reader over to their camp. What
you need to do, they seem to be saying, is listen to and agree with me. In spite of this,
readers come to texts firmly rooted in their own preconceived notions and pre-established
beliefs. One of my strongest dislikes is readers who use the text against itself, so to
speak, in order to confirm and validate the choices they have made in their own life, and
their own tenuous construction of their identity. Rather than meeting the author in a
space where reading enables new possibilities for them, they use and manipulate the text
to affirm, This is why I am the way I am. Stephen Levine calls this the judging mind.
He writes:
The judging mind has an opinion about everything. It selects from the
mindflow who it believes it ought to be and chides the rest. Its full of
noise and old learning. It is a quality of mind addicted to maintaining an
image of itself. It is always trying to be somebody (43).
We can see that beginners mind offers an alternative to performing this kind of
reading. This state of mind that is born from the practices of mindfulness and meditation
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is likened to the experience of a child, when everything was fresh and new. The ability to
see the world without its myriad contexts means that true possibility exists to transcend
culture and actually see what is, stripped of all the convoluted meaning we give to it. I am
not the first person to suggest the introduction of beginners mind into reading. My
mentor, Santiago Cols, opens his book Living Invention, or the Way of Julio Cortzar
with a passage that vividly captures the experience of beginners mind. The protagonist is
sitting alone (perhaps in meditation?) when he finds himself in the middle of a shower
of toys. He writes:
I am sitting alone when the miracle happens and the toys begin to fall all
around me in a gentle shower, falling slowly like snowflakes. They dont
hurt. They arent hard or sharp until theyve splashed softly to the ground
and then sprung back into the shape of an animal, a car, a balloon, a drum.
Im rolling in them and playing with them all at once somehow.
Somehow Im splashing crazy in this soft ocean that is each unique toy
and all of them together all at the same time and the rain of toys keeps
falling warm on my face and the waves of toys are growing and crashing
into me knocking me down laughing into the sliding surf of toys, and the
salty drops of toy go up my nose and down my throat and I can feel the
toy flowing inside me and outside of me all at the same time (1).
The experience is articulated at once as a miracle, invoking from the very first
line a concept of the divine. A miracle is a visible interruption of the laws of nature, such
that can only be explained by divine intervention (Wikipedia). The miracle in question
is that of being. Rather than questioning why toys are falling, who this protagonist is, or
wondering what this has to do with Julio Cortzar, the reader (this reader) is pulled into
the scene by the vivid language and the immediacy of the scene. The language Cols
uses brings the reader into the present moment, where even the notion of falling toys is
new and unheard of. Unlike other narratives where we can guess as readers what is
occurring, Cols introduces a shade of magical realism to pull his reader out of his/her
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rational mind and into a new space that is unknown. This act leaves the reader no choice
but to proceed with beginners mind, since this brash choice of sitting an unnamed
narrator down in the middle of a toy-storm doesnt echo any other choices made in any
toyness, shows a protagonist playing, as it were, with pure potentiality. The toys are
not yet toys in reality, but in the mind of the protagonist, they are toys even in the
moments before they hit the ground. The narrator says that he is rolling in them and
playing with them all at once somehow. The somehow iterated in this line, and
reiterated in the next, suggests that the narrator is not consciously acting; he is not in
control of his or her actions. His or her actions are instinctual, unconscious, intuitive,
occurring even as he questions them. As he gets caught up in the moment, the toysand
the wordscome faster, taking on the form of the ocean. The effect of the prose is a
surge that mimics the feeling of being pulled under by the force of the waves. The toys
begin to flow inside me and outside me all at the same time. In this moment,
traditional boundaries do not exist or have been disabled. Inside and outside are both
flooded with salty drops of toy. In this moment we see the protagonist and the toys as
relationship to the toys; there is no separation between the protagonist and the toys. The
I do not think it is an accident that Cols chose water as the metaphor for the toys.
Snowflakes and raindrops and waves are all forms of water. Water is both fluid and
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powerful. It is universalwe all come from the waters within our mothers. Water takes
the shape of its container, freezes, condenses. The evocation of water also reminds us of
the difficulty, at times futility, of trying to control water. Floodgates cannot contain
hurricanes and tsunamis. It is merely our egos that tell us that we can contain water in
our structures. Relating this to reading, we as readers often try to use our rational mind to
contain fluid, feminine forms of knowledge. But one of the problems with these feminine
forms of knowing is that they often defy rational logic- they are non linear, they are non-
binary, they incur simultaneity, forms of multiplicity not normally acknowledged and
As the toys begin to consolidate into an ocean of toys, so the novelty and
excitement with which the protagonist first embraced the situation evolves into
frustration and impatience. This impatience is with his inability to control the situation.
Cols writes:
explaining the unique nuances of the passing moments. He metaphorically became a part
of the moment, flowing with the toys, unconcerned with the specifics of his actions, but
understanding that toys were both inside and outside of him. But as he began to codify
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and control the experience, initially by creating an expectation (that he would like to
share the toys with his friends) and treating this experience as he had other experiences of
toys (that toys could be put into ordinary piles), he realized that the event itselfin this
case toys, but in our case as readers our thoughts or beliefswas frustratingly evading
his control. The yielding, Yin, beginners mind nature that characterized his first
reactions and interactions with the toys has been usurped by a desire, however good
natured, to collect the toys and share them. The idea of giving and action in this passage
indicate that Yang energy has swayed the balance. He is being active, he is controlling
the situation (or so he thinks), and he has determined what one does when one is
inundated with toys. He has stopped being governed by intuition and excited interest and
has instead turned to logic and reason. As Cols put it, Im already forgetting the
magic.
What happens next is telling of the overarching moral of Cols allegory. Despite
the protagonists aggravated efforts to gather the toys up, they cannot be contained. A
ball, a soldier and a train engine all fall to the ground despite the his struggle to keep it all
together. The irony is that the toys have not changed their nature once during this story.
The toys came in falling and they continued falling. What changed was the protagonists
relationship to the falling toys. But the protagonist is not even aware that he is making a
choice in how to act, react, and interact with the toys. He allows the situation to escalate.
Stupid toys and my teeth hard against each other my eyes burning I will
get you still I am stubborn pick you up little soldier in my arms and train
engine and ball and take you to my friends at once while the mast of a
sailing ship stabs me in the arm when I turn and everything clatters to the
ground
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It is at this moment of rupture that the protagonist begins again to exist in the
moment. By this I mean that he is not motivated by visions of the future (sharing the toys
with friends), nor by assumptions of the past (that these toys could be made into piles like
outcome.
Nothing gets added from outside the given situation, asserts Cols, and the
original, given the situation remains, now embedded, within the new one (6). The
protagonist has let go of any desire to control the situation. He has also let go of his
frustration, so that he is existing within the emotion he is feeling, riding the sobs like
It is obvious in the case of this protagonist that letting go alleviates the frustration
of the situation. The ocean has moved from outside the protagonist to inside, his sobs
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have become the uncontrollable entity. Tossed this way and that, he is no longer in
control, no longer striving for control. He is the ocean, he is the toys, he is the sobs. This
I am currently reading differently, against this grain, by reading (or trying to read)
with beginners mind. I practice a 5 minute mind clearing meditation at the beginning
moment of peace and respite during which I can put away the activity of the day and
switch gears so as to be fully present while reading. I read for 40-45 minutes, and then I
have an 18 minute meditation at the completion of my reading. I did this first reading of
My Garden (Book): in a comfy chair on the third floor porch of the Zen temple, where I
live (more on this later). From this seat, I overlook the garden and the tree-line of the
horizon. I do this reading at about eight o clock in the evening. It is June, and the air
has cooled a bit by that hour, though it is still very light out. The various birds sing an
insistent chorus that I learn to ignore. I time myself with my iPhone, letting a Xylophone
temple, or around the neighborhood of Burns Park in Ann Arbor. I actually began this
practice much earlier, but it lent itself to reading a book about gardening. I spent the
early spring walking around this lovely, affluent neighborhood, examining the first
furtive flowers to poke their heads out from beneath the snow. The crocuses and
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daffodils often sat on beds of slush, offering the first promise that the long Midwestern
winter was finally ending. I watched the tulips slowly outshine all their peers, planted in
bright beds of a single color, or in kaleidoscopic bursts. The magnolias began pumping
their perfume into the air. The irises showed off their petals like the plumage of an exotic
bird. And theneverything burst into life, the air thickened. Frequent rain pushed
everything into fervent exposition reminiscent of a carnival. I ride the waves of the
I like to look at the gardens of others. Many summer gardens look overrun and
crowded, poorly planned and executed, like good ideas in theory that, when tried, werent
very good ideas at all. Greenery grows to four and five feet, dwarfing flowers and
overtaking sidewalks. I learn from lookingwhat works, what doesnt. What makes me
say ooh! and cross the street to get a closer gander. What looks cluttered and messy. I
plan my own garden. I dream. I myself am a budding gardener. I have had one small
garden of my own in Ann Arbor, and have worked in two community gardens. Now that
I am married, expecting my first child, and moving into the role of Lady of the house in
the home my late grandparents built, I will finally have a yard of my own to cultivate. I
am both excited and nervous at the possibilities. Like Kincaid, I feel limited only by my
imagination (and my budget, a problem that does not seem to concern Kincaid).
I think it is important to read with beginners mind. Reading in this way enables
us to transcend our rational way of engaging a text and endeavor to meet the text as what
it actually is: something completely new. Even if the text is not new to the reader, the
moment is new, and the text will resonate with this moment in new ways. Beginners
mind enables us to not know, opening us up to the opportunity of actually being present
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with what actually is in a text. We also can become aware of our own thought
processes and attachments at play in reading. We can begin to mindfully observe our
own thoughts as they arise with relation to reading. We can be aware of where
dissatisfaction arises, anger, frustration, excitement, boredom, and rather than attaching
to it and identifying with it, we can simply watch these states of mind pass through our
awareness like clouds through the sky. Like the meditation cushion, books offer us a
It is not easy for me to meet Kincaid in the open space of beginners mind. A part
curious about this new genre she has delved into in her writing. Furthermore, I am
interested in the woman that she has become, in what she has to say. I want to be open to
assumptions, and my emotions regarding Kincaid. I am meeting her in the field past
I found the process pretty interesting. I really enjoyed the first 5 minutes, when I
was able to settle into the present moment. As a pregnant woman with two moves
scheduled and a dissertation defense scheduled, I am not always the pillar of calm Id like
to be. The first 5 minute meditation gave me a moment to really settle into being fully
present with the book. I enjoyed reading. I felt like my own environment made the
reading itself more sumptuous, surrounded as I was by gardens and trees. I wrote small
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notes to myself of places in the text where I felt like reacting or responding. In re-reading
these notes, I was able to observe when judgments would come up in me. The meditation
at the end was supposed to be 20 minutes, but I found myself getting antsy toward the
end of it. The mosquitoes were often out by then, and I just couldnt sustain it. I would
find myself checking the iPhone to see how much time was left. I read indoors one day,
Writing is a very different process and animal than reading. In order to write
coherently for an audience, I decided not to write every thought I had. Instead, I looked
at the idea of beginners mind and picked up the theme within the text itself.
Explorations of beginners mind need not discuss beginners mind itself, however. This
was just what popped out at me in this case. I also had in mind that there would also be a
reading for self and a reading for not self, as I described earlier, so I was able to
select what I thought would be most pertinent to this discussion, aware that there would
be others to follow. I was able to play with Kincaid, creating a reading of her text that
I might not have been able to see had I not cleared away some of the debris of my own
FIRST READING
Jamaica Kincaid fancies herself a gardener, though she spends a lot of time
explaining that she has no skill at it. My Garden (Book): opens with her various failures
and shortcomings in her newly chosen field. She reveals that she has very little control
over what happens in her garden. From her very first experience with planting, in which
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horticulture rather than any actual acumen or ability that has fueled her garden
experiments. This makes Kincaids new identity, gardener, a bit odd. Why would
someone who is not very good at gardening proudly profess herself a gardener? With my
tennis skills, mediocre as they are, I would hesitate to ever call myself a tennis player.
Yet Kincaid proudly adopts this new title, revealing that perhaps there is more at play,
beginners mind. She enjoys her dont know mind about gardening, curious and
confused by what is occurring quite naturally around her. She begins the My Garden
(Book): looking for the answers she does not have: Is there someone to whom I can
write for an answer to this question: Why is my Wisteria floribunda, trained into a
standard so that it eventually will look like a small tree, blooming in late July, almost
August, instead of May, the way wisterias in general are supposed to do? (11). Kincaid
the plants, but she does not know how the plants actually function in real life. She can
quite easily put a label on this plantwisteria floribundaand she can even describe
what it is she thinks it is bred to do, but she has no insight into why and how it does what
it does. She asks herself what to do with what is in front of her, but she has no
knowledge to draw from. Kincaid explains what she likes about not knowing:
I like to ask myself this question, What to do? especially when I myself
do not have an answer to it. What to do? When it comes up, what to do
(slugs are everywhere) and I know a ready-made solution, I feel confident
and secure in the world (my world), and again when it comes up, what to
do (the wisteria are blooming out of their season), I still feel confident and
secure that someone somewhere has had this same perplexing condition
(for certainly I cannot be the first person to have had this experience), and
he or she will explain to me the phenomenon that is in front of me: my
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wisteria grown as a standard (made to look like a tree) is blooming two
months after its usual time (12).
Kincaid notes that she knows that these questions are not unanswerable, but that
she simply does not know the answers. When she does have the answer, a ready-made
solution, she says she feels confident and secure in the world (my world), which
means she has left beginners mind and returned to the knowing mind, which she
describes as functioning to confirm her world. She prefers to not have an answer, to
remain in her beginners mind where no response comes when she asks what to do and
she is forced to invent her own solution. She consoles herself with the knowledge that
In this garden space, Kincaid learns experientially through trial and error how to
create on an external landscape other than the literary one. Rather than model her own
yard after those of her neighbors, she chooses to define her own standards of beauty,
almost by accident:
I had begun to dig up, or to have dug up for me, parts of the lawn in the
back of the house and parts of the lawn in the front of the house, into the
most peculiar ungardenlike shapes. These bedsfor I was attempting to
make such a thing as flower bedswere odd in shape, odd in relation to
the way flower beds usually look in a garden; I could see that they were
odd and I could see that they did not look like the flower beds in gardens I
admired, the gardens of my friends, the gardens portrayed in my books on
gardening, but I couldnt help that; I wanted a garden that looked like
something I had in my minds eye, but exactly what that might be I did not
know and even now do not know (7).
This brand of quirky personal style is not new to Kincaid. She actually began her
career as a writer in New York by trying out different uniforms for this new vocation. I
would wear a lot of old clothes and sort of looked like people from different periods
someone from the 1920s, someone from the 1930s, someone from the 1940s, Kincaid
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recalls of this time (quoted in Bouson 19). She was, she says, impersonating those who
were inconceivably older and more prosperous than she (Bouson 19), even dying her
hair blond to presumably fit that role. In her garden, however, Kincaid seems to be
Kincaid has grown accustomed to people not understanding her new creation.
She writes that her large, strangely shaped beds became so much more difficult to
explain to other gardeners who had more experience with a garden than I and more of an
established aesthetic of a garden than I. What is this? I have been asked. What are you
trying to do here? I have been asked. Sometimes I would reply by saying, I dont really
know or sometimes I would reply . (with absolute silence) (7). She shares
I once invited a man to dinner, a man who knows a lot about landscape
and how to remake it in a fashionable way. He did not like the way I had
made a garden and he said to me that what I ought to do is remove the
trees. It is quite likely that I shall never have him back for a visit to my
house, but I havent yet told him so. After he left I went around and
apologized to the trees. I do not find such a gesture, apologizing to the
trees, laughable (34).
It is unclear why she is creating this garden. It is obviously not for the
admiration of others, nor for their validation. It appears to be more so a place of self-
realization where her ignorance is her bliss. In fact, Kincaid does not actually seem to be
creating a garden. Instead, she is taking the elements of a gardenlawn, soil, flowers,
and treesand creating something uniquely her own, an invention. This harkens Cols
suggestion that his readers take up the raw materials of the reading process and find,
that the process of reading becomes, first and foremost, the process of cultivating desire
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and joy, and of communicating these to others. Rather than there being a set way of
doing this thingwhether reading or gardeningboth Kincaid and Cols argue for
experimental play with the elements at hand. Cols uses the word play to denote
garden space feels to Kincaid limited only by her imagination. It represents to her a
space of pure potentiality. She writes of her irritation with her beginners mind,
Nothing works just the way I thought it would, nothing looks just the way I had
imagined it, and when it sometimes does look like what I had imagined (and this, thank
expresses a good deal of fret and frustration with her garden, she acknowledges it as a
positive feeling. How vexed I often am when I am in the garden, and how happy I am to
be so vexed (14). Kincaid approaches her garden with a nervous excitement, a blithe
What to do? is the refrain that repeats in the first chapter, Wisteria, about
some of the many challenges that crop up in her garden. She is confounded by a blue
wisteria that is blooming out of season, two months behind its stated blooming time. She
laments its droopy, weepy sadness in the middle of summer (12), because its
anachronistic flowers remind her of mourning the death of something that happened
long ago (12). Perhaps this is a first clue as to what is occurring in the gardena
wisteria that never bloomed (13). While such things might merely cause most people
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I found two long shoots coming from its rootstock one day while I was
weeding nearby and I cut them off with ferociousness, as if they had
actually done something wrong and so now deserved this. Will it ever
bloom, I ask myself, and what shall I do if it does not? Will I be happy
with its widish form, its abundant leafiness and the absence of flowers,
and will I then plant nearby something to go with all that? What should I
do? What will I do? (13).
Kincaids garden, like her beginners mind and her writing, seems to be tinged
with regrets and dissatisfaction, even a hint of anger, as we see in the above passage. She
is not allowing the garden to keep her in the present moment. As Cols says, she is
already forgetting the magic. She cannot stay in the present moment because, according
to Kincaid, the garden is inextricably linked to her memory of the past. She tries to
explain the connection, or the impossibility of understanding it. Oh, how I like the rush
has happened, so that any attempt to understand it will become like an unraveling of a
large piece of cloth that had been laid flat and framed and placed as a hanging on a wall
and, even then, expected to stand for something (24). This represents a new perspective
for Kincaid, one in which the interconnection of things figures strongly. Kincaid is up to
something in this garden, beyond the mere cultivation of plants. She is using the garden
relevant in light of the role that I suspect the garden is serving for her. In this passage,
It dawned on me that the garden I was making (and am still making and
will always be making) resembled a map of the Caribbean and the sea that
surrounds it, I did not tell this to the gardeners who had asked me to
explain the thing I was doing, or to explain what I was trying to do; I only
marveled at the way the garden is for me an exercise in memory, a way of
remembering my own immediate past, a way of getting to a past that is my
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own (the Caribbean Sea) and the past as it is indirectly related to me (the
conquest of Mexico and its surroundings) (8).
While this is quite revealing, it is still a bit enigmatic. It is not clear what Kincaid
means by exercise in memory. What exactly is this relationship between the garden
and her memories of the Caribbean? The garden seems to offer access to several kinds of
pasts, her own and those that are indirectly related to hers. But those that are indirectly
related are not her own; the garden gives her access not only to her own past, but to the
pasts of others.
Mining her statement for more clues, I note that her mention of Mexico
She explains that at the time that she began her garden she was reading a history book
about the conquest of Mexico, or New Spain, as it was then called, and I came upon the
flower called marigold and the flower called dahlia and the flower called zinnia, and after
that the garden was to me more than the garden as I used to think of it. After that the
garden was also something else (6). What else it was is not exactly clear. What is clear
is that Kincaid is affected by her growing awareness of the ways in which colonialism
has impacted gardening. She learns that plants that are present in abundance in North
American gardens were indigenous to Mexico; as such, their transplantation to the north
conquerors.
Somewhere down the line of her writing career, Kincaid shifted her allegiance
from the colonized to the colonizers. In My Garden (Book): she identifies herself as
being of the conquering class rather than the conquered class. She relays that she
has named one of her beds Hispaniola, which is the name the colonizer chose for the
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island, rather than the names that the colonized gave it upon gaining their independence.
She establishes that there is a hierarchy in place in her garden, one in which common
maples and undistinguished evergreens rank below the more exotic varieties that
Kincaid has gone into debt to cultivate. She has adopted the peculiar practice of calling
almost all of the plants by their Latin names. This is an intentional choice, as she says
that Latin came later, with resistance (6). She calls these their proper names, as
opposed to the ordinary or common names by which they are known. These labels
are a curious choice, coming from one who once lamented that the only language she had
garden. She doesnt seem to have the faintest clue what she is doing, although she has
purchased the best of the best for her garden. She even seems to be out of her economic
classthough she is of the alleged conquering class, she says more than once that her
gardening purchases have almost led her family to financial ruin. For example, she says
that on one winter day, the mail was mostly from my creditors (garden related), first
gently pleading that I pay them and then in the next paragraph proffering a threat of some
kind. But since there was no clear Dickensian reference (debtors prison), I wasnt at all
disturbed, and when I saw that along with the bills there were some catalogues, all
caution and sense of financial responsibility went away (61). At one point she explains
that she had two thousand dollars worth of heirloom bulbs to place in the ground when
the first snowfall hit (59). At another point she describes what happens when all thirty
On the day I returned from the Talbots [nursery], I met the plants I had
ordered from the White Flower Farm and Wayside nurseries. Those
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orders, along with the many plants I had just bought from the Talbots,
along with some other plants Jack Manix had grown for me, were lined up
in the garage, spilling out onto quite a bit of the driveway. The plants
were in small pots, large pots, trays of six packs. It was not a pretty sight.
When you look at a garden this is not what comes to mind. The children
complained, and underneath their worry was the milk-money problem: had
their mother spent all the money on plants, would they be hungry? They
see the garden as the thing that stands between them and true happiness:
my absolute attention (186-7).
Through the Mail, which details one such exorbitant bill ($225.00), an expenditure that
hardly bore fruit. This was such a disaster. Kincaid writes, Only the pear trees are
thriving now, and only in the last two years have they flowered (100). She gives her
beginners mind as the reason for her folly, projected onto the careless or cruel experts
It isnt easy to grow hard fruits in the garden in my climate and no one
told me so; not the catalogue, which succeeded in convincing me that their
nursery was situated in a climate even more severe than my own; not my
fellow gardeners, who were always serving me a delicious apple pie from
their exceptionally productive little orchardbut they had inherited the
little orchard from the farmer whose house they had bought (100).
All she inherited, she whines, are two apple trees, but their apples are not
acceptable. the apples always turn out distorted and crippled-looking, as if someone
had assaulted them on purpose when they were tiny; and on top of that, when I cook
them, I have to add a lot of sugar just to get a taste sensation of any kind (100). Despite
this experience, however, Kincaid finds that her imagination still leads her more than her
experience. She writes, It is six years since I sent this order, and after vowing never to
order fruit trees through the post again, I am looking at this very same nurserys
catalogue and I am making up an order. Oh, please, someone, Help Me! (100-101).
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It is hard to tell what exactly is at play here for Kincaid. Is she led by her blind
optimism and her vivid imagination about growing fruit, or is she simply addicted to
gardening? Sometimes Kincaid seems to lose her beginners mind by getting caught up
in the materialism of the garden. Rather than immersing herself in the beauty of the
garden itself, she focuses on the consumptive aspect of it. She includes several chapters
that do not discuss gardening, but shopping for plants. She describes several trips she
took to England, France, and China, seemingly for the sole purpose of looking at or for
flowers. She even writes mini-reviews of her favorite catalogues. This seems to have a
someone, Help Me!), the addiction coming between the person and her family members
(as she indicated in her introduction and the passage above), and obsessive thinking about
There is also an obvious elitism that rubs me the wrong way. Being of the
conquering class comes with perks that Kincaid doesnt hesitate to enumerate. She
mentions her nanny and her housekeeper, the men who do construction for her, the man
she enlists to grow starters of certain, difficult to cultivate plants, and the several other
men who do her garden dirty work for her. Furthermore, Kincaid seems quite convinced
that she can buy entry into the inner circle of rare and exotic botany, and perhaps in some
way she has. She drops the names of several well known botanists and gardeners, to
whom she has access because of her hefty and repeated purchases.
But perhaps I am losing the magic here. Instead of seeing what is new and
amazing about this garden, I too am focusing what I perceive as the negative aspects of
Kincaids projected self. I am stuck on her imperialist attitude and her self-positioning
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as a conqueror (because of her class) rather than as one of the conquered (because of her
race). I am falling back into old patterns, falling back on earlier judgments I held of
Kincaid. I will table this discussion of imperialist identity in Kincaids work and return
Kincaid is cultivating a garden that is truly unique, not because of its beauty, nor
even the rare flowers one would find there. Kincaids garden, I believe, is a literary one.
She has married her love of plants and her love of words such that her garden itself is an
unsightly eyesore, but the words that are associated with it are lovely. She gives the
Latin names for various plants, as well as their variety, skipping their commonly-used
name entirely. The flowers she is most attracted to have very European sounding names:
Reine des Violettes, Madame Isaac Pereire, Souvenir de la Malmaison. From garden
books to catalogues, Kincaid seems lured into a world of plant language and literature.
One of the main reasons for her many costly purchases is the bewitching effect that the
stories about the plants have on her. She describes several that she purchased from Dan
Hinkley: on one occasion [They were] bought from Dan Hinkley because I was so
taken by his description, and I remain open to seeing this lobelia just the way Dan
described it (22); on another occasion, she says of two clematis growing of Himalayan
origin in her yard, I cannot remember their names, only that he [Dan] was so
enthusiastic about their good qualities, and I cant remember those, only that I like them
very much and do not know any other gardeners who cultivate them (23).
The best catalogues of any kind, whether they are offering fruit,
vegetables, flowers, shrubs, trees, will not have any pictures; the best
nurserymen in this country will not sully their catalogues with lavish
pictures but will only now and then print some little illustration of a leaf, a
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bird perched on a limb of something the best nurserymen will
sometimes not give you any information on growing zones or instructions
regarding cultivation; the best nurserymen just assume that if you are
interested in what they have to offer (all of it so unusual, it is sometimes
not to be found yet in any plant encyclopedia) they will be chatty enough
about it; they will be full of anecdotes in regard to the season just past, but
they will not show you a picture and certainly will not have a little
passport-sized photograph of them grinning up at you (62).
The best nurserymen use only words to seduce the readers of their catalogues into
their world. Small wonder then that Kincaid has become so transfixed, and that she has
adopted this new identityas a writer, a master of words, she must feel that she has entry
into this very discursive world of plants. She attests that The best catalogues for reading
are not altogether unlike wonderful books; they plunge me deep into the world of the
garden, the growing of things advertised (because what are these descriptions of seeds
and plants but advertisements), and that feeling of being unable to tear myself away
comes over me, and there is that amazing feeling of love, and my imagination takes over
as I look out at the garden, which is blanket upon blanket of white, and see it filled with
the things described in the catalogue I am reading (88). Kincaids imagination is fueled
by what she reads in the winter months, catalogues that read like wonderful books.
The garden as literary invention has given Kincaid a chance to move beyond her
Caribbean past and into a space that gives her access to her memory without allowing the
memories to control, confine, or define her. Kincaid is in love with the words of the
In early September I picked and cut open a small, soft, yellow fleshed
watermelon, and I was suddenly reminded of the pictures of small girls I
used to see in a magazine for girls when I was a small girl myself: they
were always at a birthday party, and the color of their hair and of the
clothes they wore and the light in the room were all some variation of this
shade, the golden shade of the watermelon that I had grown. I would wish
then to be a girl like that, with hair like that, in a room like thatand the
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despair I felt then that such a thing would never be true is replaced now
with the satisfaction that such a thing would never be true. Those were the
most delicious melons I have ever grown (57).
It is obvious in this memory that Kincaid is talking about feeling envy of blond-
haired, white girls and a certain golden quality that was present in their clothes, the light
surrounding them, and, metaphorically speaking, their lives. But she has removed the
whiteness and replaced it with yellow (a frequent choice which I will discuss at length
later), which removes the emphasis on racial privilege. With this construction, she is able
to say I would wish then to be a girl like that, with hair like that, in a room like that
without saying outright I would wish then to be white. She transcends usual racial
definitions which enables her to not feel the outrage that was so much a part of her in A
Small Place. Instead, this golden hue, this racial privilege, has become something
consumable, the flesh of a golden watermelon. Her pleasure is apparent in her statement,
In the same way that Cols plays at reading and Kincaid plays at gardening, I am
able to play with Kincaid now tooreading and writing about her in ways that havent
been readily available to me before. I can marvel at her new inventiongardening not
for the sake of gardening, but gardening for the sake of reading and writing about
rather than what is actually there. But I appreciate being able to at least in part move past
my previous judgments of her and be open to something new. Even if the stodgy
haughtiness of her tone sometimes still throws me, I am able to actually listen to her now.
There are a few more possibilities open to us now, it seems. I can abandon my role as
impressionable younger sister just as she abandoned hers as young, sensual, passionate,
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Caribbean woman to become the privileged outsider. I can build a new story around
Kincaid and what she is doing, perhaps at least slightly more open to and aware of the
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CHAPTER 3
st
21 CENTURY AMERICAN NIHILISM
This chapter will explore why we so desperately need the kind of internal
space that beginners mind provides at this juncture in American history.
There are a lot of cultural beliefs that, I believe, need to be questioned
turned over and pragmatically examined for their usefulness. By
articulating some of the many changes that have occurred over the past
half century, I paint a picture of the America to serve as a mirror in which
to see ourselves. Using Jean Baudrillard and Cornel Wests portrayals of
America, I examine this moment in American history. I then examine the
beliefs that gird this cultural structure, explaining how the individual can
begin to harness and mindfully choose her own beliefs. The most
important way that we can question these cultural beliefs is by questioning
our individual beliefs. American culture is one of the many filters at play
in the construction of our individual belief systems. By seeing our
individual selves in the collective, the ways in which we too are part of the
problem rather than part of the solution, I hope we might be inspired to
change. I then explore in depth how Kincaid fit herself into this dominant
model of American life and ultimately has created a nihilist world in
which flowers become a paltry replacement for true connection with other
people. I point to her own belief system as having played a large part in
this choice of plant over human contact.
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Many of the notions which we would usually regard as the basic givens
of our existence (including our gender identity, our individual selfhood,
and the notion of literature itself) are actually fluid and unstable things,
rather than fixed and reliable essences. Instead of being solidly there in
the real world of fact and experience, they are socially constructed, that
is, dependent on social and political forces and on shifting ways of seeing
and thinking. In philosophical terms, all these are contingent categories
(denoting a status which is temporary, provisional, circumstance
dependent) rather than absolute ones (that is, fixed, immutable, etc.).
Hence, no overarching fixed truths can ever be established.
-Peter Barry
One thing we can be sure of, as Bob Dylan sang, is that the times, they are a
changin. Yet the old adage goes, the more things change, the more they stay the
same. Changing with the times seems inevitable, yet at the same time it is a personal
choice whether we will go along willingly, shuffle our feet, or dig in our heels in
Change seems to electrify the air, in our individual lives and in the world For most of
us going through change, fear pounds on our door. Yet this discomfort brings an
invitation to awaken our passion and aliveness as never before. Something larger wants
to express itself in our lives. Pain often nudges our growth or illuminates where we have
been holding back our true selves. Most of us seem to need a pinch of desperation to
awaken our honesty and inspiration. As poet David Whyte says, Absent the edge, we
drown in numbness (58). Kieves sees change as a positive thing because it opens up
opportunities for personal growth. Many of us never answer the door of fear, and the
result is a dulling of our passion and aliveness. The more times we ignore the knocking,
the duller our lives seem to get as we drown in numbness. Change leaves many of us
would almost rather stay in a bad situation than change and face the unknown. Stephen
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Levine comments similarly on change, also seeing it as an opportunity. Can we think of
any pain in our life that was not caused by change? But when we deeply experience this
flux we dont recoil in fear of what might be coming but rather begin to open to how
things are. We dont get lost in fatalistic imaginings or nothing matters nihilism, but
boundaries and institutions often feel artificial, where the lines drawn seem to connect
things at least as much as they divide them. It all depends on our perspective. We can
the erosion and evolution of social categories, the transformative power of the internet
but the fact remains that, for many, life and identity exceed the parameters of easy
change hurled upon us left and right over the last half century. Yet it sometimes doesn't
look as if things are changing for the better. It seems obvious at this point that many of
our cultures old, failsafe beliefs and assumptions are no longer working, at least not for
the majority of us. We can see this evidenced in the decrease in health and happiness of
those around us and ourselves, the dissolution of intimacy between partners, within
families, and in communities, and the disillusionment of many with the way things are.
We have learned as a nation that some of the beliefs we had taken for granted are no
longer true.
For one, the assumption that if you work hard and play by the rules, you will
succeed has proven itself false. A small portion of the nation's people control a majority
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psychological feudal system fueled by large corporations. Our failure to achieve and live
the American dream is construed as our own fault rather than a failure of the system
itself. The belief is that whatever you desirewealth, success, fame, love, or a great
bodyis there for the taking. This does not jibe with the real-life experiences of most,
however. For many, life does not feel like an endless string of opportunity for growth
and achievement, and the notion that anything is possible rings false.
The assumption that you are safe at home has also proven untrue. Instead, it
often feels like we are coming home to a second job, fraught with responsibilities,
conflicting personalities, and usually under (re)paid (in kindness, appreciation, or shared
good times) labor. The dramas of the family can feel just as unsafe and unhealthy as any
that might happen outside the home. Home may be where the heart is, but at times it is
where the heartache is as well. For many, home has become representative of failures,
whether that failure takes the form of intimacy, sex, status, fulfillment, respect, love, or
Our assumptions about gender and sex have certainly been shaken up over the last
dramatically, such that we have come to see women hold top positions in many fields.
This has led to a dramatic expansion of gender roles, amending the categories associated
with female and the feminine, as well as the male and the masculine. Gender roles for
both sexes have slackened in many ways (though perhaps they have become more rigid in
others). These changes have impacted sex quite profoundly. A puritanical shame and
hush-hush surrounding sex has remained part of our national identity, but its shadow
selfthe porn star as pop icon (Pamela Anderson, Paris Hilton, Kim Kardashian)is
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widely viewed by young women today as an acceptable vehicle into the public limelight.
Feminist values, coupled with self-help aisles at Borders and the normalization of porn in
mainstream culture, have left no stone unturned in terms of exploring sex as a practice, as
a communication tool, and even as an instrument of power. Beyond Our Bodies, Our
Selves and Revolution from Within, women's exploration of their sexuality has grown to
include their partner in the discovery, as well as solo time. These days, women might
more readily explore The Joy of Sex than The Joy of Cooking.
In the academy in particular, assumptions about gender and sex have evolved
dramatically. Gender was determined, along with race, to be socially constructed much
mandated the birth of intersectionality as a method for navigating and negotiating the
sexuality, age, etc. (Crenshaw 1995). Scholars also realized the importance of
narrative, and feminist ideology have emerged and been found useful in myriad
disciplines. Women have become a perfectly acceptable subject of study, the personal
has taken its place as political, and the larger fight for the inclusion of women in the
canon and the workplace has generally ceased, the battle won.
Assumptions too about race have evolved both within the academy and in
mainstream culture. While Martin Luther King Jr.'s inspiring dream has not yet been
fully realized, we can concede that bits and pieces of it do occur far more often now than
previously, moments where we can see through and beyond the lens of race, as if it really
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didn't signify much of anything anymore. If we choose to view the occupation of
progress toward racial equality, we have achieved that. But it is difficult to overlook the
realities of poor education (often caused by allegedly race-neutral city zoning laws) and
limited opportunities (if only limited by one's education or lack thereof) that pervade
African-Americans who make it to the top of their given field are seen as the cream of
the crop, the rare exception (perhaps W.E.B. DuBois' prophetic talented tenth?),
having risen in stature assumedly because of their perceived merit and their ability to
transcend and/or manipulate the class implications often conflated with race. The rest of
us black folk, the lore seems to imply, simply do not have what it takes to succeed. In
contemporary American culture, we have witnessed dramatic success for a select few
people of color, with the vast majority still struggling from within the invisible birdcage
of interlocking oppressions. Black Americans are left to navigate schools, jobs, and their
related social interactions with this subtext of either being exceptional or not having what
it takes to succeed. This leaves us at the mercy of a positive (or at least neutral) judgment
from those controlling the keys to important gateways of opportunities and advancement,
for it is these individuals who confer power and access. The debilitating result for many
is failurefailure to transcend race, class, and educational difference, but also failure to
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succeed, failure to seduce the gatekeepers and rise to the top, failure to live our dreams
assumption about Blacks, namely, that a few of them are all right. The rest, it seems,
remain in the primitive savagery and presumed inferiority of the Jim Crow era. The
overall portrayal of Black men as violent, criminal, and sexually potent still shapes our
nation's beliefs, and in doing so creates a mold of black masculinity that is difficult to
break. While women have benefit from the loosening of gender roles, men of all races
seem to still be at the mercy of very rigid strictures regarding masculinity. For Black
men, however, this is particularly devastating, because the limited range of available
expressions of masculinity are often seen as directives given from within a multi-
system, the police and judicial systems, the media, and popular culture. All of these
Many of the caricatured assumptions about Black women still exist as well. The
sexualized Jezebel caricature of Black women is still apparent in popular culture, shaking
her ass (but watching herself) in music videos. She has also crossed over to reality TV,
where the sexy, angry, Black bitch is reproduced through the skillful storytelling the
editors of those shows do, leaving any deeper images of Black femininity on the cutting
room floor. The asexual/ sexual mammy still lurks in the homes of wealthy white
Kincaid wasa young Caribbean woman living with and caring for an affluent family.
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A walk around any of the more affluent neighborhoods in New York City on a nice
afternoon will reveal many brown women pushing white children in strollers. But there
are more metaphorical ways that this caricature is also evoked. For example, the idea of
Condaleeza Rice in bed with George W. Bush intrigued Americans both politically and
physically for a time. Many were more than willing to impose a traditional silhouette of
interracial interaction over their relationship, rendering her his beloved mammy, a
caregiver taking care of him and his family in the Big/White House, offering him her
body in illicit sex, all the while feigning a wholesome devotion devoid of sexual longing.
Black men of a certain stature have at times felt entitled to the same privileges of care
and sexual availability from the Black women on their staff or in their workplace.
America was shocked by the words and actions of Clarence Thomas toward Anita Hill.
But more shocking were the ways in which Thomas was defended by empathetic men.
Fifteen years later, Anucha Browne Sanders brings similar charges against Isaiah
Thomas, head coach of the New York Knicks. While titillating, the story did little to
raise awareness of or interest in the larger underlying issues at stake. One can only
imagine how many women in less prominent positions face similar degradation every
day.
In the face of such sad reiterations of stereotypical caricature, however, I can also
see and appreciate the widened variety of options for self expression available for
African-American women over the past few decades. A very small, but still significant
example of this is Black hair. Black women now have a wide variety of hairstyles
available to us and considered acceptable for the workplace, from weaves to braids to
natural styles like dreads and afros to chemical straighteners like relaxers. This may,
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however, only be indicative of the co-opting of Black women into the corporate machine
as a target for consumption rather than actual transcendence, for with more diverse Black
hair-styles came more Black hair-care products. Even at my tender age, I can remember
when major chain drug stores didnt carry any products for Black hair, even if they were
in the middle of a Black neighborhood. But, as Lisa Respers France acknowledges, Far
from being superficial, black hair and its care goes well beyond the multibillion-dollar
industry it has become and is deeply rooted in African-American identity and culture
(CNN). One visit to a Black hair show and one must attest that creativity and
women's hair and culture, both of which no longer have much interest in emulating the
constructions of femininity of and for white women. The hair shows, the church hat
culture of African American women, and the many dread and natural hair websites and
blogs were thriving even while white America was convinced that The Rachel was the
integrating itself quite thoroughly into our day-to-day lives, and connecting us all in new
and important ways. There really do seem to be only six degrees of separation left, from
Kevin Bacon or anyone else. We can talk, tweet, text, email, skype, or send photos or
mp3s to distant corners of the planet. I can evite everyone to the (digital) revolution,
though the invitation might end up in a spam folder. Many people have made room in
their life for online social networking on MySpace and Facebook (which a friend of mine
suggested they consolidate into a time-saving combo of MyFace, though I might prefer
Spacebook). Technology itself even seems to be moving faster, collapsing the time it
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took to invent and proliferate the cellular phone, the digital calendar/Palm Pilot, caller ID,
the digital camera, the hand-held gaming system, the internet, the GPS system, YouTube,
and the iPod into the blink-of-an-eye combination of all of them in the iPhone and similar
devices. We can now download movies directly to our television, computer, mp3 player,
or phone, which is easier than getting movies in our mailbox from Netflix, which was
easier than going to the local Blockbuster, which has only been around since the middle
of the 80's, anyway, before which we had to actually go to a movie theater to see a film.
In a time when technology makes us instantly accessible to others, and makes so much
The past 25 years witnessed small but cumulatively significant steps toward the
racial integration of the United States, giant leaps in medicine and technology, the birth
(and death?) of the MTV generation (with subsequent marketing strategies), and the
have seen the birth and evolution of reality TV, the death of what at least gave the
intellectual and liberal circlesaway from Communism and away from the communal.
These days, community and group-consciousness seem more often to be mistrusted than
idealized. But this is met by the strong counter-force of fundamentalist Christians (as
the dress to the dreams of Americans. Even counter-cultures seem commodified these
days. You can get fake Birkenstocks at Walmart and blue hair dye at CVS.
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Yes, times have changed, but it often does not feel for the better.
in part from the proliferation of material goods in our lives. Meaning here might be seen
become more aware of them as connectors between us and others. It comes from a
heightened awareness of the object itself, and a deeper relationship with that object.
Objects can simply be things that populate our world, or they can connect us to our
family, culture, nation, or planet. A sweater given to a man by his late grandmother
might have more value to him than one made of the finest cashmere. A fish that a boy
caught himself might taste that much more delicious. A woman might be more dismayed
at losing her original wedding band than had she lost a more expensive ring. These
things are valuable because they have a meaning imparted by the individual that stretches
models of the good life principally in terms of conspicuous consumption and hedonistic
anything that we can swipe a card to purchase. "I shop, therefore I am" is more self-
evident these days than the Cartesian logic it parodies. 43% of American families spend
more than they earn (MSN Money). Many people want for nothing, yet still want more
thingsor at least different, more expensive things. The more expensive the thing, the
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better it is assumed to be. There is a widely held belief that there is a product that will
create a better life and-- more explicitly-- that money creates real and lasting happiness.
corporate culture into all walks of life. This combination of the passionate, not at all
trivial pursuit of material items for consumption, paired with the incorporation and
trademarking of our daily lives, is partially responsible for everything from the over-
medicalizing and over-medicating of American people (courtesy of Pfizer and Eli Lilly)
to the erosion of the American political culture (thanks to the generous donations of
lobbyists for corporate interests). Our practices around consumption serve to reinforce
the idea that we are not connected to others, that we are isolated. Material items are used
unlimited access with no responsibility. But what to make of this freedom- is it freedom
representative only of oneself? Why does our society privilege conformity, then
Our consumptive practices with food are among the most disturbing. It has gotten
such that activities are closely associated with the foods they offer uspopcorn at
movies, hot dogs at baseball games, cotton candy at carnivals, to name a few. We as a
nation are so obsessed with consumption that one of our largest industries is diet and
health-related productswe even consume things that are supposed to either block,
inhibit, or negate our consumption! This type of food consumption has led to health
problems for many. Our diet often does little to offer us balanced nutrition through
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reasonable quantities of food, nor does it stabilize our energy or mood. Movies like
American cuisine.
Yet sometimes it is hard to believe that there are other possibilities available to us
in any given moment. With our food traveling an average of 1500 miles before it reaches
our plates, Americans are often so far removed from the production of the goods we
consume that it feels virtually impossible to instill in that consumption some type of
meaning. We often have no idea where our clothes are made, where our strawberries are
grown, where our food is prepared or packaged. We dont know who makes our clothes,
who picks our strawberries, who prepares and packages our food. We have no clue what
language they speak, if they are treated kindly, whether or not they go to bed hungry or
fed.
Our society seems to be plagued at this juncture with the nihilism that Cornel
The meaninglessness that West sees in American culture stems from the prosaic
repetition, the day in-day out, the over and over, the same old thing. In other words, we
have cultivated practices that do little to enhance our happiness, health, or well-being.
Without the change that Kieves described earlier, we drown in the numbness of same old-
same old. This type of repetition creates a feeling of meaninglessness because we are not
seeing the change implicit in each moment, the power, nor the beauty. We are not seeing
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things as they are. We frequently fix something or someone with a label (ugly/ fun/
boring/ beautiful) and do not bother to notice and observe changes in that thing or person
from moment to moment over time. Many American rituals are secular, empty
repetitions that do little more than wear grooves into our brains. We often mistake the
rituals for the meaning itselfmany see holidays such as Valentines Day or Christmas
not as opportunities to show our loved ones how we feel or celebrate the birth of Christ,
but as mandatory shopping times. This meaninglessness is not often discussed as such,
The hopelessness comes from not knowing how to change our situation(s), not
feeling in control. Although we as Americans have more freedom than many peoples on
the planet right now, many of us dont feel free. We feel constrained by obligations
many financial, others professional, some emotional to stay the same course, to not
change, to not explore other aspects of who we are. Our culture romanticizes love and
success, which sends most young people scrambling after both. It is only once the love is
lived, complete with its moments of loneliness and hurt, resentment and boredom, or the
success is achieved, complete with its moments of competition and conniving, insincerity
and insecurity, that we notice that we never got to see what happily ever after actually
looks like. Many of us want more and better, but we cant seem to get it.
not feeling connected to/interconnected with everything around us. In spite of the
technological ease with which we can connect, our thoughts and choices frequently leave
us feeling very isolated and alone, longing for human connection. The frightening result
is a numbing detachment from others and a self-destructive disposition toward the world.
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Life without meaning, hope and love breeds a cold-hearted, mean-spirited outlook that
This is an interesting point that West makesin American culture right now, the
individuals needs are placed above those of the community. While this is true, the
individuals deeper needs are fulfilled only with the approval of the community. The
individual lives in fear of the group, a fear that is taught through the culture, rather than
The most powerful and poignant work ever written about America (45)describes the
insidious way that our culture threatens our individualism. "Under the private culture
monopoly it is a fact that 'tyranny leaves the body free and directs its attack at the soul.
The ruler no longer says: You must think as I do or die. He says: You are free not to think
as I do; your life, your property, everything shall remain yours, but from this day on you
are a stranger among us'" (133). By attacking our souls, this brand of tyranny has left us a
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nation of isolated individuals who fear expressing our individuality, a fear used against us
settle for exploring the limited number of combinations and permutations of what is seen
as acceptable within these cultural confines. Our consumption, then, becomes a method
of differentiation, a key component in our identity. Work becomes a necessary evil for
sustaining one's life-style, money becomes the vehicle through which one may construct
an image. West feels that the dogma of free-market fundamentalism redefines the terms
of what we should be striving for in life, glamorizing material gain, narcissistic pleasure,
shoulda dictate from outside of our selfthat takes away our freedom. Likewise, it
of our power to be Self-defined. We are told that we are free, then goaded into
American lives are now seen in terms of numbers, demographics, and dollar
signs. Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno assert that "the universal criterion of merit
this idea can be applied to products of culture (movies, for instance, where the amount
spent on making the movie is meant to indicate its merit to moviegoers, and its gross at
the box office is intended to indicate its value as art), as well as people as products of
culture (the amount of money spent on one's education, for instance, coded in the name-
brand of the school, is meant to indicate one's merit to prospective employers and ones
entry into a fraternal bond with other graduates of the school already in the workforce).
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It becomes easy to see what Americans view as important and what we view as
We prefer to see ourselves as being the controller rather than the controlled when
Though we still pay lip service to the old myth that what is good for the
market is good for everybody, as a matter of fact the development of
new products and the marketing of commodities has really little or
nothing to do with mans real good and his real needs. The aim is not the
good of man but higher profits. Instead of production being for the sake
of man, which, while proclaiming its humanism and pretending indeed
to glorify man as never before, is really a systematic and almost cynical
affront to mans humanity. Man is a consumer who exists in order to
keep business going by consuming its products whether he wants them
or not, needs them or not, likes them or not. But in order to fulfill his
role he must come to believe it. Hence his role as consumer takes the
place of his identity (if any). He is then reduced to a state of permanent
nonentity and tutelage in which his more or less abstract presence in
society is tolerated only if he conforms, remains a smoothly functioning
automaton, an uncomplaining and anonymous element in the great
reality of the market (31).
How did our consumption become our identity? How did we get to this point
where lives can be appraised? Nowadays it feels as if we can get an estimate on our self-
worth by plugging some numbers (SAT scores, GPA's, net worth, zip code, age, weight,
clothing size, credit rating) into some arbitrary and unarticulated formula. Do these
numbers give meaning to life? Horkheimer and Adorno claim that numbers do give a
certain meaning, in that they help group people into markets. "Everybody must behave
(as if spontaneously) in accordance with his previously determined and indexed level,
and choose the category of mass product turned out for his type" (123). Our numbers
(clothing size, age, income, zip code) help determine what type of consumer we will be
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and what type of lives we will lead. This numbers game is symptomatic of the (false)
thought.
America, land of the (buy one, get one) free, home of the brave (consumer).
America is shockingly beautiful and poetic in its splendor, opportunity, and power. But
contemporary American culture has come to a grotesque point that flouts even the best of
the flawed ideals of its founding fathers. In his book America, postmodernist scholar
Jean Baudrillard shares his caustic perspective of American hyperreality, gleaned from a
coast-to-coast road trip through the deserts and cities of the United States. Beaudrillard
portrays America similarly to West, devoid of meaning, hope and love (a result perhaps,
This primary, visceral, unbounded vitality sounds to me like spirituality (that is,
a concept of spirit, life, or energy), but one that springs from sex and bodies, work,
and buying and selling. This vitality Baudrillard describes is uprooted, a belief system
lacking in an understanding of the connections between us all, other than in terms of the
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connections of sex and bodies and buying and selling. Thus, Americans become
capitalism has become vital. In his essay What is Primitivism? John Fleiss gives a
definition of primitivism that seems more relevant to this century than the Enlightenment
era in which it was penned. Perhaps the easiest way to understand primitivism is as a
technology that goes far enough not to be subsumed by it (Primitivism). One can see
scientific, postmodern disconnect and discomfort brought about by our unique history
and circumstance. Our primitive god is money, our primitive religion is science, and our
used to illustrate and back his claim that the human experience is a simulation of reality
rather than reality itself. According to him, modern society has replaced reality and
meaning with symbols and signs, and it has become so reliant on simulacra that it has lost
contact with the real world on which the simulacra are based. America is hyperreal in
Baudrillards eyes because it has blurred the line between mass media and real life,
fiction and reality. In an essay which examines the effects of technology and capitalism
Horkheimer and Adorno say that "real life is becoming indistinguishable from the
movies" (126). Baudrillard claims that "in America cinema is true because it is the whole
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of space, the whole way of life that are cinematic. The break between the two, the
abstraction which we deplore, does not exist: life is cinema" (101). Americans want to
solve all their problems, save the day, win the race, get the girl/boy, and be the casually
affable center of attentionjust like the plastic stars of the formulaic movies they know
however, according to Baudrillard. "What develops around the video or stereo culture is
which immediately hooks up like with like, and, in so doing, emphasizes their surface
Yet his exterior subjectivity does not detract from his sad but valid commentary on
because it is a utopia which has behaved from the very beginning as though it were
already achieved. Everything here is real and pragmatic, and yet it is all the stuff of
dreams too (28). Cornel Wests depiction of America in mirrors Beaudrillards some
respects. Yet West attributes Americas paradox not to postmodernism, but to the
impossibility of its original dream- to build a free nation on the backs of the unfree. West
writes:
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Perhaps Baudrillards hyperreal America is a result at least in part of Americas
self-assured utopic vision of itself being marred by the hypocrisy of its actions toward
who were also slaveholders, like George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, he asserts:
The most painful truth in the making of Americaa truth that shatters
all pretensions to innocence and undercuts all efforts of denialis that
the enslavement of Africans and the imperial expansion over indigenous
peoples and their lands were undeniable preconditions for the possibility
of American democracy. There could be no such thing as an experiment
in American democracy without these racist and imperial foundations
(45, Wests emphasis).
White America was asserting its utopian nature at the same time that it was
committing genocide against the indigenous peoples and enslaving Africans. It was
declaring its freedom at the same time that it was robbing others of their freedom. This
practice has extended over time into our foreign policy, forcing our growth and profit at
the expense of others. West reminds us that America truly has become an empirea
military giant, a financial haven, a political and cultural colossus in the world. The U.S.
military budget accounts for over 40 percent of the worlds total military spending. It is
six times the size of the military spending of the number two nation (Russia) and more
than that of the next twenty-three nations combined. (59) Everything and everyone
American is huge, literally and figuratively, taking up more space, requiring more
attention, hogging what is available. We are the free world, but we are as reckless with
society barraged by signifiers and messages, all centering around the mighty dollar which
has self-realized into the "God" in whom "we trust." He concludes plainly, "This country
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is without hope," (123) but I think that meaning is what is missing from many lives in
America. The Last Poets sang, "Put more meaning into everything you do. More
meaning into loving, eating and living and there will be more meaning in you, which
means everything!" I believe that our individual actions and choices can impact the
greater whole. Even seemingly small choiceslike making buying locally grown
This country is not without hope. It is has been, perhaps, in some respects,
without meaning... and direction... and dignity. "Dignity is as compelling a human need
as food or sex, and yet here is a society which casts the mass of its people in limbo, never
satisfying their hunger for dignity, nor yet so explicitly depriving them that the task of
proving dignity seems an unreasonable burden, and revolt against the society the only
reasonable alternative" (Sennett & Cobb 191). In constantly looking outside ourselves
for satisfaction, we are less able to appreciate the abundance and meaning that already
exists. But there are possible meanings and directions that we might adopt and pursue as
responsibly, with love, dignity, spirituality, acceptance, community and peace at the
forefront of our existences. Rather than suffering the maelstrom of meaninglessness that
postmodernism thinks into being, we can each choose to impart meaning. Whether we
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THE ISSUE OF BELIEFS
Rather than pointing outside ourselves at what is wrong, we can begin to make peace
chapter on beginners mind. We can begin to see how our culture and our own individual
beliefs are connected. As Krishnamurti remarks, What we must realize is that we are not
only conditioned by environment, but that we are the environmentwe are not
something apart from it. Our thoughts and responses are conditioned by values which
society, of which we are a part, has imposed on us (56-7). Gloria Karpinski puts it thus
consciousness, expressed through the body, emotions, and mind, is in constant process
with our many environmentsthe immediate ones, the remembered ones, and the ones
we fantasize (84). The repercussions of this are significant, for what we can be and do
is limited (more often than not) by our beliefs and their corresponding actions. Karpinski
writes in Where Two Worlds Touch: Spiritual Rites of Passage, Whatever you believe is
truefor you. We do not act outside our perception of reality. Whatever shape and
structure our belief system takes on any subject is our form. Our forms allow us to
express ourselves within the parameters of whatever we perceive ourselves to be. Good,
believe them (73). By examining our beliefs, we can see more clearly the ways in which
we are complicit with our cultures mors and practices. We can get to know the ways in
which we have been seduced or coerced into participation and compliance with societal
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norms. We are then better able to pragmatically choose for ourselves if these endorsed
beliefs and practices our actually serving us. Intimately understanding our beliefs takes
away their power over us, freeing up space in which we can choose our beliefs with
awareness. In this section I try to illuminate how beliefs function so that we might have
Richard Gillett quips that It is more work to maintain a belief than a car (53).
We dont notice the work that we are doing, however, because it is mostly automatic and
unconscious. Gillett breaks down the things that we do in order to keep our precious
beliefs intact. He describes how we make life choices that both reflect and confirm our
beliefs about ourselves and our beliefs about others. He contends, To some extent we
choose situations and people that fit our perceptions (53). He gives two examples, A
woman who believes that change is dangerous will choose secure relationships and a
secure working situation so that she does not have to test out change. A man who
believes he is stupid will choose manual work or repetitive mental work requiring little
creativity or initiativein this way he never develops his mind and is able to retain his
belief (53). These people he describes never test the validity of their beliefs. Instead,
they choose actions and situations that are based upon their beliefs and help maintain
them.
For example, Im sure we all know (or perhaps are) someone who is always the
victim in every story told. Even in stories where the person seems to come out
triumphant, s/he insists that s/he was somehow victimized. Energy medicine pioneer and
author Caroline Myss has this to say about the origins of victimhood:
Being a Victim is a common fear. The Victim archetype may manifest the
first time you dont get what you want or need; are abused by a parent,
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playmate, sibling, or teacher; or are accused of or punished for something
you didnt do. You may suppress your outrage at the injustice if the
victimizer is bigger and more powerful than you. But at a certain point
you discover a perverse advantage to being the victim (116).
This advantage is the reason that the victim often clings to and insists upon that
identity. S/he goes to great lengths to maintain the role, filtering out experiences and
situations that contradict his/her belief in his/her victimhood. S/he might remember the
same situation differently than others who were present. S/he takes the truth and
Leadership, a follow-up book to his wildly popular Seven Habits of Highly Effective
People. He places victimhood at the low end of a spectrum measuring effectiveness, with
writes:
Viewing victimhood in this way acknowledges that while there may be real or
imagined limitations existing in the world, we cannot know for sure how much the world
is actually oppressing us until we stop oppressing ourselves. For surely we can name at
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least a few people who have come from circumstances far worse (in our judgment) than
our own and have somehow soared far higher than we ever imagined possible for
ourselves. We can attribute it to genius or luck, if that serves us. But it is also possible to
see these people as able to transcend and transgress the limits enforced by others in order
to realize the potential within themselves by simply refusing to believe what the world
This type of belief maintenance is done not just with victims but with a variety of
identity roles. We look around for evidence that supports our beliefs, and look right past
any information that doesnt, or even contradicts them. We see, by and large, what we
want to see. Thus does a belief become a self-fulfilling prophecy. While the phrase
simply the way in which our pre-existing thought causes us to treat others as if our
thought were already true. He contends that it is actually our thoughts and actions that
call forth in the other the very behavior or quality we were guarding ourselves against.
Although we do not notice our own role in bringing our self-fulfilling prophesies
to fruition, Gillett argues that we mold, select from, exaggerate, or distort the past to
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make it support our current belief. The process is so automatic, however, that we do not
Gillett explains, Is the last ditch attempt, when all else has failed, to make the aberrant
world fit the confines of a belief system (59). We use the imagined future to support our
stance, often giving reasons why itll never work or itll never happen. We use our
We often assume our reality will remain the same into perpetuity. The imagined result,
Gillett maintains, directly impacts what we believe is possible in the present. If I believe
I am never going to get out of debt, I will not bother to attempt to try by changing my
spending habits. If I believe I am never going to lose weight, I will feel like it doesnt
really matter if I eat this donut now. This keeps us from changing, keeps us stuck in the
same cycles.
Our beliefs also impact the future by filtering the past. Ekhart Tolle, a prominent
spiritual teacher explains how the past functions to limit beliefs in the present. He refers
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Tolle explains an important force at play in all of these manipulations, One of
the most basic mind structures through which the ego comes into existence is
identification. The word identification is derived from the Latin word idem, meaning
same and facere, which means to make. So when I identify with something, I make it
the same. The same as what? The same as I. I endow it with a sense of self, and so it
becomes part of my identity (35). This identification is ultimately what causes our
suffering when we are painfully reminded that we are not the thing we have convinced
ourselves that we are. Whatever the identification, whether with a material thing like a
car or a house, or with a title or occupation, or with a role such as mother or doctor, or an
emotional state like grief or depression, or with ones race or gender, religion or sexual
make the thing the same as us. The deep identification with a label or role causes the
person to consistently interpret whatever content s/he is given such that it fits into the
pre-determined structure that is in keeping with his beliefs about himself. We become in
our mind these things that are really little more than practices that we have chosen.
Tolle explains, "What kind of things you identify with will vary from person to
person according to age, gender, income, social class, fashion, the surrounding culture,
and so on. What you identify with is all to do with content; whereas, the unconscious
compulsion to identify is structural (36). This idea of content as separate and apart from
structure is a useful one. It shows the mechanisms at work so that a victim, for example,
can maintain the structure of his victimhood while changing the content to suit the
occasion. So closely identified is the victim with his victimhood that he often does not
see the structure, only the content, which in his mind justifies or vindicates his thoughts
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or actions. It is by examining the structurethe way in which the victim seeks out
render himself the victim, or only notices situations that confirm his victimhoodthat the
victim can stop looking at the content and start looking at himself. Victimhood is a locus
of power. There is tremendous power in articulating what is not possible, what I can't do,
what is not available to me. Many of the prisons in life are self constructed, based upon
what Gillett calls the ego advantage. This refers to the way that with great dexterity
of mind, any belief, however narrow, can be converted into a personal superiority (44).
Gillett contends that we are able to take our weaknesses and turn themin our own
negative, then views the very same quality in ourselves as positive. We do this by sugar-
coating the trait linguistically and making it in line with our beliefs about what is
Take the situation of the man who has difficulty in crying or being tender:
It is usually much easier for him to think to himself Im a man; Im not
weak; Im strong; I can take it, than it is for him to admit his own
difficulty with, or even disapproval of, tenderness. It is easier to say: I
know whats best for me than to admit you are frightened of change
because you have an old belief that change is dangerous. It is easier to
consider I am above money or money is dirty than to face the
possibility that you cannot successfully sell goods because you do not
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really believe you are good enough. Quite often underlying beliefs are
lightly hidden beneath a sugar-coating of ego, which makes the belief
palatable (44).
Thus, our inability to keep a job is seen in ourselves as free spiritedness, our
picky or not settling. We find ways to spin our misdeeds into virtues in our own
minds. We then judge others who do not share our limited belief. As Gillett describes,
The man who has difficulty being tender calls the man who weeps soft. The woman
who is frightened of change calls the person who changes freely inconsistent or
untrustworthy. The man who cannot sell his product thinks of the successful
Another advantage to limiting beliefs that Gillett points out is the illusion of
safety that accompanies them. Gillett explains, As long as we stay within the confines of
our belief systems, we are afforded a feeling of security. There is no need for the anxiety
of uncertainty because any new input will be rejected before it is effective, or else
distorted to fit the parameters of our beliefs (47). Gillett contends that we reject new
with our pre-set beliefs. Gillett asserts that this is true even when the beliefs create
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experiences that fit with a limited belief, and this continues until we learn
to change the belief (47).
The predictability of the outcome makes the situations feel comfortable and
familiar. We know the outcome before we even get to the end, mainly because we are
helping create it. When it arrives, we think I knew this would happen! Whether this
feeling abandoned by a parent, our limiting beliefs help bring it to fruition. Gillett
First, our interpretation and perception of events are distorted to fit into
our system of belief. If you dont like somebody, for example, they look
uglier and your interpretation of their motives is tainted with suspicion.
Secondly, we selectively remember and perceive events that fit our beliefs,
and selectively forget and ignore events that do not fit. If you think the
world is an awful place, you will notice and focus on the one dead leaf in a
bunch of beautiful flowers. Thirdly, we make life choices that fit our
belief. For example, if you are a woman who believes men are brutes,
you will have a tendency to marry brutes. If you are a man who believes
women are manipulative, you will tend to choose manipulative women.
Fourthly, implicit in every belief is a self-fulfilling prophecy. I have
always found that there is a rational explanation how a belief gets
translated into reality (51).
Holding limiting beliefs ultimately makes us less responsible for the outcomes in
our lives. As Gillett says, it exonerates us from action (49). Why bother when we
know it wont work out anyway? I have had many people tell me what they want to do,
and when I give them encouragement and support, they start their list of reasons why they
cant do it. Most of these are projections, my husband would never let me go back to
events, the last time I started working out I pulled a muscle, or even associations with
unrelated information, like my parents are divorced, so Im not sure Im cut out for
marriage. We dont have to try, dont have to challenge ourselves. We dont have to do
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anything really. And we dont. We dream of greatness while clinging to our safe,
limited versions of what we are and what we are capable of. We determine what causes
us pleasure and what causes us displeasure, and we try to live such that we only
encounter and experience the pleasurable things. While it is arguable that these likes and
dislikes are simply judgments that prevent us from being fully present and accepting what
is, I hardly expect any of us to rush out and order a plate of our least favorite food. It is
perhaps even instinctual that we endeavor to create a safe and comfortable environment
for ourselves, as relatively vulnerable creatures that protect ourselves mostly with our
minds. But, over time, for many of us, our preference of safety and comfort takes over
and becomes rigid. We know what we like and were not too interested in
Gillett argues that even our body language and facial expressions help to attract
the situations that fit our beliefs. He contends that We are all equipped with an
genuineness (59). We communicate our beliefs about ourselves with our bodies as well
as our minds. A woman with wide-open eyes, slightly caved-in chest, raised shoulders,
and shaking hands is proclaiming through her patterns of muscular tension and the stance
of her body: Im scaredprotect me. This message acts as an aphrodisiac on all those
men who believe I am the great protector. Like moths drawn to a light, these men will
pursue her one after another (54). Our body is informed by our beliefs and many of our
Above and beyond all the ways that we maintain our beliefs previously described,
we do one very important and insidious thing: we manufacture feelings that support our
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beliefs. While we often rely on our feelings and often take them as truth, Gillet argues
that Many feelings are no more than emotional representations of the restrictions of the
mind (61). In the example of racial prejudice, A person has to have the prejudicethe
misinterpretationbefore he or she can feel the hate. Feelings are easily manufactured
from attitudes (61). We often use our feelings to validate our beliefs, ignoring the ways
While we may (or may) not be able to control the events that occur in our lives, it
is inarguable that we can control our responses and reactions to them. What might be the
moment to throw in the towel for most is the moment for a few others to try harder with
renewed conviction. What might be life ending for some is life-beginning for a few
others. It all depends on our own perspective of the events of our lives, our positive or
those events. One guy gets into a car accident, loses his legs, and becomes a depressed,
reclusive alcoholic; another guy gets into a car accident, loses his legs, and ends up
winning the Special Olympics for downhill skiing a few years later. Our choices depend
on our perspective.
letting go of those places of holding beyond which we seldom venture. That edge is our
cage, our imagined limitations, our attachment to old models of who we think we are, or
should be. It is our edges that define what we consider safe territory (44).
Understanding that limiting beliefs exist, and that we create our reality with our thoughts
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to a larger extent than we often acknowledge, is an important first step toward change.
The next step is to diagnose and decipher our own limiting beliefs. Some of these
will be obvious, others will be much more subtle and obscured. This is where it stops
being an intellectual exercise and becomes a personal and embodied one. Gillett gives
His suggestion of an automatic writing process is intended to keep you, the writer,
from self-editing. The editing itself would be a form of judgment and, as such,
- What are my goals in life? He notes that They do not need to be realistic in
terms of your present situation and they should not take into account anything
that anybody else wants or needs from you. (125)
- What is it that stops me from having these goals right now? He suggests that
For each goal write down all the things that seem to you to be in the way
aspects of yourself (your body, your feelings, your inner self, your mind, your
characteristics), aspects of others, of society, the past, your age, time, loyalties,
the inevitable way life is. Write fast. Dont think too much. Allow yourself to
be unreasonable. (125)
- What do I disapprove of? He recommends that you try to make the
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suggestion into a definitive statement, even if it sounds dogmatic and off the
walls. Remember that this is a process of exploration which eventually aims to
go beyond the limiting belief. The first step is to have the personal honesty and
courage to see what the limiting belief might be. (128)
- What do the people of things that I disapprove of have in common?
- And then, the clincher, So what does that make me? or How am I
different? or How am I similar? Exploring the relationship between your
disapproval of others and what that means in terms of your own ego is very
interesting.
He then offers a really interesting list of questions that help to identify a lot of
beliefs. When you read your responses, they might sound absurd, contradictory, racist,
sexist, conservative, unfair, and completely irrational. And thats okay. The point is not
to judge what we think, but to uncover it. The next several questions were quite
- What were or are my parents belief systems? You can figure this out by
remembering or thinking about what they approve(d) and disapprove(d) of?
Sometimes your own beliefs will be opposite of your parents beliefs.
- What generalizations about life did I learn from:
My country?
My culture?
My class?
My education?
My color?
My religion?
My gender?
My body image?
My profession?
Other influential people in my life? (131-2).
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Gillett explains, Once you have dislodged your belief from what you used to
think was reality, you are free to create a better belief. Such a simple statement may
seem hard to accept at first. Many people have tried positive thinking techniques, only to
find them unreal or too good to be true. A limiting belief is, by nature, cynical. When
faced with the unlimited, it projects a screen of disbelief: Come on, you've got to be
kidding, it says. Somehow the old limiting belief is so firmly ingrained in the mind as
reality, that the new positive thinking is simply unbelievable (137). According to
I am reading for self right now in Kincaid. By this I mean that I am reading
with awareness, noticing the places where I feel connection, and where I feel disconnect.
This clues me into where I see my self in the text a self that is either resonating
with or ruffling against Kincaids self. My objective is to get to know my self through
the process of reading. I do this by trying to be fully present with Kincaid and noticing
where there is resistance, where judgment arises, where I feel kinship or camaraderie. In
doing this I can better see the places where I have identifications, where I made it the
same as me. Already I have noticed some contradictions in my own beliefs. I want for
race as a category to be transcended, yet I chide Kincaid for doing just that. I feel like
she has betrayed the group through her dissociation. I want her to be responsible to
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others at the same time that I tout freedom for everyone. I try to simply be aware of these
This reading is not going as well as the first, mainly because I have had a lot of
life circumstances interfere with my practice of reading. I still practice a 5 minute mind
clearing meditation at the beginning of my reading period, and I still read for a duration
of 45 minutes. I have made the final meditation 19 minutes long. I have not had one
location for this second reading, and I think this is part of the difficulty I am having. I
moved from Michigan to New York during this reading. As such, I missed a few days, or
performed a modified meditation in the interest of time. I realize now that this interest
in time was really me placing my reading lower on my list of my priorities than other
things. This might be justified, but the result is that my practice feels choppy and
irregular.
length in chapter (?). I can acknowledge that I am not walking the talk this week. Part
of it is just an anxiety and a restlessness that I feel that seems to keep me a bit agitated.
Yet I can see that when I do sit down and do the practice, I feel calmer, more in my body,
and less stressed. Still, it is hard to bring myself to do it consistently. I have learned
practice does get easier. The practice itself takes on a new dimension as it takes root in
my life. I have also learned to be gentle with myself. If this is what my practice looks
like this week, this is what it looks like. Choppy is choppythe determination that
choppy is negative is my own. The more I can accept of myself and my circumstances,
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the easier it is to take the snares in life in stride.
For my creative activity, I have been cultivating my own little garden here in
New York. As I said, I am a budding gardener, which feels very much like being an
artist without a medium. Now I finally have the main ingredient, a lawn. It is a fairly
large lawn right now, with very retro (to me) hedges close to the housethe landscape
hasnt much changed since my grandfather built the house 50 years ago, though there
have been some small changes. There used to be two hedges at the beginning of the
driveway, but my mother cut them down a few years back. To me, their stumps are
actually far lovelier than they were. A few trees have had to come down for various
reasons. But, otherwise, a snapshot of the front of our house from the 1960s would look
I have gradually taken over the cultivation of these two empty spaces where the
hedges used to be (in the front of the house, by the driveway) from my mother, an annual
planter at heart. She begins with starter plants, indicating to me in some ways an
immediate need for gratification and a mistrust of the process of nature inherent in seeds.
I am a perennial girl myself. I like the idea of a self-perpetuating garden rotating through
seems unnecessarily grueling and expensive. Why reinvent (and pay for) the wheel each
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I first planted a (perennial) lavender plant on one side of the driveway, where the
hedge used to be. The next year I purchased and planted another, on the other side,
where the other hedge used to be. I also put an Echinacea on that side, purchased with
the lavender on Marthas Vineyard during a Labor Day excursion with my then fianc,
now husband. I liked the idea of having such a souvenir from such a trip. It builds
This year I went out there with a few dozen packets of perennial seeds that I got
from the Zen temple and put them in the ground. I did this in May, hopeful that my
tardiness would not be a deal-breaker for them all. For some I dug small holes by poking
my finger into the earth. For others I drew thin lines with my trowel so the seeds could
live just beneath the soil. Others I pressed into the surface of the earth. And then I left,
putting my seeds in the care of my mother for water and nurturance. She reported to me
on their growth, and on the unevenness of the two beds (one flourishing in full sun while
the other grumbles in shadow of my neighbors imposing hedge). She also reported the
strange fact that even though I planted about seven different varieties of flowers, all of
their leaves looked the same. There was also a curious phenomenon where several
(annual) alyssum flowers that my mother planted last year have returned on their own.
imagination by drawing pictures of the front lawn and backyard, rough sketches of
different possibilities I could envision. I thought about which Ann Arbor yards I
particularly appreciated and what qualities made them special (surprise and continuity as
one example, mulch and stones as borders as another). I tried to take into account
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pragmatic necessities like accessibility of paths, symmetry (impossible to create in a
split-level ranch, I realized), and how to work with what is already here. It was fun to
read of Kincaids folly while planning my own garden, and I think I learned a few things
about gardening from reading her. I could identify with her excitement and passion about
cultivating a garden of my own. I want to grow my own food and flowers and live off the
earth. I realize that not everyone shares this desire, so I do feel a sense of kinship with
When I came home, I saw that my mother was right. All of the plants growing
were the same. They looked lush and plentifulbut nothing like the seeds I planted. I
referred to the pictures on the packets, comparing the leaves. I looked at the plants. I
looked at the pictures. I fretted. I began to feel the anxiety that Kincaid speaks of, that
pervasive feeling of What to do? Yes, indeed, what to do, I asked myself. I really
wasnt sure. But then a memory of this plant came back to me. Last year this plantan
ugly plant that produces little ugly flowerspopped up out of nowhere as well, if my
memory served me. Maybe 6 or 8 of them, unsolicited. The more I thought about it, the
more certain I felt that this was the same plant. My anxiety increased. What the heck
were these plants? My mother and my husband offered the possibility that the seeds I
planted were given to the temple because they were mismarked. I dismissed this theory
as foolish. I fretted. What to do? What was this plant? I turned to the internet. Unable
to locate it and identify it online, I emailed my two gardener friends, snapping a few
shots of the offending shoot with my iPhone. They had never seen it in their lives.
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I decided on the spot that the plant was invasivethe devils spawn I said as I
pulled them angrily from the soil. These plants had self-seeded at an alarming rate over
the course of one year. If I let them flower, I was convinced they would take over the
world. They had to come OUT. NOW. They grew uglier and uglier to me, particularly
because I didnt know what they were. I could empathize with Kincaids butchering of
the rootstock of the wisteriaI felt a similar anger toward this infestation of hideous,
unidentifiable plants. They had robbed my seeds of a chance of success this year.
Removing them revealed the pathetic beginnings of what could only be my plantings.
They had taken over and ruined everything, at least for this year. My mother laughed at
understand. She might even know what they were called, these evil, ugly plants.
In this garden I am all beginners mind, but it does not always feel good.
Although I did learn for a summer about permaculture, I am really a novice at gardening.
Like Kincaid, I find the whole process of cultivating a garden bewitching and
confounding. I like the feel of the dirt under my fingernails (though I think I noticed last
time that some gloves might help salvage my manicure), the color the water turns the soil
as it seeps in. But I also feel completely ignorant, without a roadmap. I have removed
the offending Unidentified Growing Obects and have some hope again. I will do some
transplanting in the fall, some bed preparation, and then I will wait eagerly for spring.
SECOND READING
It is nice to finally hear a new story from Jamaica Kincaid. After decades of
discursive rumination on the injustices of her youth and the challenges of her young adult
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life, it is refreshing to meet Kincaid in a space that seems less psychologically loaded and
emotionally laden: the garden. Kincaid seemed stuck in a rut for a long while of not
being able to get past her past. Her world view was such that she saw herself as a victim
of that past, and she seemed unwilling to release that identity for a long time. It is in her
literature that we see some of the structures at play in maintaining the belief system she
directly to which stories she tells, and which ones she tells repeatedlyfor her reiteration
cements her identity. Her writing functions as a means of self creation, narrating her
past and her present in a way that accords with her beliefs about herself. Yet even My
Garden (Book): is not a new story, really. This story is in keeping with the evolution that
Kincaid has undertaken in her writing, though perhaps reaching a new extreme. But
before we look at the identity Kincaid has adopted presently, perhaps it would serve us to
When Kincaid first began writing, it was of a young girl robbed of the paradise of
her mothers attention and affection. As J. Brooks Bouson remarks, Kincaid was an
only child until age nine, and from ages nine to thirteen her life was disrupted by the birth
of her three brothers: Joseph, Dalma, and Devon (6). She was dealing, it seems, with
feeling like she lost the attention and nurturance of her mother and step-father to these
younger half-siblings. Quite suddenly, the narcissistic only child was forced to relinquish
both her centrality and her childhood. In At the Bottom of the River and Annie John,
Kincaid explores the evolution of her relationship with her mother from ideal to
contentious. Kincaid reveals in Annie John, I spent the day following my mother
around and observing the way she did everything (15). She chronicles the blissful
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moments she spent shadowing her mother as she performed domestic tasks. Kincaid
portrays this as a positive time, when she felt very loved and treasured by her mother.
As my mother went about from pot to pot, stirring one, adding something
to the other, I was ever in her wake. As she dipped into a pot of boiling
something or other to taste for correct seasoning, she would give me a
taste of it also, asking me what I thought. Not that she really wanted to
know what I thought, for she had told me many times that my taste buds
were not quite developed yet, but it was just to include me in everything
(17).
Kincaid develops a strong identification with her mother, literally basking in her
presence. As Kincaid remarks in her most recent writing for Harpers Magazine, She
seemed to us not a mother at all but a God, not a Goddess but a God (24). This idolatry
is evident in Annie John and At the Bottom of the River as Annie/Kincaid marvels
repeatedly at her mothers beauty and manages to objectify her mother by creating a God
My mother sat on some stone steps, her voluminous skirt draped in folds
and falling down between her parted legs, and I, playing some distance
away, glanced over my shoulder and saw her facea face that was to me
of such wondrous beauty: the lips like a moon in its first and last quarter, a
nose with a bony bridge and wide nostrils that flared out and trembled
visibly in excitement, ears the lobes of which were large and soft and silk-
like; and what pleasure it gave me to press them between my thumb and
forefinger. How I worshipped this beauty, and in my childish heart I
would always say to it, Yes, yes, yes. And, glancing over my shoulder,
yet again I would silently send to her words of love and adoration, and I
would receive from her, in turn and in silence, words of love and adoration
(River 73-74).
As she told me stories, I sometimes sat at her side, leaning against her,
or I would crouch on my knees behind her back and lean over her
shoulder. As I did this, I would occasionally sniff at her neck, or behind
her ears, or her hair. She smelled sometimes of lemons, sometimes of
sage, sometimes of roses, sometimes of bay leaf. At times I would no
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longer hear what it was she was saying; I just liked to look at her mouth
as it opened and closed over her words, or as she laughed. How terrible
it must be for all the people who had no one to love them so and no one
who they loved so, I thought (Annie 23).
Kincaids union with her mother at that time was perfect in her eyes. She
describes the happiness of her fulfilling relationship with her mother. Sometimes she
might call out to me to go and get some thyme or basil or some other herb for her, for she
grew all her herbs in little pots that she kept in a corner of our little garden. Sometimes
when I gave her the herbs, she might stoop down and kiss me on the lips and then on my
neck. It was in such a paradise that I lived (25) In this passage we see the mother
stooping down, as if from a pedestal upon which Kincaid has placed her.
mother shared a garden in her youth in Antigua. Thus Kincaids love of gardening is
foreshadowed in her earlier works and gardening, in some sense, is a nostalgic practice,
evoking memories of a garden grown with a now deceased mother. She wrote about her
I know now that it is from our mother that we, he [Devon] and I, get this
love of plants. Even at that moment when he and I were sitting on the
lawn, our mother had growing on a trellis she had fashioned out of an old
iron bedstead and old pieces of corrugated galvanize a passion-fruit vine,
and its voluptuous growth was impressive, because it isnt easy to grow
passion fruit in Antigua. It produced fruit in such abundance that she had
to give some of it away, there was more than she could use. Her way with
plants is something I am very familiar with; when I was a child, in the
very place where my brothers house is now, she grew all sorts of
vegetables and herbs (12).
Kincaid characterizes the gardens of her homeland as generally being devoted to the
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production of food rather than to aesthetic valorit is nonetheless where the seeds of a
remembered from her young adulthood. What this is, then, is the romantic and nostalgic
manipulation of the past by an older Kincaid, now living in America and endeavoring to
write books rather than magazine op-ed pieces. The manipulation may not be
malevolent, nor even intentional. It is simply the result of Kincaid trying to tell a story
with her past. She herself admits that she is not actually writing non-fiction in these
texts, she is using the events of her life to tell stories that she is creating. This is why she
considers them fiction. Kincaids genre is not really the novel, but the bildungsroman,
development of a young man or woman (86). As such, Kincaid is more or less telling
the story of herself, of who she is, and how she became that person. She is narrating
and in doing so also choosingthe story of her identity and how it was constructed.
Kincaid herself says, I am sort of lucky or privileged to do this thing called writing, in
which basically all I am doing is discovering my own mind. Really, for me, writing is
like going to a psychiatrist. I just discover things for myself (Perry 132).
We can see that her early relationship with her mother in particular, played a large
role in how she saw herself. She sees her mother as self through an attachment that
alternately craves and resists complete union with her mother. Yet it becomes apparent
that in Kincaids mind they are one, regardless of her acceptance or resistance to it.
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I fit perfectly in the crook of my mothers arm, on the curve of her back, in
the hollow of her stomach. We eat from the same bowl, drink from the
same cup; when we sleep, our heads rest on the same pillow. As we walk
through the rooms, we merge and separate, merge and separate; soon we
shall enter the final stage of our evolution (River 60).
book entitled The Autobiography of my Mother, and which causes Kincaid such trauma
when faced with differentiation. Moira Ferguson pinpoints a defining moment for
Kincaid:
A key turning point surfaces when Annie John outgrows her clothes. She
is horrified to learn that the mother has called an arbitrary halt to look-
alike dresses. She equates her mothers clumsy efforts to separate with a
personal abandonment: You are getting too old for that. Its time you had
your own clothes. You just cannot go around the rest of your life looking
like a little me (46).
Kincaid feels helpless in the face of this shift. In At the Bottom of the River, she
frequently refers to herself as defenseless and small and to her mother as large,
sometimes larger than life. Kincaid portrays this as her mother rejecting her. But the fact
is that Kincaid is not willing to be the person she would need to be to regain her mothers
favor. As she gets older and adopts more familial responsibility, Kincaid begins to resent
her mothers rules and judgments. Kincaid renders herself a victim of her mothers
abandonment, refusing to acknowledge that she too is changing and shifting the balance
of their relationship. As Kincaid develops interests that fall outside of her mothers strict
and conservative opinion of how a young woman should behave, she frequently chooses
to lie to her mother rather than risk further rupture by exerting her autonomy. From
tries to hide the person she is becoming from her mother. She feels constantly criticized
and reprimanded. These emotions mar the previous enjoyment Kincaid felt in following
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her around and learning how to be a woman. She documents the strain in their
relationship in At the Bottom of the River, rendering her formerly ideal practice of
Wash the white clothes on Monday and put them on the stone heap; wash
the color clothes on Tuesday and put them on the clothesline to dry; dont
walk barehead in the hot sun; cook pumpkin fritters in very hot sweet oil;
soak your little cloths right after you take them off; when buying cotton to
make yourself a nice blouse, be sure that it doesnt have gum on it,
because that way it wont hold up well after a wash is it true that you
sing benna in Sunday school?; always eat your food in such a way that it
wont turn someone elses stomach; on Sundays try to walk like a lady and
not like the slut you are so bent on becoming; dont sing benna in Sunday
school; you mustnt speak to wharf-rat boys, not even to give directions;
but I dont sing benna on Sundays at all and never in Sunday school;
this is how to hem a dress when you see the hem is coming down and so
to prevent yourself from looking like the slut I know you are so bent on
becoming; always squeeze the bread to make sure its fresh; but what if
the baker wont let me feel the bread?; you mean to say that after all you
are really going to be the kind of woman who the baker wont let near the
bread? (5)
The entire chapter is a list of what Kincaid must and must not to, culminating in
mother and child is one fraught with smothering devotion, criticism, and deceit. She
craves her mothers love and attention at the same time that she resents how it is given.
Rather than acknowledging that she herself has certain stipulations about their
relationship that are not being methow they might spend time together or how she
might be given constructive criticism, for exampleshe casts herself as the helpless
victim. Rather than see her mothers feelings as outside of her control and influence, she
internalizes these feelings. She is not her mother, no matter how much she wishes to be.
Ferguson explains:
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monstrous that her mother wants to be free of her. In another sense, Annie
John displaces onto her mother antagonistic feelings of rejection, of
confused self-location that in turn engenders psychic fragmentation. Since
her birth, she has lived in her mothers shadow, and now that she has to
fend for herself in her own spotlight, she seeks shade. She assumes that
she cannot live up to her mothers level of competence. Put another way,
since she can barely conceptualize, let alone accept, her mothers cultural
construction, she ceaselessly tries to fashion a subjectivity in opposition.
Meanwhile she internalizes all this turmoil (46-47).
Her inability to reconcile this information that conflicts with her established belief
I turned back to look at my mother, but I could not see her. My eyes
searched the small area of water where she should have been, but I
couldnt find her. I stood up and started to call out her name, but no sound
would come out of my throat. A huge black space then opened up in front
of me and I fell inside it I couldnt think of anything except that my
mother was no longer near me I dont know what, but something drew
my eye in one direction. A little bit out of the area in which she usually
swam was my mother, just sitting and tracing patterns on a large rock.
She wasnt paying any attention to me, for she didnt know that I had
missed her. I was glad to see her and started jumping up and down and
waving to her. Still she didnt see me, and then I started to cry, for it
dawned on me that, with all that water between us and I being unable to
swim, my mother could stay there forever and the only way I would be
able to wrap my arms around her again was if it pleased her or if I took a
boat When I told her what had happened, she hugged me so close that it
was hard to breathe, and she told me that nothing could be farther from the
truththat she would never leave me. And though she said it over and
over again, and though I felt better, I could not wipe out of my mind the
feeling I had had when I couldnt find her (44).
Kincaid asserts here that the closeness she longs to feel with her mother is out of
her control. She cannot call to her mother, she has no voice. She cannot swim, cannot
reach her mother; it is her mother who must return to her, if she so chooses. Kincaid here
is completely helpless and abandoned, and she cannot get past the realization that their
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Although Kincaid feels suffocated by her relationship with her mother, she is
unwilling to let go of the deep association she has with her. Yet her hand is forced, in a
sense, since her existing belief system no longer supports reality. Though she resists it as
long as she can, ultimately Kincaid must find a way to make her beliefs and her reality
coincide. Kincaid decides that, in order to save face, she must also reject her mother.
Kincaid develops a resentful antagonism toward her mother that tries to coincide with her
deep love and identification. We can see both extremes of these emotions at work in At
assumptions about a mothernamely, that she must be loving and nurturing. Her
mothers love, Kincaid insists, is suffocating her. Kincaid points to select stories from
her past to show how her own assumptions about a mother/ daughter relationship were
challenged. The stories she chooses to includeand surely the ones she chooses to
omitare selected to inform us of how Kincaid has reconstructed her own identity and
her own belief system to support this new relationship between them. Ultimately, she
transfers the intense, obsessive love she felt for her mother onto other womenher
takes a backseat to her familys need for assistance. As J. Brooks Bouson notes, For
Kincaid, one of the great betrayals of her life was her familys interruption of her
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education after the birth of her brothers (5). Bouson describes a pivotal moment that
displays the extreme lengths that both Kincaid and her mother would take to assert their
beliefs:
When fifteen-year-old Kincaid, who had been asked to babysit her two-
year-old brother, Devon, became so absorbed in a book that she failed to
notice that his diaper needed to be changed, Annie Drew, in a state of fury,
gathered up all of her daughters treasured books and burned them. (5)
Kincaids actions are more subtle in their assertion of her priorities and her
booksindicates that she sees the books as the object standing between her and her
daughter. The books are inscribed with meaning for both, and this difference in meaning
causes great conflict. Kincaid writes that she used to steal books from the library, and
that the public library in Antigua closed and remained closed for a long time. Thus books
come to represent a form of education for Kincaid that she felt she had to steal. Since she
was robbed of her educational opportunities, she chose to claim her education for herself.
colonial education, gender inequality, and her mother. The fact that the library was
closed shows that Kincaids passion for education was, in her mind, an anomaly in her
frequent theme of Kincaids fiction is the way that this ten-by-twelve-mile island traps its
citizens and discourages them from reflecting upon their experiences, analyzing their
situations, or controlling their destinies(4). Kincaid chooses not to see that, in stealing
the librarys books, she was doing the same thingrobbing others of the chance to
educate themselves.
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Kincaid attributes the choice by her parents to remove her from school to
assumptions they held about gender. Edwards notes that At an early age, Kincaid
recognized that daughters were treated very differently from sons, and that Antigua had
been severely scarred by its history of British imperial rule (3). Kincaid says in an
interview:
She writes of how these gendered beliefs affected her in Lucy, Whenever I saw
her eyes fill up with tears at the thought of how proud she would be at some deed her
sons had accomplished, I felt a sword go through my heart, for there was no
accompanying scenario in which she saw me, her identical offspring, in a remotely
similar situation (131). After the birth of her three half-brothers in rapid succession and
her step-father falling ill, her family is left in a financial crisis. They send Kincaid to the
U.S. in an effort to help support the struggling family. This is a contentious and
devastating decision in Kincaids eyes at the time, proving that she is not really important
Lucy is the last book that Kincaid writes about her former selfElaine Potter
Richardsonthe person she was before she became Jamaica Kincaid. It tells the story of
the transitional time in which Kincaid was sent by her family at the age of sixteen to the
United States to work as an au pair for an affluent white family. In Lucy, Kincaid
explains her psychological and emotional dilemma more clearly. Edwards explains,
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Lucys feelings about her mother pull her in two different directions. She sees her
mother as the great love of her life and as the figure she must separate herself from if she
is to develop her own identity (64). The stifling love that is written into the books about
her childhood reappears in Lucy. Lucy, then, views maternal love as something that
threatens to kill her through suffocation. I had come to feel that my mothers love for
me was designed solely to make me into an echo of her; and I didnt know why, but I felt
that I would rather be dead than become just an echo of someone. If she is to grow into a
complete individual, Lucy must extricate herself from the maternal bond (64).
mothering than she received from her own mother. She sees her employer, Mariah, as a
mother figure, writing Mariah was like a mother to me, a good mother (110). Mariah is
wealthy, white, and American. Perhaps it is this mother, Mariah, then, that gives birth to
Jamaica Kincaid as Elaine Potter is put to rest. For it is after this point in her life that
Kincaid chooses a new identity, one which might be seen as closer in many respects to
Mariahs than to her birth-mothers in Antigua. Although Kincaid sees herself as her
own creationcalling herself her own parents in one interviewthe similarities between
the character of Mariah and the narrator of Kincaids later works warrant examination.
While Kincaid was still Elaine Richardsonstill of the conquered class, as she
that she received from Mariah was met with what many readersincluding myselfsaw
as bitter resentment. From early on in Lucy, the protagonist is literally put in her place
the maids room (7). Although her employers tell her that she should regard them as
[her] family and make [her]self at home (7), her room tells her a different story. It
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resembles to her, a box in which cargo traveling a long way should be shipped (7).
This evocation of slavery reveals that, despite their efforts to welcome Kincaid into their
lives as a make-believe equal, she is intent on maintaining the hierarchy in which they are
the conquerors and she is the conquered. But now Kincaid has joinedin her words
the conquering class (123). She has been reborn, perhaps, as she claims, from herself,
but in the likeness of her former employer, from whom she created the character of
Mariah. The stories that Kincaid now tells about her own life are strikingly similar to
those she told about Mariah, and her beliefs about the world and herself now mirror
Mariahs.
Perhaps the greatest lesson Lucy/Kincaid learned from Mariah/her employer is the
ability to play the fencethat is, to be both the conqueror and the conquered. In a
critical scene in Lucyone which represents a moment of rupture in this text, but also a
moment of revelation when read inter-textuallyMariah tells Lucy that she is of Indian
descent. I will revisit this moment, mentioned briefly in the first chapter:
She was almost out of the room when she turned and said, I was looking
forward to telling you that I have Indian blood, that the reason Im so good
at catching fish and hunting birds and roasting corn and doing all sorts of
things is that I have Indian blood. But now, I dont know why, I feel I
shouldnt tell you that. I feel you will take it the wrong way. This really
surprised me. What way should I take this? Wrong way? Right way?
What could she mean? To look at her, there was nothing remotely like an
Indian about her. Why claim a thing like that? I myself had Indian blood
in me. My grandmother is a Carib Indian. That makes me one-quarter
Carib Indian. But I dont go around saying that I have some Indian blood
in me. The Carib Indians were good sailors, but I dont like to be on the
sea; I only like to look at it. To me my grandmother is my grandmother,
not an Indian. My grandmother is alive; the Indians she came from are all
dead Mariah says, I have Indian blood in me, and underneath
everything I could swear she says it as if she were announcing her
possession of a trophy. How do you get to be the sort of victor who can
claim to be the vanquished also? (39-41)
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This question seems to be at the crux of Kincaids new identity: how do you get to
be the sort of victor who can claim to be the vanquished also? Kincaid cannot understand
how this blond, privileged, white woman can claim the history and the traits of an
oppressed people. Kincaid notes that she herself has Indian blood, but that this blood
does not imbue her with traits associated with Indians. She seems to be taking issue with
the fact that Mariah is able to select likeable qualities, like fishing and hunting and
roasting corn, and appropriate them for herself. She equates it to possessing a trophy
Mariah is able to enjoy a history and a heritage for her own pleasure and amusement,
deciding not only what aspects of Native culture she wants to own, but also whether or
not she chooses to reveal this. Mariah does not have to wear this race on her face; it is
more like a race card she can pull proudly at her discretion.
Kincaids tone in Lucy seems at first acerbic and cold, as if she scorns Mariah for
her privilege. Lucy marvels at Mariah, repeating a question that has been a refrain in the
text:
I said, All along I have been wondering how you got to be the way you
are. Just how it was that you got to be the way you are. Even now she
couldnt let go, and she reached out, her arms open wide, to give me one
of her great hugs. But I stepped out of its path quickly, and she was left
holding nothing. I said it again. I said, How do you get to be that way?
The anguish on her face almost broke my heart, but I would not bend. It
was hollow, my triumph, I could feel that, but I held onto it just the same
(41).
While she is still the vanquished, Kincaid cannot embrace this appropriation, just
as Lucy cannot embrace Mariah. As her employee, all she can do to inflict suffering on
Mariah is withhold her affection. She cannot embrace this social positioning, just as
Lucy cannot embrace Mariah after she proclaims it. In doing so, for a brief moment, she
becomes the victor in a hollow triumph. However, as Kincaids life comes to mirror
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Mariahs more and more, as she transitions into the conquering class as a well-received
author, mother, and ruler of the domestic sphere of her familys life, she herselfperhaps
unwittinglyends up playing the same fence, occupying the stance of both the victor and
the vanquished. Lucy at first sees Mariahs privilege as shielding her from difficulty or
She said, I have always wanted four children, four girl children. I love
my children. She said this clearly and sincerely. She said this without
doubt on one hand or confidence on the other. Mariah was beyond doubt
or confidence. I thought, Things must have always gone her way, and not
just for her but for everybody she has ever known from eternity; she has
never had to doubt, and so she has never had to grow confident; the right
thing always happens to her; the thing she wants to happen happens.
Again, I thought, How does a person get to be that way? (26).
manipulates her into a separation and divorceKincaid tries to emulate this privileged
quality. We see this most clearly in her description of her life in My Brother. She is
informed of her brothers sickness, AIDS, she writes, I was in my house in Vermont,
husband, absorbed with the well-being of myself. At the time the phone call came
telling me of my brothers illness, among the many comforts, luxuries, that I enjoyed was
reading a book, The Education of a Gardener, written by a man named Russell Page (7).
Kincaid writes very little about her Vermont family, except that their life is idyllic and
uneventful. The biggest doubts Kincaid expresses nowadays are about her garden. Her
doubts are trivial, almost gratuitous, like wondering if spring will ever come again.
Perhaps what Lucy/Kincaid dislikes is not Mariahs privilege, but the fact that she
downplays it. Kincaid originally learned about American privilege from her employer, as
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Lucy does from Mariah. This served as a new and overriding form of instruction in how
to be the lady of the house, enhancing and at times replacing what Kincaid received from
her birth mother, Annie. In light of this, Kincaids constant questioning of Mariahs
beliefs and actions seems less bitter and sarcastic and more genuine as a query: how does
In some ways, Kincaid has found the answer to her question in the appropriation
of material things. She has moved into a house that she coveteda large, four bedroom
in Vermont of which ten of her thirty windows look out on a mountain (Garden 29). She
writes, I love the house in which I live. Before I lived in it, before I was ever even
inside it, before I knew anything about it, I loved it I longed to live in this house, I
wanted to live in this house (Garden 29-30). It is not so different form the large and
beautiful house that Mariah grew up in on the Great Lake, where she took her family and
Lucy to spend their summers (Lucy 35). Kincaid acknowledges the privilege of
occupying such a large space, saying that it is at least twenty times as big as the house I
grew up in, a house in a poor country with a tropical climate (Garden 37). It is
noteworthy that she does not name the island, Antigua, but instead describes it with two
adjectivespoor and tropical. Her association with her homeland has dissipated to a
flippant and reductive reference to wealth and weather. The specifics of her history are
no longer important, because, as she says, I had lived in America for a long time and had
adjusted to the American habit of taking up at least twenty times as much of the available
resources as each person needs (37). The repetition of twenty times renders her
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Kincaid defines herself, in some respects, through this space that she owns and
occupies. Because she is writing of the garden, she feels that the story of the property on
which the garden dwells is somehow relevant. She devotes an entire chapter entitled
The House to describing her house, its former inhabitants, and the series of events that
led to her acquisition of it. The couple that owned the house, their children, and their
grandchildren are described in depth, as if their history in the house is an inextricable part
of her own. It appears that Kincaid believes that purchasing the house entitles her not
only to the property, but to its history as well. Although the occasion that made the house
available for purchase was the death of Bob Woodworth, its former owner, Kincaid feels
fine attending the funeral of this person she never actually met (40-41). Kincaid
appropriates the story of the house and the family it housed while leaving her own story
in relative obscurity, not even bothering to call her childhood island home by name. This
might be because she has exhausted the topichaving written already about her
childhood, her mother, her father, her step-father, her brother, and Antiguan bureaucracy.
She is telling a new story, but it is not really her storyshe bought it, it seems, with the
house.
Yet is in light of her new home that Kincaid is able to reflect on her past and see it
from a different perspective. She rehashes an anecdote she has told beforeabout
learning from her mother about domestic choresbut it does not have the nostalgia of
Annie John nor the resentment of At the Bottom of the River. Thus, she is telling old
stories along with the new, but this past has become much more matter of factperhaps
because she now has her house to invest with meaning. This house even begins to house
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My house looks quite like the outside in which I grew up. The outside in
which I grew up had an order to it, but this order had to be restored at the
beginning of each day. This restoring was done by my mother and by me
as I grew up, for my mother was training me to do things the way she had
done them (there was nothing sinister in that, everyone who is good at
anything likes an apprentice). In the middle of my yard stood the stone
heap, and this was covered with soapy white clothes on Monday
mornings. The stone heap was a mound of stones about a foot high, and I
do not now know its diameter but it was properly wide; the stones, which
were only stacked one on top of the other with no substance to hold them
together, would come apart, it seemed during the night, and from time to
time they had to be rearranged (43).
In this passage we see a Kincaid who no longer harbors ill will toward her
mothershe was simply teaching her daughter what she was good at, she rationalizes.
This acceptance of her mothers teachings is a new belief for Kincaid. The white clothes
on the stone heap which were seen in At the Bottom of the River are no longer associated
with a list of mandatory chores. Kincaids mother restores order, and Kincaid views her
My mother would preside over the yard with an agitation that perhaps is
endemic to people in her situation. The dishes are clean, then they are
dirty, and then they are clean and then they are dirty. The stone heap will
not stay in its immaculate mound. Nothing behaves, nothing can be
counted on to do so. Everything eventually becomes smudged, falls out of
place, waiting to be restored. All of this was my yard. And all of this
continues outside my house today, only the details have changed. The
collection of stones has been made into a wall; the trees are different, but
they provide more or less the same function of usefulness and pleasure.
Only, this area outside my house today is called the garden (44-45).
agitated (14)). For, as we can see, Kincaid still identifies with her motherbut the
meaning. It simply is. Kincaid seems to have come to terms with the fact that she, like
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her mother, has the role of restoring order to the world outside her door. As she says,
only the details have changed. The garden is to Kincaid what her mothers yard was to
her. Although Kincaid portrays herself as a woman of privilege as the owner of a four
bedroom house on several acres of land on which hundreds of costly plants grow, she is
able to insist that she is little more than an order-restorer, like her mother. Like Mariah,
Kincaid can be privileged in one moment and downplay or erase her privilege in the next.
Kincaid now has a staff of domestic workersthe lady who cleaned the house
the women who helped me take care of my child (3), and several workers who till her
soil (6), dismantle her chicken coop (31), control the presence of rodents (24), rebuild her
stone wall (67), remove plants (182), rearrange patches of land (183), and grow starters
from seeds for her (214). This makes her much more similar to Mariahwho had Lucy
working for her as well as a maidthan to her mother, who pulled Kincaid out of school
to help shoulder the burden of domestic responsibility. Kincaids staff is much larger, in
fact, than Mariahs, and much of their employ revolves around the upkeep of her garden
(and, of course, the watching of her children while she tends to her garden and her garden
staff). Kincaid is living the American dream of privilege, and exercising those privileges
One day, as they worked, I sat on a stone step (also in need of repair)
observing them, reveling in my delicious position of living comfortably in
a place that I am not from, enjoying my position as visitor, enjoying my
position of not-the-native, enjoying especially the privilege of being able
to make sound judgments about the Otherthat is, the two men who were
stooped over before me, working (67)
In this passage we see that Kincaid not only enjoys the position of privilege, but
she enjoys judging those who are not as privileged. This was one of the qualities in
Mariah that she disliked, her ability to choose to either see or turn a blind eye to her
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privilege at the same moment that she is exercising it. A story of one of Mariahs
When we got to our destination, a man Mariah had known all her life, a
man who had always done things for her family, a man who came from
Sweden, was waiting for us. His name was Gus, and the way Mariah
spoke his name it was as if he belonged to her deeply, like a memory.
And, of course, he was a part of her past, her childhood: he was there,
apparently, when she took her first steps; she had caught her first fish in a
boat with him; they had been in a storm on the lake and their survival was
a miracle, and so on. Still, he was a real person, and I thought Mariah
should have long separated the person Gus standing in front of her in the
present from all the things he had meant to her in the past. I wanted to say
to him, Do you not hate the way she says your name, as if she owns
you? (33-34).
Kincaid can tell the story of Bob Woodworth and his family with impunity,
however. Kincaid does a lot of name dropping in My Garden (Book):, including the
botanistswhile giving only the first names of her household staff (referred to as the
housekeeper Mary Jean and Vrinda (17)). Some of her workers remain unnamed, they
My Garden (Book): reveals that Kincaid has become a woman who is made
happy or sad by the weather, not so unlike her former employer. This marks another of
Lucys questions successfully answered. She writes of Mariahs feelings about the
weather:
One morning in early March, Mariah said to me, You have never seen
spring, have you? And she did not have to await an answer, for she
already knew. She said the word spring as if spring were a close friend,
a friend who had dared to go away for a long time and soon would
reappear for their passionate reunion. She said, Have you ever seen
daffodils pushing their way up out of the ground? And when theyre in
bloom and all massed together, a breeze comes along and makes them do a
curtsy to the lawn stretching out in front of them. Have you ever seen
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that? When I see that, I feel so glad to be alive. And I thought, So
Mariah is made to feel alive by some flowers bending in the breeze. How
does a person get to be that way? (17).
On the very day it turned spring, a big snowstorm came, and more snow
fell on that day than had fallen all winter. Mariah looked at me and
shrugged her shoulders. How typical, she said, giving the impression
that she had just experienced a personal betrayal. I laughed at her, but I
was really wondering, How do you get to be a person who is made
miserable because the weather changed its mind, because the weather
doesnt live up to your expectations? How do you get to be that way?
(20).
Kincaids: I was putting the garden to bed for the winter when, looking over the empty
spaces that had not so long ago been full of flowers and vegetables, I was overcome with
the memory of satisfaction and despair, two feelings not unfamiliar to any gardener (49).
Or, The surprise, the shock, of winter has become to me like a kiss from someone I love:
I expect it, I want it, and yet, Ah! For it holds the expectation of pleasure to come:
spring (61). The biggest difference is that Kincaids flowers bow rather than
curtsying (23). And I think, So, Kincaid is made to feel satisfaction and pleasure by
flowers and vegetables. She also feels despair, but, as she describes it, this despair is of
the pleasurable kind, the kind that everyone living in the area of the world that starts in
the Sudan and ends in southern Africa ought to have, just to begin with (27). This
despair has nothing to do with survival, but rather with what to do with unruly plants that
are not behaving as she thinks they should. It is the kind of despair that Kincaid wishes
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the aesthetics of her flower beds. This is the despair of the conqueror rather than the
In one of the several chapters devoted to her dislike of winter (her twist on
The snow so early did not go away; the snow stayed and the air grew
colder and so winter started in mid-autumn. I began to complain and
make a big fuss about this, but when I took a look at a pathetic journal of
climate that I keep and make entries in from time to time, I saw that each
year I say the same thing; winter always starts at about the same time
(mid-autumn) and I always feel that this is unusual, that it comes too
soon (60).
At one point Kincaids materialism is given as the reason that she is upset with
the changing seasons. She had two thousand dollars worth of heirloom bulbs to place in
the ground when almost one foot of snow fell on the ground (59). She repeatedly
mentions her own misery in winter, saying I hear that the temperature will drop to such
a low degree that it will cause a frost, and I always take this personally, I think a frost is
The one redeeming thing about winter for Kincaid is the catalogue shopping. She
is made happy by their arrival. On the day the temperature was 10 degrees below zero,
the Ronnigers Seed Potatoes catalogue arrived and that was the cheeriest thing, for I then
spent the afternoon sitting in a bathtub of hot water, trying to satisfy a craving for
overchilled ginger ale and oranges, and reading this little treasure (86). She explains
that the catalogues are actually a part of her gardening practice. The process of
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receiving and reading catalogues may not be as important to my garden as my weeding is,
but that is the way I begin the gardening year. Actually, first I despair that there will
never be a gardening season again, and then just when that conviction sets in, the seed
and plant catalogues start to arrive (87). I imagine that this too is the enviable kind of
despair that she would benevolently wish on othersthe kind that apparently happens
Kincaids new stories are those of a woman obsessed with a garden, the same way
she was for a long time obsessed with her mother. The garden represents her past, her
wealth and material excess, her upper echelon connections, her botanical erudition, and
her passion. That she can balk at spending money on AZT to treat her brothers AIDS
and decide against allowing him to live with her to receive better medical treatment,
citing as her reason Im not rich (Brother 48), then she can spend thousands on rare
breeds of flowers and special exotic tomatoes indicates that Kincaid truly has become
American, and that she suffers from the nihilism described earlier in this chapter.
Kincaid demonstrates that she is living the good life to which Cornel West referred,
clematis, the lovelessness of placing limits on what she is willing to do to help an ailing
and still conquered relative who does not have the means to help himself, and the
hopelessness of despairing over spring will come (the answer: it will, as it must, which
she wrote in My Brother (61)), depict a life in which consumption very obviously
correlates with priorities and beliefs. Kincaid is deeply connected to little more than her
garden. It is a safe place to put her trust, for its betrayals are so trivial and its stories
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always offer another chance at redemption with the next growing season. It is apparent
that Kincaid, in transcending her class and moving from being conquered to being a
conqueror, had to shed some of her beliefs about her self in order to do so. Kincaid has
overcome the circumstances caused by her racial heritage and her class position, but it is
another shallow-seeming triumph. Being one of the few Blacks that is all right doesnt
win Kincaid much more than the opportunity to spend cash on different, more esoteric
things. She has invested all of her money and her meaning into a garden, yielding little
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CHAPTER 4
BLACKNESS AND BLACK SELF CONSCIOUSNESS
In this chapter, I probe deeply into the identity category of race. Seeing it
as a social construct, I offer in its stead the concept of interconnection as
a more liberal and ethical paradigm. Rather than dominant hegemonic
constructions of power and freedom, I suggest a more liberating
perspective. I look at the ways in which the academy still serves the racist
patriarchal norms on which it was founded. I contend that American
scholarship in the humanities frequently reiterates and re-inscribes
dominant hegemonic narratives and norms, which has lived
consequences for those it functions to marginalize. In light of this, I
examine the linguistic lens of race and the ways in which it uses stereotype
to become a self-proliferating and self-perpetuating entity. I look at the
trope of blackness in American culture, in my own life, and in the work of
Jamaica Kincaid. My final reading of My Garden (Book): reveals how
Kincaid has resolved the conundrum of race in her life by holding up as
her mirror the most detestable character in the history of the Americas
Christopher Columbusand realizing that she is not so different from him
after all.
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- Stuart Hall
It is my belief that everyone has power. There are different kinds of power and
different ways of using that power, but inherent in all beings is a power that must be
circumstances can define us, limit us, or offer us opportunities for growth. When we
realize this, we are less likely to simply give our power away. It is also my
understanding that true power is infinite. As such, a gain in power by one is not a
necessary loss of power by another. Instead, we are all tied together and our freedom lies
in realizing through our interconnections that the power of the whole is far greater than
that of the sum of its parts. Martin Luther King, Jr. reminded us in his speech,
John Donne caught it years ago and placed it in graphic terms: "No man is
an island entire of itself. Every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the
main." And he goes on toward the end to say, "Any man's death diminishes
me because I am involved in mankind; therefore never send to know for
whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee." We must see this, believe this, and
live by it if we are to remain awake through a great revolution."
We live in a time and place where many of us dont even know our neighbors.
We would often rather connect digitally to someone we already know than meet the
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person sitting next to us. Our media culture instructs us to mistrust those who are not
already in our circlemaking the exploration of our interconnection seem risky. While
living in New York City, I have often felt that the swarms of people around me were not
subjects at all, but moving objects, part of the landscape, extras in the movie that is my
life. Despite the amazing proliferation of information that technology affords usit is
still very easy to cast the role of other, whether that other be a Rwandan orphan on a
PBS special or the Mexican janitor at our workplace. It is often easierand more in
keeping with our existing belief systemto see those around us as other than to feel
that we are brothers intertwined in a single destiny. Martin Luther King, Jr. was able to
wo/man consisting of all of us does away with allegiance based on race, alliance based on
us equally important in relation to what is. And, as King reminds us, I cannot be what I
ought to be until you are what you ought to be, and vice versa. When we see the
upliftment of another as a necessary component of our own upliftment, then their gain in
power is not construed as our loss. Similarly, their victimhood becomes our concern. We
see that we are each contributors to the whole, endowed with the potential to enact great
and wonderful change, when and if we are able to meet the challenge.
interconnection and able to align self-interest with the interests of the greater whole:
When we create out of the lower will only in order to satisfy greed, our
finest productions fall before time as easily as sand castles give way to the
sea. But when we listen to our deepest impulses from our highest will, we
create from a blueprint that seems much larger than our own. We become
co-creators with the universe, bringing into the physical realm new
sounds, symbols, social concepts, discoveries, and inventions that enrich
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us all. Such creations are beautiful, and they endure because they provide
for the good of all (35).
interdependence that King and Karpinski describe, we are able to see our own importance
interbeing, as he calls it. He gives an example of this connection between all things:
If you are a poet, you will see clearly that there is a cloud floating in this
sheet of paper. Without a cloud, there will be no rain; without rain, the
trees cannot grow; without trees, we cannot make paper. The cloud is
essential for the paper to exist. If the cloud is not here, the sheet of paper
cannot be here either. So we can say that the cloud and the paper inter-
are. Interbeing is a word that is not it the dictionary yet, but if we
combine the prefix inter- with the verb to be, we have a new verb,
inter-be (95).
If we look into this sheet of paper even more deeply, we can see the
sunshine in it. Without sunshine, the forest cannot grow. In fact, nothing
can grow without sunshine. And so, we know that the sunshine is also in
this sheet of paper. The paper and the sunshine inter-are. And if we
continue to look, we can see the logger who cut the tree and brought it to
the mill to be transformed into paper. And we see wheat. We know that
the logger cannot exist without his daily bread, and therefore the wheat
that became his bread is also in this sheet of paper. The loggers father
and mother are in it too. When we look in this way, we see that without
all of these things, this sheet of paper cannot exist We cannot point to
one thing that is not heretime, space, the earth, the rain, the minerals in
the soil, the sunshine, the cloud, the river, the heat. Everything co-exists
with this sheet of paper. That is why I think the word inter-be should be in
the dictionary. To be is to inter-be. We cannot just be by ourselves
alone. We have to inter-be with every other thing. This sheet of paper is,
because everything else is (95-96).
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be a poor Black; for you to be a moral heterosexual, I need not be a deviant homosexual.
We dont have to fix the other in order to construct our self. Instead, we can see that
all of these things exist within our Self. When we can do that, we are able to see life as
an opportunity to get to know ourselves and to mindfully create from our unique vantage
point. True subscription to this belief does a lot toward the erasure of race, class, or
One might choose to see the relationship of power and freedom as being this:
power is the ability to influence others, whereas freedom is the ability not to be
influenced by others, to fall outside of the sway of power of others. This feels at first like
a sound construction, one that adequately sums up ones experience of itif I have
power I can make you do what I want you to do and if I have freedom I dont have to do
what you tell me to do. But I think there is more to itthere is a way to construct power
and freedom that is not so limiting. Perhaps real freedom is knowing that we are always
choosing, and therefore always able to choose differently. Power then becomes not the
ability to influence the choices of others, but something else. Power is perhaps the ability
to attract and accumulate the energy required to achieve an objective or meet a goal.
In spite of this power and freedom that are accessible to us all, so many of us feel
that our hands are tied in our own lives. We do not feel free to do, explore, have, or be
whatever it is we want. Someone or something bigger and more powerful than us makes
the rules and it is our lot in life to merely enforce or abide by them. Our world view,
ethics, and culture frequently exert considerable influence over us, making us feel that we
have no choice. Motivated by the desire to be a good husband, father, Christian, friend,
worker, or whatever, we cannot see that each of these signifiers is actually almost empty.
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We have filled them with our own (or our cultures, or our familys, or our races) ideas
and perceptions of what they mean. It would probably sound incomplete to many to
the relationship between the mother and child. But, honestly, the restthe nurturance,
the love, the connection / or the neglect, the resentment, the disconnectare all choices
or the results of choices made consciously and unconsciously. The extent to which we
are unwilling to admit this is directly connected to the extent to which we are attached to
To Krishnamurti, freedom is first and foremost the absence of fear, both from
without and from within. He equates ambition with the fearful struggle to be somebody,
indicating that one is not accepting of what is. Krishnamurti explains further the
conditions in which freedom can and cannot exist. So there can be true freedom only
when the mind understands this whole process of the desire for security, for
permanency.... All your political, religious, and social activities, whatever they are, are
based on that desire for permanency So long as the mind is seeking any form of
securityand that is what most of us wantas long as the mind is seeking permanency
It is when we understand that we are choosing what these words we associate with
definition of various terms and our level of association or identification (or disassociation
or non-identification, as the case may be), that we realize that we are free to choose
differently from this moment on. This echoes Stuart Halls notion of identity as a process
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rather than a fixed entity. When we can see that what we think of a circumstance, action,
or eventas well as what we do or do not do about itare all choices, then we are free.
Then we have power. This freedom is the awareness of the ability to choose. This power
is the ability to make things happen that we want to have happen, not at the expense of
others, but for the betterment of all. This construction has more liberatory potential, in
my opinion, than one in which power is concentrated in the hands of the few and they are
nons to incorporate ourselves into the pre-existing American models and institutions
was received by many exactly as it was intended, as an empty and forced gesture not of
genuine love and acceptance, but of unconvinced acquiescence to a tidal shift in our
culture. We were dealt into the white mans game, to be played by his rules and on his
turf. Many were so happy to have a seat at the table at all that the fairness of this was not
debated. I invite those who do see their location as central to deeply examine what
beliefs about themselves it serves to maintain the beliefs they have about others. When
we are able to see our own worth independent of others is when we have truly
It is rather presumptuous of this so-called center to think that our lives on the
margins revolve around them. And yet, for many, they do. Some people code their lives
in terms of haves and have-nots and create for themselves a very realistic location from
which to enact the drama of the victim. Whether clinging to a nostalgic past with vapid
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traditions or projecting fret and worry onto the uncertain future, we play mind games
with ourselves to stay put, anchored to our view of the world. While American culture
prides itself on progress, Americas citizens often do whatever they can to keep from
changing.
Genuinely distraught over the oppression and degradation of, among many others,
peoples of color, white women, the lower class, immigrants, homosexuals, the elderly
and the disabled in the United States, I have examined the tactics by which these groups
have inserted themselves into the academy, "American" culture in general. Why do
we/they want to continue this painful insertion into American discourses and institutions?
I have scrutinized the lives of groups who don't see themselves as oppressed and realized
that theirs are not much better. Why do we continue to compete in a game that is not
enjoyable? Liberation will not come from white scholars quoting scholars of color with
the respect and frequency accorded their white counterpartsCornel West is a testament
of this, for his being exceptional does nothing to elevate the perception of Black
American men overall. Instead, he is one of the few who is all right. Equality, if
understood as equal inclusion and representation, will probably never happen. The game
itself must be reconfigured in order to enable other possibilities. I do not think we can
beat the system at its own game, but we can introduce a new game, a game within a
I find it ironic that many minority scholars struggle to insert themselves into a
responses. If one truly believes in equality, how does it make sense to create a binary
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between "them" and "us"? Doesn't that perpetuate dichotomous thinking, which, clinical
studies show, may perpetuate hierarchy? Doesn't seeing oneself as disenfranchised and
white males as empowered create that reality, at least to a certain degree? But, then again,
I think it might be easier to fight for insertion or fight against the "hegemonic white
patriarchal male" and his system than trying to create something completely different. Or,
According to bell hooks, Teachers are often among that group most reluctant to
acknowledge the extent to which white-supremacist thinking informs every aspect of our
culture including the way we learn, the content of what we learn, and the manner in
which we are taught (25). This is not an indictment of contemporary scholars, because
I dont think this reluctance is intentional, per se. I see much of it as the brilliant self-
proliferating and self-protecting design of this living organism called the American
university. Like most species, it has survival plans built into in its blueprint. There is an
implicit belief system built into the superstructure. When facing up to it, usually as a
tenure review, its enormity make it appear insurmountable. Our own work must be in
keeping with how things are done in our field, our university, and our department. Our
objective is to produce new scholarship, but not so new that it seems a non sequitur or out
in left field, lest the authority of those signing off on the work be questioned.
Yet at the same time, I am aware that it is people, not institutions, who uphold
rules and perpetuate beliefs. It is people, not the institution, who confer degrees and grant
tenure. We as individuals choose our level of identification with the institution, and that
determines how we respond to the roles assigned to us by it. The dominant norms and
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narratives are often taken up by the individual because they offer safety, or they conform
to the individuals other beliefs, or the individual feels helpless to change them. But, like
everything else, as I have argued exhaustively, this is a choice, and our power comes in
that exists not only as that struggle which also opposes dehumanization but as a
enough. In that vacant space after one has resisted there is still the necessity to become-
to make oneself anew" (15). I would go so far as to say that opposition is actually
hurtful to any given objective, because it calls upon the divisive construction of self
and other, or us and them, and employs a notion of power as finite. This makes it
easier to lay blame, but it also makes change more difficult, for it reinscribes their
power and makes ours predicated upon their permission, which usually never comes.
But, as Wayne Dyer says in a presentation on The Power of Intention When you change
the way you look at things, the things you look at change. To enact social change, to
change the structures of the university, to move beyond archaic and racist stereotypes, I
If you are curious what this kind of scholarship might look like, hooks texts
discuss her various classroom strategies for creating an engaged educational environment
in which a feminist praxis can be effectively established. These views extend into her
own transgressive pedagogical theory, which borrows from Paulo Freire but is still
uniquely her own. Her discussion of her own successes and failures in the classroom
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give helpful techniques and reassurance to younger teachers like myself, but might offer
insight to anyone who hopes to find a way to teach differently. hooks proposes a
different model for what might happen within a university classroom. In texts such as
Teaching to Transgress and Teaching Community: A Pedagogy of Hope, she shares her
own methods of teaching race and racism, examining gender and sexism, and
insistent integration into a physically distant and culturally foreign predominantly white
school, where hooks felt first-hand the effects of racism on her own education. She
writes, Racial integration ushered in a world where many black folks played by the rules
only to face the reality that white racism was not changing, that the system of white
supremacy remained intact even as it allowed black people greater access. (Teaching
Community, 52) Her memoir, Wounds of Passion, focuses specifically on her own story,
while works such as Teaching Community and Breaking Bread use her experiences as a
see the relationship between these experiences with race and education in her formative
years and her views on these subjects many years later. Her texts are often segregated
themselves, writing for and about Black American people, or perhaps for all people
willing to acknowledge the ways that white supremacy shapes American culture and
everyday lives. She presents white supremacy as pervasive, but still a choice made by
the individual to either accept or reject this belief. hooks declares, No one is born a
racist. Everyone makes a choice. Many of us made the choice in childhood. A white
child taught that hurting others is wrong, who then witnesses racial assaults on black
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people, who questions that and is told by adults that this hurting is acceptable because of
their skin color, then makes a moral choice to collude or oppose. (53) In some
interesting and important ways, hooks has created both real and discursive communities
sexuality.
I think that teachers miss out (perhaps intentionally) on the opportunity to educate
students about racism when they don't try to open dialogue between students about race.
I think I wouldn't have been as frightened of racism and its power if it wasn't left hidden
and embedded in our educational system. Perhaps this apprehension is because teachers
feel ill-equipped to address these issues in a formal setting. I know I feel ill equipped
when colored people come up in my classroom. hooks argues that the main hindrance
We have to find a way to insert something into this cyclea new discourse about
the idea that a gain by us would be a loss for them. And, as hard as it is to
acknowledge, what we are opposing is a part of ourselves that we have denied, negated,
and thrust onto another. The power of racial stereotypes can only be fought from the
inside out, on an individual basis. We must probe our own beliefs to discover our own
true mind.
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RACE AS A LINGUISTIC LENS
Race has enjoyed a long, successful career as a social category. It remains one of
the most facile vehicles for constructing an other, as well as for reinforcing limiting
definitions of power and freedom. Even though there is more variety among races than
between them, we still rely on race as an important marker of difference. As Henry Louis
meaningful criterion within the biological sciences, has long been recognized to be a
fiction. When we speak of the white race or the black race, the Jewish race or the
Aryan race, we speak in biological misnomers and, more generally, in metaphors (4).
In spite of this, race retains its currency as a category, mainly because it has become a
package-deal, in which the almost empty signifier of race has been filled with other
social and cultural connotations. Gates explains, The sense of difference defined in
popular usages of the term race has both described and inscribed differences of
language, belief system, artistic tradition, and gene pool, as well as all sorts of supposedly
natural abilities such as rhythm, athletic ability, cerebration, usury, fidelity, and so forth.
The relation between racial character and these sorts of characteristics has been
inscribed through tropes of race, lending the sanction of God, biology, or the natural
(5, his emphasis). Although it has been proven to be little more than a construct, race
lesser degree with our race and at times our ego/ self feels the need to position our race
among other races (or our nation among other nations, or our ethnic group among others,
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or whatever it is with which we are identifying). Some people strongly identify with their
race and draw from it a sense of belonging. Others use race to situate themselves in a
historical continuum, taking pride in the past achievements of people of their race or
citing past injustices. Some use the past as a predictor of what is possible for their race in
the future. For others race is little more than an afterthought, yet even this stance is
nuanced. Many privileged people are rarely put into a position where they have to think
about race, while others are forced to confront race every day. Regardless of how race
functions in the life of the individual, many people feel that it is often easier to lug along
the stuffed suitcase of race than to take the time to open it, unpack it, and take out just
Besides, when we look at the world, it is difficult to see that for which there is no
language. We might see it, but we cannot express it from within the narrow confines of
linguistic communication. Since there is no word in English, for example, for the space
between trees, we do not really think of that space as an entity. If there were a word for
it, we might pay more attention to it. But there is no word and, as such, we do not have
qualifiers for it; we do not note larger spaces and smaller spaces, prettier, or sunnier
spaces. We do not pay attention to the space between trees, and we cannot discuss it
without using the trees themselves as referents. Similarly, we have had comparatively
little scholarship that examines blackness (or the space between blacknesses), gender (or
the space between genders), or any other categories of identity without making the tree
Many contemporary American literary scholars do not often freely and creatively
explore these in-betweens. Academic scholarship in the humanities (by which I mean the
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practices of reading, writing, research, and teaching) in the U.S. frequently reiterates and
re-inscribes dominant hegemonic narratives and norms, particularly with regard to the
intersections of race, class, gender, and sexuality. It often does little to de-center the
conceivably could if it endeavored to do so. Instead, there is much scholarship that helps
to construct and maintain American ideology, without regard for the implications of
this assistance. It does this in many different ways, one of which is through language
Many scholars do not undertake this process of making words their own. They
are content (or feel there is no alternative but) to adopt the general connotations and work
from within someone elses linguistic framework. But this re-inscription of racist, sexist,
repercussions for those whom they function to marginalize. The naming process often
results in the imprinting of a hierarchical lens. A ranked name becomes part of the way
in which the so-called other is understood, even by the other itself. An example of this
would be the class-based notion of a Third World, which has at its root implicit
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economic subjugation. The moniker Third World became pass recently, and has
sometimes been substituted with the equally hierarchical developing countries. This
designation posits that developed countries are more advanced. We do not mean only
that we are more technologically advanced. We are a fait accompli, indicated by the ed
at the end of our name (developed, advanced). We are, in some very meaningful senses,
while developing countries are not. They aspire to be, to become, but are locked through
handle, Global South, might hold some possibility if it gains enough currency, though
it may just be a re-drawing of a line in the sand with its own implicit hierarchy. Another
example of the difficulty with naming might be discomfort I feel when a student talks
college kid can easily unsettle me, evoking Jim Crow and its direct teaching of black
inferiority. If I let it go, I feel I am doing the students a disservice, wasting a teachable
moment. If I mention it, I feel like I am inviting limiting, archaic hierarchies into my
classroom space. I end up stuck between the narrative that posits me at the top of the
class hierarchy as the instructor and this inadvertently evoked historical narrative that
prophetic quality. It not only tells of the past and the present, but also tells of the future,
which in many ways dictates what is possible in that future. Naming fixes things. As
Words, no matter whether they are vocalized and made into sounds or
remain unspoken as thoughts, can cast an almost hypnotic spell upon you.
You easily lose yourself in them, become hypnotized into implicitly
believing that when you have attached a word to something, you know
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what it is. The fact is: You dont know what it is. You have only covered
up the mystery with a label. Everything, a bird, a tree, even a simple
stone, and certainly a human being, is ultimately unknowable. This is
because it has unfathomable depth. (25)
Once we stick a label on something, it is easier to think that we know that thing.
We lose our beginners mind and stop discovering what is new and different about the
thing in each moment. We blindly feel the trunk of the elephant, make our
pronouncement, and we are done with it. We tack the butterfly to the piece of cork and
call it a day.
I bring attention to this naming and renaming process to show how the Western
linguistic conceptualization of the alleged other (third world: as being from another
world that is lower in rank; developing: as being in process and in some sense
striving to become what we are; global south: as little more than a set of geographical
northern neighbors), says quite a lot about the self that is being constructed both
globally and personally, much more than it says about the other (if there is, in fact, an
other at all).
J. Krishnamurti asks interesting questions about the self and other, calling
them the observer and the image because of the nature of their relationship:
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So we come to a point where we can say, The observer is also the image,
only he has separated himself and observes (95-96).
insight into how it helps to perpetuate domination and exploitation. She writes:
Tolle posits the other as a concept that plays a large part in the maintenance of
the ego, which can be seen as interchangeable with the self as I have constructed it
within this work. He characterizes this self or ego as the incessant stream of
involuntary and compulsive thinking and the emotions that accompany it. (59) He
relates this to Descartes thinker in the statement I think, therefore I am, then links it to
Sartres assertion that he is not the thinker, but the one observing the thinker. In Tolles
work, the Cartesian thinker is the ego/ self, the involuntary and compulsive thinker.
As long as you are completely unaware of this, you take the thinker to be
who you are. This is the egoic mind. We call it egoic because there is a
sense of self, of I (ego) in every thoughtevery memory, every
interpretation, opinion, viewpoint, reaction, emotion. This is
unconsciousness, spiritually speaking. Your thinking, the content of your
mind, is of course conditioned by the past: your upbringing, culture,
family background, and so on. The central core of all your mind activity
consists of certain repetitive and persistent thoughts, emotions, and
reactive patterns that you identify with most strongly. This entity is the
ego itself (59-60).
The ego/self, according to Tolle, uses the other as an anchor for its free-
floating and delicate existence. He claims that all egos operate with the same structures,
thriving on identification and separation. He explains, When you live through the mind-
made self comprised of thought and emotion that is the ego, the basis for your identity is
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precarious because thought and emotion are by their very nature ephemeral, fleeting. So
every ego is continuously struggling for survival, trying to protect and enlarge itself. To
uphold the I-thought, it needs the opposite thought of the other. The conceptual I
cannot exist without the conceptual other (60). The self and the other inter-are.
not mean the concept of the other, but the lived reality of those who have been grouped
as sucheven into the future. This prophetic nature of language is born of reiteration. In
Declining the Stereotype, Mireille Rosello reveals the functioning of reiteration in the
dissemination of stereotypes, revealing it as that which gives stereotypes their power and
potency as forms of classification and transmission of knowledge, more often than not of
According to Rosello, stereotypes are not the individual units, but rather the
chunks of generalization that we force upon ourselves and others. These stereotypes have
lived results for those stereotyped. Rosello explains, Cultural theorists who seek to read
benefits provided by the wealthier nation-states. When we deal with national or ethnic or
gender communities, exclusion almost systematically entails the loss of rights, the loss of
privileges, or in the most extreme cases, the loss of all dignity and hope (11).
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Since the stereotypes are often more widely agreed upon than our personal
beliefs, they often feel truer and even more like fact. The targets of stereotyping are
maneuvered into certain roles, so that a vicious circle develops, in which reality seems to
endorse the stereotype. (17) We can see this vicious circle at work with the chicken and
egg story of the Black American man and prison. Statistics about Black men in the
American prison system are staggering. In 2008, one in nine Black men between the
ages of 20 and 34 was incarcerated, compared to one in thirty for men of other races in
the same age group. Ben Jealous, president and CEO of the NAACP, says that
According to The Sentencing Project, one in three Black men born today can expect to
go to prison, if the current trend continues On any given day, one in every ten Black
men between the ages of 25 and 29 is incarcerated (Essence 102). Since 1990, the U.S.
prison population, which was already the worlds largest, has doubled. State
governments are spending nearly $50 billion a year on jails and prisons to contain over
2.3 million prisoners. Five states, Michigan among them, now spend as much or more on
Because of the power of stereotype, criminality is branded into Black mens skin.
The stereotype of the criminal Black man leads to more racial profiling, to harsher
sentences for comparable crimes, to less attention in the classroom, to limited job
legal counsel. I often wait to see the sketch or the photo of the person who has just
murdered an old woman or raped a teenager on the evening news, hoping that the person
will not be Black. Thanks to the news, I have probably seen thousands of Black men
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over the years with their heads bowed, their hoodies on, being led to and from police cars
in handcuffs. I have grown accustomed to seeing someone who looks like my downstairs
neighbors son or my mailman splashed across the news for committing heinous crimes.
I have seen black and white footage of the very same thing since the Civil Rights
movement, where the heinous crime was simply asserting ones right to sit in a certain
place. We can definitely see how the stereotype of Black men as criminal has resulted in
a self-fulfilling prophecy that makes it seem that this were so. We can also see in this
stereotypes by reiterating them. She says, To declare them wrong, false, to attack them
description of the stereotyped community will never work (13). She sees stereotypes as
having within them a sort of built-in antidote against all attempts at discrediting them.
(Rosello 18) This is because Stereotypes were precisely created to protect ideas from
the wear and tear of materiality (23). I feel that the best way to approach stereotypes is
to examine the role they serve in maintaining cultural beliefs. Ethnic stereotypes are
always at the service of some ideological system, but they cannot be reduced to the
system (16). These stereotypes become self-fulfilling prophecies (17) of what is and
isnt possible for groups that are stereotyped. It is important to understand that beliefs
about the other are no different and no less limiting than the other beliefs examined in
cling to the safety of the stereotype. This is at least in part because the stereotypes may
figure into our own belief system in ways we are not willing to rethink. If my self has
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as part of its construction a notion of racial superiority, I will be loath to relinquish this
idea even if my experience disproves it. Thus, it is only in exploring my own beliefs that
PARADIGMATIC FRAMES
frame of reference. In the more general sense, its the way we see the worldnot in
interpreting. (Covey 23)), which place limits on what can be known. Such paradigms as
linearity, hierarchical, and binary thinking, for example, leave no space for the type of
inter-being that Hanh describes, nor for simultaneity, synchronicity, multiplicity, and
other forms of non-duality . These other ways of seeing the world are not as easy to
work with because they are not as simplistic as either this or that or first this then
that. Yet without these other, lesser used paradigms, it is impossible to understand the
complex interplay of different categories, the ways in which they inter-are. In his essay,
Who Are Our Own People Challenges for a Theory of Social Identity, Michael R.
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themselves in fundamental ways. These various categories of social
identity do not, therefore, comprise essentially separate axes that
occasionally intersect. They do not simply intersect, but blend,
constantly and differently They expand one another and mutually
constitute each others meanings (103).
Hames-Garca argues that using the traditional paradigms actually perpetuates the
problem. Separate and fragmented become ways of seeing others and oneself that
facilitate domination and exploitation (120). By using these reductive frames, the full
story can never be told. If I can only answer Yes or No, there is no room for No,
but or Yes and or Well, yes and no or Yesterday, yes, but today, not so
much. For some, multiplicity is hard to express, and for others it is hard to perceive. As
Hames- Garca says, Unfortunately, this multiplicity of the self becomes obscured
through the logic of domination to which the self becomes subjected What does it
that one is understood in terms of the most dominant construction of that identity (104).
the Politics of Empowerment, Patricia Hill Collins writes that, "Oppressed groups are
frequently placed in the situation of being listened to only if we frame our ideas in the
language that is familiar to and comfortable for a dominant group" (xii). This is apparent
even in the fact that anger and blame are frequently absent from multiethnic discussions
of race, particularly academic ones, ostensibly to benefit the white people that are
present. I have heard more than once that anger would not be productive. Perhaps
not, but it might be authentic and it might be warranted. Even so, the discussion of race
must often be framed in a way that makes it easy for the dominant group to hear. While
at first glance this might seem like a progressive attempt to do away with blame and
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them versus us constructions, when examined more deeply, it is also an assertion that
the discomfort of the dominant group takes priority over the discomfort of the oppressed
group.
Stories that are not familiar or are uncomfortable are harder to hear. I can give
two examples to support this claim from my own personal observations and experience
growing up in the 1980s and 1990s as a Black and Caribbean American. For one, the
mainstream media conflated race and class by frequently taking the experiences and
culture of lower class and working poor Black Americans as representative of the
experience of all Black Americans. This was why so many Americans, Black and white,
were in an uproar about The Cosby Show in the 1980s. They felt that the premise of the
showa doctor and a lawyer raising functional children in an upper middle class, two
Blackness, in this case, was framed in a way that many people could not, or were not
willing, to understand and accept. Blackness had become so inextricable from poverty in
American culture that it was genuinely puzzling to many to see this variation in the
Another example would be the way in which Jamaican culture was seen for a long
time as synonymous with Caribbean culture, since its popularity gave it higher visibility.
Furthermore, Jamaicans seemed to embrace the idea of their culture as the authentic
Caribbean experience. Bob Marley, dreadlocks, the Ethiopian flag, and the marijuana
leaf came to represent the Caribbean and Caribbean-ness in the eyes of many Americans
who saw no distinction between Caribbean cultures. Thus, for many Americans even to
this day what they see and define as Caribbean culture is a stereotyped caricature of one
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group, Rastafarians, that emerged on one particular island, Jamaica. The 1980s and
1990s were full of such generalizations, where little distinction was drawn among groups.
Mainstream cultures arrogance and ignorance saw Asian cultures as all more or less the
same as one another, Latino cultures as lacking specificity, and Caribbean cultures as
being the same shit, different island. Sadly, because tourism is the primary industry in
a large part of the Caribbean, this erasure was tolerated and perhaps even endorsed by
many Caribbean nations. In St. Maarten, for example, I could easily find a hundred hats
with dreadlocks sewn in or t-shirts that promise, No Problem, Mon, both symbols of
the Rastafarian culture prevalent in Jamaica and, while present to some degree, hardly
defining of local culture. I would be much harder pressed to find something that one
might define as a national literature (save perhaps using calypso songs as literary texts).
Yet at the same time that Hill Collins explanation points to an accurate
serving to unpack and decode the lived experienceneglects the crucial fact that
education also prophetically mediates the experience itself by providing the linguistic
lens and paradigmatic framework through which it can be understood. But if I include
the future in my equation of the relationship between education and experience, certain
understandings are enabled and others are disabled precisely because of the results they
will produce. Thus, education might serve to unpack, decode, then repack the lived
experience. Our understanding of the past and present must also facilitate our desired
future. If I were to agree with Hill Collins, then that would fix my identity within the
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make my existence relative to and contingent upon a central oppressor, without whom I
could not maintain this identity. It would bring my own ego/ self into play, making me
a player in an ongoing battle between oppressor and oppressed, and creating a personal
attachment to and identification with the identity of the victim. If I were to become
attached to the idea of myself as victim, I would have a hard time relinquishing it and
seeing myself as other than that. It would become a part of my story, my history and as
such, every memory, every interpretation, opinion, viewpoint, reaction, emotion would
have this oppressed identity woven into it, as Tolle mentioned. To no longer be
oppressed would be to unravel my egoic identity, which my ego would never let me do
anyway.
With many things that I read in my first few years of graduate school, like Black
Feminist Thought, I often felt I was being handed the wrong tools and techniques to
excavate and carve out my own experience. They were valuable tools, but they were not
of much help in the work I was undertaking. I was trying to sculpt a vessel, but was
being given paint brushes and lessons in finer painting techniques. Unlike other branches
of scholarship where the truths of the past still hold true today, talk about race today has
little to do with discussions of race in the past. There are many structures and functions
of race that certainly carry over from the past and merit examination, but a lot of cultural
assumptions have changed since the 90s, let alone the 80s, 70s, or 60s many spurred,
revisiting the past in racial discourse, we walk a thin line between reiterating and
reinforcing stereotypes, as Rosello outlines, and making progress toward lived and
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In my scholarship, I try to render textual and academic performances that are not
work endeavors to serve as a reminder that many of the rules and strictures only exist if
we choose to uphold them for ourselves and others. Inspired by the work of hooks, West,
called "scholarly tone" that presents itself as objective or neutral, precisely because it
attempts to obscure or erase much of the subjectivity of the author. Its performed
neutrality is normally associated with whiteness and maleness, probably because white
males were scholars in Western culture long before anyone else was allowed to be. As
whiteness operates as the unmarked norm against which other identities are marked and
racialized, the seemingly un-raced center of a racialized world (10). It is from the
neutral position of the white male that many scholarswhite and non-white, male and
femalewrite, forgetting that "white people are raced, just as men are gendered" (1).
As Richard Dyer notes, White power secures its dominance by seeming not to be
anything in particular. (67) Thus College seems race neutral until we introduce the
term Black College, which puts a White in front of what before was taken to be
everymans College. Government seems similarly race neutral until we realize how
long government was exclusively white, and how long it has been predominantly white.
Likewise, we discover this invisible White lurking in front of what has been called
academic voice or scholarly tone. In adopting this white mask, non-white scholars
often end up "other-ing" the non-white people that they discuss, including themselves, in
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the process. I can recall times when I was writing a paper about African-Americans and
started to write they instead of the more accurate, yet more confrontational sounding
we.
subject in the realm of the oppressed and fragments the speaker into both oppressor and
oppressed. Paula Rothenberg points out the underlying belief that this academic practice
reinforces. This assumption that white people are just people, which is not far off
saying that whites are people whereas colours are something else, is endemic to white
culture (10). Mab Segrest explains the painful result. Because racism normalizes
whiteness and problematizes color, we whites as generic humans escape scrutiny for
our accountability as a group for creating racism and as individuals for challenging it
(42). In Blood, Bread and Poetry (1984), Adrienne Rich states: "We are not urged to
help create a more human society here in response to the ones we are taught to hate and
dread. Discourse is frozen at this level" (220). One of the reasons that discourse is
frozen might be the tone and gaze that scholars have been encouraged to adopt, in that it
ends up limiting the questions that one is able to ask and the stories one is able to tell.
concurrence of such a thing as blackness in ways that make rational, logical sense. How
disadvantage, but can also be an advantage? Being Black has afforded me a (real?
imagined?) connection to some incredible things- the black church, a legacy of survival
and resistance, a richness and depth of spirit that isn't rooted in the material, a strong and
beautiful family history, a mind-blowing and diverse artistic tradition through which I
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can explore and express myself, an impressively self-sacrificing work ethic, and a sense
of pride and hope at the accomplishments and beauty of Black peoples from myriad
diasporic locations who have excelled and innovated in spite of historic and present-day
societal biases. How do I articulate that what most would point to as the main cause of
African-Americanhas also been the cause of infinite joys; that I wouldn't trade it for
anything? I have felt an overwhelming and heartwarming sense of belonging, love and
kinship based on my racein Africa, the Caribbean and the United States. And, in spite
Blackness has also caused torment and tragedy for me and my family and friends.
I have experienced staggering alienation from being either the only or one of few
African-Americans in virtually every academic setting I have encountered; yet I have also
my class and educational background and/or my genealogy (i.e., the way I talk and dress,
the texture of my hair, my ease in interacting with whites). I have been told more than
once that I dont act black or talk black which more often than not left me feeling
community. I have even felt disunited from some African-Americans for not being
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racist, for judging people based on the content of their character rather than the color of
their skin as Dr. Martin Luther King prescribed. This has been a bone of contention most
particularly in relation to interracial dating, which I have defended in principle (if one
wants to eliminate racism, sexism, classism, and homophobia in society, I contend, one
cannot judge others based on race, gender, class or sexual orientation), but have cursed at
times in practice because of the way some white suitors left me feeling objectified and
loving relationship predicated on the assumption that you are the exotic other.
white audience and writing exclusively to and for them? How do I then go on to discuss
the plight of the African in America or the liberation of all peoples of African descent
from oppression when I have already alluded to some of the joys and benefits that are
exclusively ours and stem- at least in part- from the many combative and coping tools
that we have developed in the face of that oppression? How do I discuss blackness
without essentializing? How do I strive to transcend race and gender in my life and my
scholarship without neglecting, at best, or degrading, at worst, the historical and cultural
specificity of that race and gender, of the intersection of that race and that gender? In
If I view race as a function of the ego/ self, there is renewed possibility of unraveling it.
Race might then be seen as little more than a limiting attachment or identification, instead
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of the life-defining juggernaut that it sometimes can be. I can try to notice race when it
comes up in myself or in others without judging it, similar to how I might observe anger
for, another feeling, such as inferiority, superiority, membership, or isolation. But, upon
examination, more often than not, I believe that we will see that race is the content and
not the structureit is merely being used to support or uphold pre-existing structures of
Im not navely asserting that race can be done away with by seeing it as a mental
construct. I am suggesting that we each own our own beliefs about race, and our own
racist beliefs. It will take all of us looking honestly at race on the individual level to
change the way that race impacts greater society. We cannot expect more from our
culture than we expect of ourselves. Most of us dont really want to know our true
feelings about race. We dont want to question our liberal stance, nor our quiet bigotry.
Some pretend that we are all equal, while others pretend that they are superior. Many are
told that they are inferior, and some of them believe it. When we can see our beliefs
about race as a liability of our own thinking rather than a limitation of the imagined
other, it loses some of its power over us. Race does not exist solely in the mind,
however, because it fuels many actions and choices that impact our lives. Race colors
our countrys politics, industry, foreign policy, education, and much more. It tempers our
interactions and mediates our understanding. But it is when we can detach and stop
identifying with our race that we can transcend the limits that racial thinking impose.
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Blackness has certainly meant many things to me. But when I can allow it to
mean more things, different things, andultimatelynothing, will be when I have truly
detached from it. When other blacknessesJamaican ones, lower class ones,
blackness(es), I will know that I have stopped identifying with race. To me, transcending
blackness doesnt mean I have moved beyond race, it means I have embraced race and all
its myriad expressions. And yet I am able to see race for what it is, a crutch that
sometimes feels useful but more often feels useless, an unhappy comfort zone of our own
creation.
This reading is going more smoothly than the last one. I have been able to
establish a routinereading on my bed after I put the dogs to sleep in their kennel.
Building it into my schedule has helped me to maintain the practice. Making it a regular
emphasizes the importance of cultivating regular practices, reminding his readers that A
little bit of something is a lot better than nothing. You are more likely to do, and
continue doing, what is convenient and simple. Better to meditate, contemplate, or pray
for only sixty seconds every day than for an hour once every week (44). Millman uses
If you dont exercise every day but would like to start, then get up
tomorrow morning and remember to do one jumping jack; then, the next
morning do another jumping jack; and the next morning, and the next.
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That one jumping jack every day is a profound step in the right direction,
because it gets your foot in the dooryou are forming the habit of
dedicating a portion of your day, no matter how small, to exercise. The
following month you may decide to trade in your daily jumping jack for a
brisk walk around the block or two minutes of free-form movement and
deep breathing To transform your life, begin simply, with a foot in the
door. (45)
Anyone who knows me well knows that I deeply believe that anything is possibly
if we just take small, diligent toward a given goal. Little by little, step by step, we
approach our goal. And when it gets difficult, when we are discouraged, we need only
turn around and notice how far weve come already, how much ground has already been
traversed. By making reading and meditating part of my routine, I am less likely to judge
the moment and decided that I dont feel like doing it. Brushing my teeth, for example,
has become a regular practice that I do regardless of whether I really want to or not. I
dont decide that my teeth are clean enough for today and skip it, or decide that
brushing them is boring and put it off until tomorrow. By doing it regularly, it
becomes just another thing that I do every day, almost automatically. This reading
Karpinski writes:
important to us consciously and mindfully. Discipline enables us to put our new, more
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expansive beliefs into action. To use Millmans example, by choosing to do even a little
bit of exercise regularly, someone who formerly thought I will never get into shape will
see that his new practice does not support this belief. As he sees even slight changes in
his physical composition, he will realize that this limiting belief is no longer the truth of
his experience. In this contradiction he finds the freedom to formulate new unlimited
beliefs, the freedom to choose differently in this moment and in subsequent moments.
Shunryu Suzuki explains in Zen Mind, Beginners Mind. Perfect freedom is not found
without some rules. People, especially young people, think that freedom is to do just
what they want, that in Zen there is no need for rules. But it is absolutely necessary for
us to have some rules. But this does not mean always to be under control. As long as
Millman adds that, Discipline leads to freedom, according to an old spiritual law.
This seems a contradiction, since most of us view discipline as doing something we dont
want to do and freedom as doing whatever we want. But those of us who have achieved
financial freedom, social freedom, the freedom to travel where we wish, the freedom to
share the fruits of our labors and learning with others, and the freedom of good health
have done so through self mastery(49). Thus, discipline might be seen as the mental
attitude that leads to practice. We might also say that practicing with mindfulness is
discipline. In our world of immediate gratification, the idea of having the discipline to
develop a practice is not au courant. We live in the time of the quick fix, of instant
gratification, and of the binge. The concept of delayed gratification barely factors into
our mass culture. Most people seem to prefer to take a pill to fix their blood pressure
than walk for 10-20 minutes daily. Many people would have surgery get thinner if they
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could afford it, rather than cultivate a healthy lifestyle. Similarly, there were several
nights when I would have preferred to just go to bed than do my reading practice. I could
have cited various rationalizations to justify not doing it (Im pregnant and need rest/ its
already 10:00/ I can do it first thing in the morning/ Ive already read this dumb book
twice for goodness sake!), but I did it anyway. And I am glad I did.
In sitting, I see that I am still relatively angry with Kincaid, even though she has
done what I have been suggesting we do throughout this textshe has renegotiated her
identity on her own terms, choosing not to be defined by others. She has even overcome
her past obsessions, thrown off the mantle of victimhood so pervasive in her earlier
writing. She has done away with many of the beliefs that werent serving her. She has
chosen what blackness, motherhood, caribbeanness, and many other facets of her identity
will mean to her. She has eschewed linearity, upturned dominant hegemonic paradigms.
So why am I not applauding the ways in which she has shaken loose from societal
constraints?
Jamaica Kincaids blackness. I have felt betrayed by the ways that constructs like race or
kinship do not function in her writing, which transparently describes her life. She has
used biting words to publicly attack her family, her island, her friends, and Europe
indiscriminately. She seems to hold no allegiance to anyone other than herself and her
immediate family of husband and children (though she may even be turning ever so
slightly on them as well, as evidenced by her most recent essay in Harpers, but more on
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this in a moment). Furthermore, I cant help feeling like she has thrown everyone else
under a bus in order to save herself. She adopts an imperialist gaze and tries to fix others
in her definitions and judgments of them. While she claims and practices freedom with
regard to her identity, she does so in a way thatI feeldisallows that freedom in
others. She seems to build her identity on the backs of those closest to her, those who
have smaller voices and have no international audiencelike her dead brother or the
Indeed, I have built quite a case against her in which choices she madesuch as
taking a Scottish last name, dying her hair blond in her early 20s, and basically
formulating an identity around her family with a white academic in Vermont and her love
of gardening indicate that her transcendence of blackness was really little more than
an appropriation of whiteness. She did not reconfigure blackness, she simply chose not
to be black. She didnt redefine caribbeanness, she simply talked her way out of it. She
seems to be fine with being one of the few Blacks that is all right. Quite an indictment!
I have not left any space in which her blackness, whatever that is, might be acceptable.
Kincaid describes her take on blackness in her first book, the novella At the
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into a vastness of free-flowing matter. In the blackness, then, I have been
erased. I can no longer say my own name. I can no longer point to myself
and say I. In the blackness my voice is silent. First, then, I have been
my individual self, carefully banishing randomness from my existence,
then I am swallowed up in the blackness so that I am one with it (46-7)
playing with her relationship to it, striving to understand how it is so much a part of her
and so apart from her at the same time. This ubiquitous blackness seems to be the cause
of her annihilation, a flow into the formless and the silent. It causes her erasure,
leaving her voiceless and without an identity, without an I. She is what she calls her
individual self before being subsumed in blackness. This might be seen as her coming
to understand that the blackness, like the blackness of her skin, will always be there as a
part of her. She is, as she says one with it, and as such her individual self has been
I hear the silent voice; it stands opposite the blackness and yet it does not
oppose the blackness, for conflict is not a part of its nature. I shrug off my
mantle of hatred. In love I move toward the silent voice. I shrug off my
mantle of despair. In love, again, I move ever toward the silent voice. I
stand inside the silent voice. The silent voice enfolds me. The silent voice
enfolds me so completely that even in memory the blackness is erased. I
live in silence. The silence is without boundaries. The pastures are
unfenced, the lions roam the continents, the continents are not separated.
Across the flat lands cuts the river, its flow undimmed. The mountains no
longer rupture. Within the silent voice, no mysterious depths separate me;
no vision is so distant that longing is stirred up in me. I hear the silent
voicehow softly now it falls, and all of existence is caught up in it.
Living in the silent voice, I am no longer I. Living in the silent voice, I
am at last at peace. Living in the silent voice, I am at last erased. (52)
in the silent voice, wherein she finds peace in erasure. I see this erasure as a
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detachment from her previous identification with blackness, in which her black self is
abandoned and her peaceful, spiritual Self is recognized as her true self, who she is. This
spiritual Self is silent, it does not speak and, as such, cannot tell anyone who or what it is.
It can only be. Its silence keeps it from having boundaries. It creates safe space for her,
Yet I am hesitant to believe that this is the place from which her subsequent
writing comes, this silent, peaceful place of no-self. As much as I want to accept her
THIRD READING
Like many early Black writers in America, Kincaid emerged as a writer from a
people who did not have a literature. In Antigua, Kincaid asserts, No one in the history
of the place I come from wrote (Columbia Chronicle). Kincaids role as a mouthpiece
for those assumed to have nothing to say is similar to the role that early Black writers
held in the United States and Europe where, as Henry Louis Gates describes in his
introduction to Race, Writing, and Difference, a correlation was assumed between race
and the ability to write. Accused of lacking a formal and collective history, blacks
published individual histories which, taken together, were intended to narrate in segments
the larger yet fragmented history of blacks in Africa, now dispersed throughout a cold
New World (11). As Gates explains it, these autobiographical narratives were integral
The narrated, descriptive eye was put into service as a literary form to
posit both the individual I of the black author as well as the collective
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I of the race. Text created author; and black authors, it was hoped,
would create, or re-create, the image of race in European discourse. The
very face of the race was contingent upon the recording of the black voice.
Voice presupposed a face, but also seems to have been thought to
determine the very contours of the black face. (11)
slaves in the United States. As Brita Lindberg-Seyersted remarks in Black and Female:
Essays on Writings by Black Women in the Diaspora, Kincaids writings date from the
period when Antiguas colonial yoke was gradually being lifted, first by its joining
associated groups of a few Caribbean islands, later when it achieved the status of an
writing helped establish Black subjectivity in the face of a dominant culture convinced of
similarly in Antigua. As part of the Caribbean world, Antigua typifies the post-colonial
dilemma of what to do with the new freedom; what to preserveif anythingof the
colonial legacy; and how to decolonize the mind (129, her emphasis). This
Chapter 1, a release of thoughts and behaviors that impede independence. Like many
post-colonial peoples, Antiguans were freed from colonial rule, but not from the
subjugation of the colonial belief system, which relied heavily on the trope of race to
One might view, Lucy, her novel about her experience as an au pair to a white,
family by greed, sent to live in a foreign place in servitude to a privileged white family,
and then discovered by and wed to another privileged white family, Kincaids story is
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quite similar to that of other Black American women around the civil war era. Childhood
poverty, domestic work, travel, and marriage that benefit the brides socio-economic
status are consistent themes in the earliest writings of Black women in the Americas.
Nancy Gardner Prince, for example, a freeborn woman who was sent from her family at
autobiography, Prince writes of similar economic challenges that sent her and her siblings
into homes to perform domestic service. After a summer of Prince and her brother
supporting their mother, a widow who had already placed three of her eight children with
other families, on the sales of various berries they had picked and fish they had caught,
they realized that an even greater contribution was necessary from the remaining
We stayed with our mother until every resource was exhausted; we then
heard of a place eight miles out of town, where a boy and girl were
wanted. We both went and were engaged. We often went home with our
wages, and all the comforts we could get; but we could not approach our
mother as we wished (Busby 42).
loss plagued Kincaid. Prince describes her mother as young, inexperienced, with no
hope in God, and without the knowledge of her Savior. Her grief, poverty, and
responsibilities were too much for her; she never again was the mother that she had been
before (Busby 42). Thrice widowed and overwhelmed by the thought of raising eight
children, Princes mother changed like Kincaids from one who gave nurturance to one
focused on survival. Kincaid did not try to alleviate her mothers burden of a sick
husband and several young children. (Stanton 45) Instead, Kincaid claims, I insisted on
reading books (Stanton 45). This might be construed as Kincaid being so wrapped up in
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her own escapism that she was unable to offer aid to others, but Kincaid toes the line
between being unable and being unwilling to help. Kincaid explains that books were her
priority over her family, leading her on one occasion to read a book instead of tending to
Devon, an infant at the time, left in her care. I would have said that I loved books but
did not love [Devon] at all, only that I loved him because I was supposed to and what else
could I do (Brother 129). This belief that books take priority over her brother is
reiterated by Kincaid. Devon, the brother depicted in My Brother,is the brother whose
birth propelled her permanently out of the idyllic world of maternal love that Kincaid had
been grasping forand losingas she grew older. Of that brother she writes, I saw him
when he was three years old and didnt see him again until he was twenty-one (149).
Later on which Devon is again put in her care, this time as a HIV patient who needs her
assistance getting medication, Kincaid again places reading above him, but what she is
foreshadowed in My Brother:
At the time the phone call came telling me of my brothers illness, among
the many comforts, luxuries, that I enjoyed was reading a book, The
Education of a Gardener, written by a man named Russell Page. I was in
the process of deciding that as a gardener who designed gardens for other
people, he had the personality of the servant, not the personality of the
artist, that his prose was fussy, tidy, timid; though the book bored me I
would continue to read it because it offered such an interesting contrast to
some of the other gardeners whose writing I loved. (I only thought all that
before the phone rang. I now love The Education of a Gardener and look
forward to reading it again.) And so when the phone rang I put this book
down and answered it and I was told about my brother. (10)
move her writing into the gardenbut also to her new vision of herself as a member of
the privileged, conquering class. Judging Pages writing fussy, tidy, timid and seeing
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that as relating to the personality of a servant belies her own beginnings as a domestic
worker. She no longer identifies with that period of her life. It is as if she has told that
story already, and as such may put it to rest. Very little about her past as an au pair
every text.
Massachusetts, she determined that she wanted to leave her country (Busby 49). She wed
Nero Prince and traveled with him to Russia. After her marriage and departure, she lived
a life of relative luxury and leisure in comparison to her years as a domestic. She writes
There I spent six weeks very pleasantly, visiting and receiving friends in
the manner of the country. While there I attended two of their parties;
there were various amusements in which I did not partake, which caused
them much disappointment (Busby 46).
Because her husband was the servant of a sea captain as well as a princess, Prince
spent time in the imperial palace and even met the Emperor and Empress, Alexander and
Elizabeth. Kincaid made a similar ascent to the leisure class when she wed Allen
Shawn, son of her former employer and editor at The New Yorker, William Shawn. Like
Prince, who wrote of her childhood and her travels to Russia, Europe, and Jamaica in her
book of memoirs, A Narrative of the Life and Travels of Mrs. Nancy Prince written by
intensification of emotion, signaling both loss and grief (Stanton 43). As I have
mentioned before, I think this repetition also serves to reinforce her version of her past.
As such they recur across texts. It is through the stories that are told and re-told that we
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can see Kincaids interpretation of her past, and her beliefs about it. Her identifications
and the choices she makes about what stories she does and does not tell reveal how she
has selectively remembered the past in order to build the self with which she presently
identifies. This self was a lover of books from early on, at the top of her academic
class, brilliant but suppressed and eventually rejected by her family, enamored of her
Lindberg-Seyerstead remarks of Kincaids first three published works, In all the books
we find the same girl with her traumatic love for her mother, the respected matriarch;
with the same rather neutral relationship to a gentle and responsible father (who
nevertheless in the end will leave his widow penniless); and with her own two-
facedness, as she calls the split she has identified within herselfa split between an
outside and an inside, between a false side and a true side (131). Kincaids writing for a
time grappled with her nostalgic paradise lost, and the emotion-fraught betrayal that
propelled her from its grace. Kincaids relationship in particular with her mother and her
Kincaid very obviously manipulates the past to create one that jibes with her present view
of herself. Even as her vision of herself shifts, so does her memory of the past. This
original rejection and expulsion by her mother from her motherland has been a large part
of her writing, particularly her early works which strove to grapple with her perceived
victimhood and salvage an identity that could have healthy self-esteem. Thus, her
struggle is also similar to the struggles of black people as a whole in America to find a
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path to Self-love and self-acceptance. Having survived this perceived trauma, Kincaid
has been reluctant, if not outright unwilling, to take on certain identities in her adult life.
In order to move beyond her past, she has had to create anew who she is. Some of the
decisions she has made about who she is not are quite telling.
Kincaid became a mother herself, giving birth to two children, Annie (which is
both Kincaids mothers and daughters name in real life, and is the name of the daughter,
not the mother, in Annie John), and Harold. It is significant that when she herself
became a mother she was released, in some respects, from her attachment to her identity
as her own mothers daughter. Kincaid settled into her writing career and her new and
carefully tailored identity quite gracefully. Her writing no longer derived from the hectic
pace of New York and the demanding rigor of writing for the New Yorker. It no longer
had the acerbic tone that I think was meant to serve as a stern dose of reality to the
primarily white and primarily privileged folk who might regularly read the New Yorker.
That writing came at a timethe late 80s to early 90swhen the notion of white
privilege was just gaining currency, thanks to feminist scholars like Peggy MacIntosh
whose work helped question the assumption that whiteness and maleness and the
privileges associated with them were normal and everything else was somehow
deviant.
Kincaid first claimed her space as other while writing at The New Yorker, where
her biting tone indicated her ire toward her perceived audience and their effortless
location in the center. Kincaid addressed her first writings to the center and positioned
herself on the margin, but in the privileged position of one who was on the margin but
had access to the center, had a voice that could be heard by the center, and as such could
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say things that she imagined the center had never heard before. In these first writings, her
perceived (and probably actual) audience fit the stereotype of the hegemonic, white,
patriarchal norm who probably saw that location as natural and deserved. Kincaid was a
bug in the ear of some of New Yorks privileged people, reminding them of their
interconnection with the other, calling attention to the ways in which their actions
adversely affected people like her. Now, almost thirty years later, it she longer has the
desperate urgency of the first few books to be heard. Nor does she seem to want to be
heard by everyone for her foray into garden and travel writing virtually insure a
This newfound tranquility stems from having constructed a world and a world
view that confirm Kincaids beliefs about who she is. The roots and seeds of this
newfound identity are found within all of her texts, which function inter-textually and can
be arranged at least somewhat chronologically to tell Kincaids story of her world as she
sees it. It makes sense then that at this juncture in life, where her most immediate family
in Antigua has passed away and she has raised a family of her own in Vermont, some of
Kincaids anger has cooled. Her most recent books, Among Flowers and My Garden
(Book): delve into new genres for Kincaidgarden and travel writing. Having exhausted
her Caribbean family drama and choosing not to expose any American family drama by
painting a very controlled and minimal image of her life with her husband and children in
her texts, Kincaid has turned to garden/travel writing as an outlet for her passion,
amazement, distress, and distaste. At first glimpse, it seems an odd choice for her to
make this aesthetic and marketing choice for her writing. However, through the garden,
Kincaid is able to reprise and continue to explore issues of domination, privilege, and
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devotion; she even manages to bring colonialism and racism into the embarrassment of
plants and flowers that she describes. My Garden (Book): does not deviate from the path
that Kincaid has chosen in her career. Instead, it merely chronicles her evolution into the
living the self she has always presented in her textsa privileged other, and now a
It is telling that she became a gardener around the same time that she became a
mother. The occasion for her first planting is a Mothers Day gift from her husband of
some garden tools and seeds shortly after she first gave birth. She was able to create a
new moniker for herself: gardener. Giving birth did not turn her into a mother,
interestingly, but a gardener. Perhaps the label of mother was still too emotionally
charged and psychologically laden for her to adopt willingly. Having experienced so
much pain in her own mother-daughter relationship caused Kincaid to shy away from
identifying herself as mother. This might be because she has always slated herself the
daughter/ victim; she fears flipping the coin and becoming the mother/victimizer. She
refuses this role to the point that she dedicates My Garden (Book): With blind,
instinctive, and confused love, for Annie & for Harold who from time to time are
furiously certain that the only thing standing between them and a perfect union with their
mother is the garden, and from time to time, they are correct. The garden serves as a
both natural and artificial boundary between Kincaid and her children.
Creating this boundary is an interesting choice by Kincaid. She even goes so far
as to literally separate her garden from her daughters with a new little tiller in My
Garden (Book):. I cant help but think that her new identity as gardener gives her an
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excuse for not being available as a mother. From the very start of motherhood she
expresses ambivalence about embracing the role. She leaves her daughter in the care of
surrogates, the women who helped me take care of my child (4). In her most recent
piece of writing, a piece that appeared in Harpers Magazine in the Spring 2009 issue,
Kincaid notes that Annie and Harold, her children, apparently took issue with this
By the time my mother died, I was not only one of her four children, I had
become the mother of two children: a girl and then a boy. This was bliss,
my two children in love with me, and I with them. Nothing has gone
wrong, as far as I can see, but tears have been shed over my not being
completely enthusiastic about going to a final basketball game in a
snowstorm, or my saying something I should have kept in my minds
mouth. A particularly unforgivable act in my childrens eyes is a books
dedication I made to them.
She goes on to cite the dedication to My Garden (Book):, which I will cite here
again: With blind, instinctive, and confused love, for Annie & for Harold who from time
to time are furiously certain that the only thing standing between them and a perfect
union with their mother is the garden, and from time to time, they are correct. Here we
can see more of this boundary that she has drawn between herself and her children. This
time it is a psychological boundary that subtly establishes that she is not willing to lose
her self for the sake of being a mother. Since to name is to possess, according to
Kincaid, she is insisting on being self-possessed. She is not someones mother (the
But perhaps the identity she is refusing is not (only) that of mother. It seems that
Kincaid is refusing the domestic roles typically associated with the women. She
mentions on the first page not only the women that care for her child, but the woman who
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cleans her house as well. From the outset she is establishing that gardeningand being a
gardeneris hard work. As noted in the last chapter, it requires a staff of many working
evidenced by the absence of sexuality in the text. She expresses none of the homo-erotic
playfulness of her childhood that was present in Annie John and At the Bottom of the
River, nor the robust sexuality that marked Lucy. We do see sexuality, but it is
inappropriate and markedly Caribbeanthe babysitter with whom Kincaid is left would
have sex while watching her (93) while Kincaid would pretend to be a little girl from
somewhere else (96). More than one reference is madein this text and othersto
herbs that are grown in Antigua to induce abortions. The only glimpse we get as readers
into Kincaids bedroom, however, is the one she shares with her friend Dan Hinkley
while traveling together to China. They are both married, she explains, he to someone
So sexuality, domesticity, and motherhood are not part of this identity Kincaid has
created as gardener. Nor, it seems, is race. Kincaid is no longer writing a slave narrative.
She gives two accounts of racist encounters in the chapter entitled The Garden in
Winter. In both, Kincaid does not seem to be angered. The first, where a friends
mothers racist remarks about some lilies (just look at these nigger colors she said to
her daughter) were revealed to Kincaid, she expresses regret for mentioning to the mother
that she too hated the color. Had she known about the mothers remark, Kincaid says she
would have embraced the Asiatic lilies and their repulsive colors with a force that
perhaps only death could weaken (67). Her reasoning is that If someone will go to
such lengths to nourish and cultivate prejudice, extending to an innocent flower the
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malice heaped on innocent people, then I certainly wouldnt want to be the one to stand
In the second account, a worker hired by Kincaid to rebuild a stone wall in her
garden shares with her a story about his only trip to New York, when his school bus was
pelted with stones. he said that not all of the people who threw the stones were
colored; and I said, Oh, but I wondered what he really wanted to say, and then he said
that he liked colored people but his father did not. I said, Oh, to that too, but I wondered
what it was he really wanted to say (69). Kincaid holds her tongue, which gives neither
her employee nor her worker any insight into what she is thinking. The employee
continues:
he said that his father did not like colored people because he was in the
army with some colored men and they all got along very well until they
were ordered into battle, and all the colored men in unison turned and ran
away, and ever since then his father had not liked colored people. And
then I was sorry that I had shared my organic cashews with him earlier in
that day, and I was sorry that I had brought him a nice glass of cold spring
water to drink after he ate the cashew nuts; I said to him that it was so
sensible of the soldiers to run away, I would most certainly have done the
same thing, and he said nothing to that; and then I said that it was just as
well that the soldiers were colored, because if they had been people who
looked like his father (white), then most certainly his mother would have
been someone who looked like me. And he stared at me and stared at me
and said he saw what I meant, but that couldnt be true at all, because I
couldnt see right away what I meant (68)
Kincaids first regret is sharing the fruits of her privilegeorganic cashews and
spring waterwith this man. Her subsequent verbal lashing is so genteel that even she is
not sure what the insult is. The man obviously regretted his statements, because The
next day he brought me a small paper bag full of bulbs, each the size of three thimbles,
and he did not know the name of the flower the bulbs would bear, he described it (small,
white, star-shaped), and he said it would bloom early in the spring, much before anything
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else (69). The man reaches out to her through a language he feels they can both
full of nameless bulbsand because of this Kincaid is able to reestablish the hierarchy
that existed previous to their conversation. Although she says she intended to plant the
bulbs, she ends up discarding of them. At the beginning of each day as I began to
work in the garden I would promise myself to plant them, at the end of each day I would
resolve to myself to plant them; and then one day, with gestures that were completely
without anger, I took the bulbs and placed them in the rubbish bin, not the compost heap
(69). Kincaids actiondetermining that the mans gift is not even worth salvaging as
compostis able to be performed without anger because she is able to let go of the
identity that he evoked, colored, and return to her own definition of herself.
My Garden (Book): takes what at first seems a strange turn toward the end.
expedition in China. Even in this moment she seems more regretful to leave her garden
than her children. And what did I leave behind? Two childrena boy who is ten, a girl
who is fourteena husband, a garden full of autumn color (hibiscus, aconitum, anemone,
miconiodes) (191). This moment marks an important step in Kincaids evolution, for
Linda Lang-Peralta explains that while this may seem to be an odd choice to her
readers, this new identity category offers resolution for Kincaid of many of her identity
issues. With this new self that she is establishing, she can make her beliefs and her
practices jibe and unify in a way they hadnt previously. She writes:
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In her garden book, Kincaid seems to answer many of the questions raised
in previous texts. In A Small Place, she couldnt understand why the
English would have chosen to live among the Antiguans, but here she
seems to find an answer in her own identity. In Lucy and again in the
garden book, she angrily describes having to recite Wordsworths poem
about daffodils, but she reveals that blooming in her garden is an exquisite
yellow daffodil that ultimately turns a creamy color she finds irresistible.
In Antigua, she had not understood why the English had brought plants
from conquered lands to create a botanical garden Now she travels as
far as China and the Himalayas to bring back foreign plants to her garden,
carefully listing their scientific names (43)
It makes perfect sense, in light of this new identity that Kincaid is trying on (as
she did the clothing of people from different periods in her early days), for if she wants to
be an explorer and a conqueror, she must be able to do all the things that conquerors do
penetrate and possess the feminine terrain. Amy K. Levin writes that:
Recent theorists on geography and region have made cogent cases for
viewing geography like any other structure of knowledge; that is, they
argue that geography as it is traditionally understood is primarily a
construction of white European men that values certain elements while
rendering others invisible. The glorification of the great explorers who
discovered uncharted territories suggests that only places that have been
seen and named by white men exist, and the language of exploration,
beginning with its assumption that unmapped lands are virgin, has put into
play a series of metaphors that gender the land as female to be possessed
and known by men (78).
Kincaid no longer wants to play the fence. She has chosen a side to be on: the
conquerors. And though she does explore the imperialist impulse in botany, it is not
with the rage and betrayal of someone victimized by it. She merely marks the parallels
between the oppression, acquisition, and sublimation of indigenous plants and the same
actions by the same people toward people. Lang-Peralta agrees that Kincaid has an
increasing identification with the side of the binary that she previously attacked (41).
Kincaid has embarked, left the shores of the known to explore this new identity, as so
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many European explorers once did. She is no longer Black, no longer woman: she is
anchor (61), it is apparent that she is trying to unmoor herself from her previous
memories and build new ones around voyages to the edge of the world (200). This
new identity trumps her previous gendered one where she was denied education because
of her gender; it overrides her previous racialized one which enabled her employer,
fictionalized as Mariah in Lucy, to fall back on the paradigm of master servant when she
feared losing Lucy in her life (143); it enables her to have a new relationship to her
nationality and to the world around her than the one she had in the essay On Seeing
When I saw England for the first time, I was a child in school sitting at a
desk. The England I was looking at was laid out on a map gently,
beautifully, delicately, a very special jewel England was a jewel all
right, and only special people got to wear it. They wore it well and they
wore it everywhere: in jungles, in deserts, on plains, on top of the highest
mountains, on all the oceans, on all the seas, in places where they were not
welcome, in places where they should not have been (344-345).
Kincaid indicates that before seeing the map of England she had long been
conquered by the myriad other ways she was made to feel awe at its existence, small
because I was not from it (347). To illustrate this, she writes I knew the details of the
year 1066 (the Battle of Hastings, the end of the reign of the Anglo-Saxon kinds) before I
knew the details of the year 1832 (the year slavery was abolished) (347). This new
identity affords Kincaid a way out of all of the identity markers that have limited her in
the past.
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But she hasnt quite figured it all out yet. Kincaid still expresses ambivalence,
which Homi Bhabha defines as the complete mix of attraction and repulsion that
characterizes the relationship between the colonizer and the colonized (quoted in Lang-
Peralta 33). She still clings to vestiges of her birth by writing things that are not in
keeping with this new identity. She does not see the irony, for example, that the same
person who can boldly profess It is best just to accept what you have and not take from
other people the things they have that you do not have(74) can also travel a great
distance to collect exotic seeds. Her own actions have moved beyond her scrutiny, and
while she is able to disparage others for their actions, she has constructed such a
privileged location for herself that she is able to function above her own law. Acceptance
may indeed be best, but Kincaid acknowledges just two pages later that she is
marveling at the ways that the assumption of superiority can alter ones experiences in
life. How permanent everything must feel when the world is going your way! she
exclaims while discussing the imperialist nuance of the botanical garden (80).
Discussing the work of Oakes Ames, she writes He was a nineteenth-century man of
European descent: his sense of possession is funny now only because he is dead. On his
way to Cuba, to visit Harvards botany station there, he wrote this to his wife, Blanche:
We are surrounded by the usual uninteresting people one meets on a journey to Cuba
and back; people who are well enough to watch, but undesirable to meet. This is the kind
of confidence you have when the world is yours (80). Yet Kincaids reaction to the
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Chinese that populate the landscape of her plant-hunting ground is strikingly similar: I
saw a large family having a wonderful time as they ate their dinner; it was so heartening
it made me homesick, and I wanted to join them; but the baby of the family was having a
bowel movement on the floor right then; it was all very comfortable for them, but I had
come to China to collect seeds, not to be comfortable with what Chinese people did
(192)
Earlier in her career we could see both Kincaids original anger, cultivated in
association with the victims of conquest (the conquered) and the beginnings of an
appreciation and acceptance of the standpoint of the conquerors. In an interview that was
All these people are very admirable when you think of what they did
these great men. People thought the world was flat. A very poetic idea.
In some ways, these explorations to the New World were very touching. I
realize that one of the tings that is bound up in this horrible thing that
happened (slaverythe domination) is the great curiosity in every human
being. I mean making maps, building a boattheres something really
extraordinary about it, very moving, when you think of these people just
going somewhere without knowing what really they would find (Perry
135)
Yet this narrative of the touching explorer contrasts queerly with Kincaids
It would seem that the thing we call civilization cant be achieved without
uprooting whole groups of people from everything they have ever
knownwho and what they know their individual and collective selves to
be; the place they have always lived; their mothers, their fathers, their
childrenand forcibly made subject to the will of others. Why this is so
is not a mystery to me. I look at it this way: suppose I am living in a nice
village situated in a nice forest, or, say, my nice village is surrounded by
some beautiful mountains, their tops changing color with the changing
position of the sun. I go fishing every day, and every day I catch some
fishjust the right number to satisfy me. I cultivate a small plot of land
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and I always have as much food from this land as I need, so that I never
have to have a larder. To keep myself company, I make up some tales
about how I got here and where I will go when I am not here anymore.
This is a nice little set-up I have here, my definition of contentment; and
the thought of going off somewhere to pile brick upon brick in the hot
desert sun to make monuments commemorating vicious people and their
vicious deeds, or working in someone elses fields, or doing any of the
horrible things that a civilization requires in order to be a civilization
none of this appeals to me at all.
Now, then, I try to imagine this: I am living somewhere thats not in the
least nicethe weather is terrible (England); the people in other countries
like your country better than they like their own because something more
than the weather is terrible about where they live; I am surrounded by
plenty but still I feel very greedy; I want more than I have; I have heard
about all sorts of tings somewhere else on the other side of the world an dI
would like to have them and I would like to have them for nothing. I have
ideas about a lot of things. I feel I know how the world ought to look, the
language most people ought to speak (my own), the sort of god they
should believe in (my own again), and so on and on. Unfortunately, none
of the things I want for myself or the things I want to do, none of my
desires, can be realized where I am, so how terrific, how nearly perfect to
find a defenseless people somewhere to be mere instruments of my will,
some people over whom I have complete dominion. Who can resist this?
No one has ever done so (v-vii).
Apparently this impulse is irresistible even to Kincaid. But she has been
intrigued by this identityembodied most often in her work in the iconic form of
Christopher Columbusfor quite some time. When she was conquered, she had a
dislike for him that seemed quite natural. Yet she also likened herself to him from early
on. In At the Bottom of the River, she identified with him and his story as discoverer.
Perhaps I stand on the brink of a great discovery, and perhaps after I have made my
In Upon Seeing England for the First Time she writes of his desire to dominate:
The space between the idea of something and its reality is always wide
and deep and dark. The longer they are kept apartthe idea of thing,
reality of thingthe wider the width, the deeper the depth, the thicker and
darker the darkness. This space starts out empty, there is nothing in it, but
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it rapidly becomes filled up with obsession or desire or hatred or love
sometimes all of these things, sometimes some of these things, sometimes
only one of these things (350).
Yet even in her description of this unlikable man we can see a hint of empathy in
the acknowledgement that he was simply living his circumstances. She similarly
empathically derides Columbus in Lucy, where Kincaid writes that he could not have
known that he would have so many things to name and I imagined how hard he had to
rack his brain after he ran out of names honoring his benefactors, the saints he cherished,
events important to him. A task like that would have killed a thoughtful person, but he
went on to live a very long life (135). Antigua, which is named after a church, was
given its name without Columbus even setting foot on its soil.
again, she seems conflicted. She calls upon the dominant Eurocentric and hegemonic
narrative, asserting that My history begins like this: In 1492, Christopher Columbus
discovered the New World (153), but at the same time she asks:
What to call the thing that happened to me and all who look like me?
Should I call it history? If so, what should history mean to someone like
me? Should it be an idea, should it be an open wound with each breath I
take in and expel healing and opening the wound again and again, over
and over, and is this healing and opening a moment that began in 1492 and
has yet to come to an end? Is it a collection of facts, all true and precise
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details, what should I do, how should I feel, where should I place myself?
(153).
She renders herself obscene, saying that she is not yet I the picture and that she
does not yet have a name in 1492 (155). As such, she is not yet angry or confused by
the assertion of discovery. Instead, she is left with a burning curiosity. Who is he? she
wonders. I find it interesting that history still begins for Kincaid with this discovery.
The notion that being discovered when Europeans laid eyes on you gives centrality to
Europe in defining and naming you. But I guess if Kincaid genuinely believes that to
name is to possess, that the person who really can name the thing gives it a life, a reality,
that it did not have before (156), then this positioning would make sense. She also
seems to want to leave space in which to examine him without the judgment and blame
He, Christopher Columbus, then discovers this new world. That it is new
only to him, that it had a substantial existence, physical and spiritual,
before he became aware of it, does not occur to him. To cast blame on
him now for this is childish, immature, small-minded, even with all the
moral substance of a certificate given to a schoolgirl for good behavior; to
be a well-behaved schoolgirl is not hard (154).
was actually considered a troublemaker, though very bright. She is trying to look upon
him with beginners mind, seeing him anew without the baggage of her colonial/post-
When he sees this new world, it is really new to him; he has never seen
anything like it before, it was not what he had expected, in his mind he
had images of China and Japan, and though he thought he was in China
and Japan, it was not the China or Japan he had fixed in his mind; he, after
all, had never been to China and Japan ever. When he saw this new world,
he couldnt find enough words to describe what was before him: the
people were new, the flora and fauna were new, the way the water met the
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sky was new, this world itself was new. It was the New Worldbut New
only because he had never seen it before, new to him in a way that heaven
itself could not have been (154-155).
She concludes that This blankness, the one Columbus met, was more like the
blankness of paradise; paradise emerges from chaos and chaos is not history, chaos is the
ordinary and the extraordinary, but in such a way as to make it, paradise, seem as if it had
Kincaid realizes that allying herself with the botanists of the world is to adopt this
power to name and to make permanent, to seek and find paradise. To be a conqueror is,
in some sense, to be a God, one who is able to create the world around him by naming it.
The botanists are from the same part of the world as the man who sailed
on the three ships, the man who started the narrative from which I trace
my beginning. And in a way, too, the botanists are like that man who
sailed on the ships: they emptied worlds of their names; they emptied the
worlds of things animal, vegetable, and mineral of their names and
replaced these names with names pleasing to them; these names are
pleasing to them because they are reasonable; reason is a pleasure to them
(160)
of her own destiny. She is choosing what relationship she wants to have to her
surroundings and making it manifest. When she is able to put her identity as a conquered
person aside, she sees that it really is quite poetic and impressive, what these great men
have done. They have taken the unknown and found a way to know it. They have taken
the world around them and forced it into a mold in which it makes sense to them; by
force they have caused the world around them to mirror their beliefs. For someone who
has suffered from her beliefs, having spent a lifetime feeling rejected by her mother and
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not knowing what to do with that belief, this type of rigid reason is most desirable for it
In the end, Kincaid finds her own paradise in China. She evokes the Garden of
Eden, which she sees as an idea state of mind and an ideal as a place in which to live
day after day after day (221). There, in China, thousands of miles away from her
husband and her children, she finds her peace of mind, a state in which she could dwell in
to perpetuity.
This is the garden! I said to myself, as I walked up and down the side of
some mountains in southwestern China, this is the garden! I was thinking
of the beginning of so many garden books I have read, I was thinking of
the accounts of gardens by the many gardeners I have read, and I was
thinking, Is this Eden, that thing that was banished, turned out into the
world as I have come to know itthe world of discarding only to reclaim,
of rejecting and then claiming again, the world of such longing that its end
(death) is a relief (222).
Thus, the gardeners role is not so unlike Gods role. Kincaid empathizes with
William Robinson, who wrote The Wild Garden, sharing his sentiment that the joy of the
garden is the luxury of stating and enjoying the results of your own will, your own idea
of how the things in front of you ought to be, to do what a God would do! (228). Her
desire to hunt plants from far away, like the desire of the botanists, and of Christopher
Columbus himself, is to bring in from the wild as many things as can be appreciated, as
many things as it is possible for a gardener [conqueror/God] to give meaning to, as many
It is quite amazing, poetic, and touching that Kincaid has gone from writing slave
narratives to writing explorers travel-logs to writing her own scripture. She has
overcome circumstances that she swears would have killed her otherwise. She has
fashioned a self with whom she seems quite content and comfortable. And yes, its too
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bad about everyone she had to pitch under that bus, but she saved herself, which in the
end is all anyone would do in the same situation. Now she is divorced, her children are
grown, and she is teaching creative writing at Harvard. She began as a writer from a
people who did not have a literaturenow she is a writer who doesnt have, or need, it
seems, a people. She used to be an othernow she is her own. I can only imagine
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CHAPTER 5
CONCLUSION: BE A CROSSROADS
To survive the Borderlands
-You must live sin fronteras
Be a crossroads.
- Gloria Anzalda
Aware that money is not the golden ticket to happiness it is often made out to be,
and that psychology is not the cure-all it was once thought to be, this seems an opportune
moment for us to begin to reclaim soul, both in our work and our lives. In Care of the
Soul, Thomas Moore alludes to Plato's expression techne tou biou, translated as the
craft of life. Moore sees the potentiality in this expression, writing When techne is
defined with sufficient depth, it refers not just to mechanical skills and instruments but to
all kinds of artful managing and careful shaping. For now, we can say that care of the
soul requires a special crafting of life itself, with an artist's sensibility to the way things
are done. Soul doesn't pour into life automatically. It requires our skill and attention
(xvii). i This artistic practice of crafting life renders life an impassioned expression of
The universe is one of infinite possibility, and though some scholars (like James
A. Snead in his essay Repetition as a Figure of Black Culture in Black Literature and
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Literary Theory) believe that people have by now had to make peace with the idea that
the world is not inexhaustible in its combinations, nor life in its various guises (59), I
beg to differ. It is an easy way out of owning ones own power to say that everything
that can be done has already been done. It leaves us little more than repetition as a
possibility. While this enables certain beliefsas Judith Butler attests in her
scholarshipit disables others that are equally viable. Sneads is not the perspective of
an artist. Artists know, perhaps inherently, that there are no limits to what can be created.
As Kincaid herself attests, we are limited, at times, by resources, time, energy, and
imagination, but these are limitations that form based on individual circumstances, not on
what is possible. The roles of artists in a culture are many, but we are often mouthpieces
expressing what is, what has been, and what might be. Part social commentator, part
visionary, the artist strives to do two things: to express something within her/himself, and
to connect with this thing in others. We endeavor to hold a balance between these two
functions, to be a crossroads.
Borderlands/ La Frontera, the Borderlands are physically present wherever two or more
cultures edge each other, where people of different races occupy the same territory,
where under, lower, middle and upper classes touch, where the space between two
individuals shrinks with intimacy (preface), it is the crossroads that joins these two
disparate entities. Thus, our classrooms, books, or our self could be considered a
Borderland, where self and other, or many selves and many others, rub against
one another. The crossroads, long a spiritual signifier in many African diasporan
cultures, opens the door to the spirit and serves as a gateway between the mundane world
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and the spiritual world. In being the crossroads, we are able to know deeply that there is
no real border, no distinctionthese are only imaginary lines drawn in the sand to create
of academic scholarship as well. Experience is not thinking, nor saying, but being.
In this trinity of thought, word, and deed, it is the being part, the experiential element
that closes the circle, enabling us as humans to bear witness and to know ourselves as
Creators of our own experience. Experience is, ultimately, what throws a wrench into
our belief systems and pulls us out of the safe categories we rely upon. We see that our
beliefs about ourselves or others and our experience do not correspond. Thus, we are
forced to either privilege our experience and reconsider our beliefs, or discredit our
experience so that we can hold fast to our beliefs. More often than not, people choose the
latter, mentally reconfiguring their experience so that it can fit into their poorly
constructed world view. But there is an opportunity here to begin again with beginners
mind, to question the beliefs and assumptions we take for granted, and to mindfully
create our experience so that it reflects our highest vision of our Self. This is the work
that must be doneboth outside and inside of the classroom. If we continue to check our
spiritual Selves at the classroom door, feigning an impossible impartiality that is little
institution long gone, I wonder if we can ever find true peace in our lives. Moore warns
that:
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If we do not claim the souls power on our own behalf, we become its
victims. We suffer out emotions rather than feel them working for us. We
hold our thoughts and passions inward, disconnecting them from life, and
then they stir up trouble within, making us feel profoundly unsettled or, it
seems, turning into illness. We all know what it feels like to hold anger in
our hearts, as it builds and transmutes into corrosive resentment and rage.
Even unexpressed love creates a pressure that demands release in some
kind of expression (135).
in Education, editor Steven Glaser shares the observation that many people fear religion
or spirituality in education because they are afraid of the imposition of identity and the
tragedy has taken place the wholesale abandonment of the inner world. This fear has
allowed us to ignore in our classroom (and lives) the existence of the inner realm, the
wants the lectern to turn into a pulpit or a soap box, and no student wants her grade
determined by whether or not she has been converted to the teachers beliefs. Yet I feel
that incorporating the spiritual into literary scholarship activates and actualizes a
relationship in which literature can be seen as a vehicle for bringing Self into dialogue
with self, toward the goals of Self-realization. I think that anyone who teaches must
acknowledge that their own beliefs, interpretation, values and understanding, as well as
those of the institution which they assume they must uphold, are ingrained in their
teaching in subtle and not-so-subtle ways. There is a place for the spirit and the spiritual
in the academy, particularly because there is a place for it in our lived experience. As
Wade Clark Roof notes, The polls indicate that 94 percent of Americans believe in God,
90 percent report praying to God on a fairly regular basis, nine out of ten claim a
religious affiliation (quoted in Frankenberg 5-6). Both Cornel West and bell hooks
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write extensively on spirituality, as did Gloria Anzalda, who even began to theorize
into the academic study of the spiritual by such important scholars seems noteworthy. I
that go beyond socio-cultural frameworks and beliefs in order to produce new thoughts,
words, and deeds around the concepts of race, gender, class and sexuality. As William
James says, If there be any life that is really better we should lead, and if there be any
idea which, if believed in, would help us to lead that life, then it would really be better
The exploration of the frames and lenses of race, gender, class and sexuality must
necessarily return to spiritual questions, because it is upon certain logical structures that
are very much rooted in the Christian faithand more so in the practice of Christianity
that much of our national, ethical, and educational understanding is built. Hierarchical,
self-centric, linear, dichotomous thinking is at the root of not the actual beliefs of the
Christian faith per se, but these constructs have figured greatly into the actions of
Christians around the globe. These logical structures end up limiting what is possible for
those who use them, eliminating from possibility the ideas of non-linearity, of non-binary
among all things. Within the very confining walls of Christianity as a practice, the
dark side of people, the side that was capable of committing the seven deadly sins, the
side that was not filled with Christ-like love and goodness, was cast into the shadows of
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Rather than see this as a balance to be held gracefully, being a crossroads between
light and dark, we fought to sublimate our perceived darkness, our shadow self, and beat
it back into submission. This aggressively fought war between our dualistic
ability to subject so-called heathens to the cruelest atrocities and, on a personal level, to
sometimes abuse the ones we love most dearly. There is an implicit assumption within
this mindset that it is okay to inflict harm on something or someone that is not good/ not
of God. There are many implicit assumptions such as this one that are a part of the
fundamental logical code that by and large governs our society. We are educated from
within this framework, and part of our education often mandates that we disallow
anything that falls outside of this framework. The dichotomous construction of the
margin gave Christian-white-male-centric culture a dumping ground for its shadow self,
so abhorred and abnegated that it was seen as other. Woman became other, non-
disabled became other. These real and imagined others have functioned as the
receptacles for the many different qualities that Christian white male-centric culture had
few. Perhaps theres a reason we dont want to know the other side of ourselves.
Perhaps we prefer to think of parts of us as unknowable and thus force it to maintain its
space in the margins. But what if we can know it? What if we can begin to know things,
perhaps not in the way we know other things, like mortgage rates and capitals of states
and the history of super-delegates, but in a different way, one which we might need to
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It is this binary that made Jamaica Kincaid think she had to choose a sideand
ultimately she chose good which elides with white and male and privileged and
self-centered in our culture. Small wonder that after a few decades in America her
writing no longer represents the angry, sexual, Black woman she once was. The woman
she was would be relegated to the margins in American culture, and Kincaid was
unwilling to reside there, as she made clear in Lucy and A Small Place. The margins,
which would seem to be the site of something unimportant and ob-scene, are the ballasts,
bastions, and buttresses of the centers identity, and the basis for its argument for its own
centrality. It is for this reason that understanding the margin has always been essential to
understanding the center. Margins enumerate the many things that are not seen as good or
of God at a given time within a given culture and quite frankly I am tired of serving
time in this ungodly margin. Until we establish other frames and other lenses for
understanding the world of self and other, we will perpetuate the myth that there is
an other.
I do not think it is possible to dismantle the master's house, with the master's
tools, as Audre Lorde disclosed. Thus, I feel compelled to introduce other tools, ones
which enable different relationships among things. Our educational system stresses
binaries and linearity at the expense of other modes of thought. We must work through
account for simultaneity, multiplicity, synchronicity, and other forms of non-duality like
otherwise evade normal either/or categories, but we haven't developed the language to
express these spaces between the trees... or have we? In some fields of spirituality there
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is extensive information about these non-binary, non-linear ways of knowing. These
other ways of knowing are engendered not only through language, but through
experience and through cultivating practices that bring them to the fore.
I recommend being able to rethink our paradigmatic frames and linguistic lenses
by stepping back with beginners mind to see into how they are constructed. Spiritual
theories and precepts enable different relationships to texts, and new ways reading and
symbolisms, and mythologies, thus providing both the substance and structures for
completely different interpretations of life and its events. They take up the important job
of soul work, learning how to perform Self-care. As such, they merit evaluation.
Another argument for the inclusion of spirituality in academic literary and cultural
scholarship is quite pragmatic. If you venture into your local bookstore, you will notice
Age. You might also notice the absence of the tomes of writing of most academic
scholars from most of these mainstream venues. I think that this shows two things.
Firstly, it demonstrates that Americans are thirsty for a deeper understanding and practice
health problems as also being spiritual problems (see Northrup, Einstein, Schultz). We
marriage. Secondly, it shows that the scholarship academics are currently performing
often has little resonance and relevance beyond the academy. We might be able to
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actually help people (and perhaps even have book sales in the millions, as so many New
Age writers do) if we adopt as areas of inquiry things that actually matter to people: how
to be happy, how to be healthy, how to be free (as well as how to deal with being
unhappy, unhealthy, and unfree). My argument here is that spirituality is a subject that
culture. If we choose to see one function of reading as providing equipment for living,
then it follows that we should survey the variety of tools available so as to include them
in our scholarship.
In a pivotal scene in the movie Shaka Zulu, the first of many negotiations of
power occurs based not just on race, but also on the outward manifestation of each mans
perceived superiority based on his own construction of self. The great warrior king
Shaka meets a European man with glasses for the first time in his life. He has the mans
spectacles brought over to him and he looks through them interestedly. After he has seen
through the mans lenses, he proclaims This man does not want to see the world as it
truly is. Although at first this seems a nave pronouncement, I think, in some sense,
Shaka was right. This man did not want to see what other ways of knowing might be
present were he not to use the frames and lenses afforded him. These other ways of
knowing would probably be the blurrier, fuzzier, more embodied and experiential ways
of understanding that I associate with feminine epistemology. These are, perhaps, more
like what seeing is without the lenses and frames, without the spectacles which do
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MY CONCLUSIONS ABOUT MY READING PRACTICE
All in all, I learned a lot from my experiment with reading. I liked how
meditation enabled me to just be with the text, rather than me manipulating it. By being
silent I was able to let the text speak to me, sometimes not in words. I wasnt meditating
on the text specifically. I was focusing on my breath and really just trying to stay in the
present moment. It was invariably easier with the shorter meditation before reading than
with the longer one following. I found that the practice led me to different readings than
I normally have had of Kincaid, freeing up some space for both her and me to co-exist.
literature, a frighteningly deep love for our mothers, an avid interest in gardening, and a
passion for books and writing, but it is okay if the similarities end there. I realize that
now that I am not a teenager, I dont need Kincaid to speak for me. Perhaps I never did.
While I dont agree with all of her decisions, I would still sit down with her for tea and
conversation. I offer her the freedom to choose her own path, just as I choose for myself.
would create a very different dynamic which might enable new readings and new
into the class I led last yearwhich some students loved and others thought was a boring
incorporating this method into my teaching so that I might dialogue with others engaged
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APPENDICES
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APPENDIX 1
BELIEFS AND PRACTICES
1. The first realization is the awareness that the world is impermanent. All political
regimes are subject to fall; all things composed of the four elements are empty
and contain the seeds of suffering. Human beings are composed of five skandhas,
aggregates, and are without a separate self. They are always in the process of
change constantly being born and constantly dying. They are empty of self,
without sovereignty. The mind is the source of all confusion, and the body is the
forest of all impure actions. If we meditate on these facts, we can gradually be
released from samsara, the round of birth and death.
2. The second realization is the awareness that more desire brings more suffering.
All hardships in daily life arise from greed and desire. Those with little desire and
ambition are able to relax, their bodies and minds free from entanglement.
3. The third realization is that the human mind is always searching for possessions
and never feels fulfilled. This causes impure actions to ever increase.
Bodhisattvas however, always remember the principle of having few desires.
They live a simple life in peace in order to practice the Way, and consider the
realization of perfect understanding as their only career.
5. The fifth realization is the awareness that ignorance is the cause of the endless
round of birth and death. Therefore, bodhisattvas always remember to listen and
learn in order to develop their understanding and eloquence. This enables them to
educate living beings and bring them to the realm of great joy.
6. The sixth realization is the awareness that poverty creates hatred and anger, which
creates a vicious cycle of negative thoughts and activity. When practicing
generosity, bodhisattvas consider everyone, friends and enemies alike, as equal.
They do not condemn anyone's past wrongdoings, nor do they hate those who are
presently causing harm.
7. The seventh realization is that the five categories of desire lead to difficulties.
Although we are in the world, we should try not to be caught up in worldly
matters. A monk, for example, has in his possession only three robes and one
bowl. He lives simply in order to practice the Way. His precepts keep him free of
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attachment to worldly things, and he treats everyone equally and with
compassion.
8. The eighth realization is the awareness that the fire of birth and death is raging,
causing endless suffering everywhere. We should take the Great Vow to help
everyone, to suffer with everyone, and to guide all beings to the realm of great
joy.
These eight realizations are the discoveries of great beings, buddhas and bodhisattvas
who have diligently practiced the way of compassion and understanding. They have
sailed the Dharmakaya boat to the shore of nirvana, but then they return to the ordinary
world, having abandoned the five desires, with their minds and hearts directed toward the
noble way, using these eight realizations to help all beings recognize the suffering in this
world. If the disciples of the Buddha recite these eight realizations and meditate on them,
they will put an end to countless misunderstandings and difficulties and progress toward
enlightenment, leaving behind the world of birth and death, dwelling forever in peace.
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5. Pratyahara- Drawing one's attention toward silence rather than things
6. Dharana- Focusing attention and cultivating inner perceptual awareness
7. Dhyana- Sustaining awareness under all conditions
8. Samadhi- Return of the mind into original silence
(From Yoga Mind, Body & Spirit by Donna Farhi)
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On Children
Your children are not your children,
They are the sons and the daughters of life longing for itself
They come through you, but they are not from you,
And though they are with you, they belong not to you.
You can give them your love but not your thoughts.
They have their own thoughts.
You can house their bodies but not their souls
For their souls dwell in a place of tomorrow
Which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams.
You can strive to be like them, but you cannot make them like you.
(From The Prophet, by Kahlil Gibran)
Desiderata
Go placidly amid the noise and haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence.
As far as possible, without surrender, be on good terms with all persons.
Speak your truth quietly and clearly; and listen to others, even the dull and ignorant;
they too have their story.
Avoid loud and aggressive persons, they are vexations to the spirit.
If you compare yourself with others, you may become vain and bitter;
for always there will be greater and lesser persons than yourself.
Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans.
Keep interested in your career, however humble;
it is a real possession in the changing fortunes of time.
Exercise caution in your business affairs; for the world is full of trickery.
But let this not blind you to what virtue there is;
many persons strive for high ideals; and everywhere, life is full of heroism.
Be yourself. Especially, do not feign affection.
Neither be cynical about love; for in the face of all aridity and disenchantment,
it is perennial as the grass.
Take kindly the counsel of the years, gracefully surrender the things of youth.
Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misfortune.
But do not distress yourself with imaginings. Many fears are born of fatigue and
loneliness.
Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle with yourself.
You are a child of the universe, no less than the trees and the stars;
you have a right to be here.
And whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should.
Therefore, be at peace with God, whatever you conceive Him to be,
and whatever your labors and aspirations, in the noisy confusion of life,
keep peace with your soul.
With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world.
Be careful.
Strive to be happy.
(From The Desiderata of Happiness by Max Ehrmann)
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The Fourteen Mindfulness Trainings Introduction
(from Interbeing by Thich Nhat Hanh)
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do or say anything, but to practice mindful breathing or mindful walking and
acknowledge, embrace, and look deeply into our anger. We will learn to look with the
eyes of compassion at ourselves and at those we think are the cause of our anger.
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12. The Twelfth Mindfulness Training: Reverence for Life
Aware that much suffering is caused by war and conflict, we are determined to cultivate
nonviolence, understanding, and compassion in our daily lives, to promote peace
education, mindful mediation, and reconciliation within families, communities, nations,
and in the world. We are determined not to kill and not to let others kill. We will
diligently practice deep looking with our Sangha to discover better ways to protect life
and prevent war.
(For monastic members): Aware that the aspiration of a monk or a nun can only be
realized when he or she wholly leaves behind the bonds of worldly love, we are
committed to practicing chastity and to helping others protect themselves. We are aware
that loneliness and suffering cannot be alleviated by the coming together of two bodies in
a sexual relationship, but by the practice of true understanding and compassion. We know
that a sexual relationship will destroy our life as a monk or a nun, will prevent us from
realizing our ideal of serving living beings, and will harm others. We are determined not
to suppress or mistreat our body or to look upon our body as only an instrument, but to
learn to handle our body with respect. We are determined to preserve vital energies
(sexual, breath, spirit) for the realization of our bodhisattva ideal
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APPENDIX 2
MY OWN LIST OF LIMITING BELIEFS
Smart people are superior.
Spiritual people are superior.
Beautiful people are superior.
Beautiful people deserve more.
Beautiful people get more.
Beautiful people achieve more.
Beauty is important at any cost.
You can always become more beautiful.
Long hair is more attractive than short hair.
Hair is very important.
I cant have long hair.
Women should be financially supported by men.
Women make less money than men.
Black men are scary and complicated.
Black men have HIV or STDs.
Black men are unfaithful.
Black men are kinda dumb.
Women dislike me because I am attractive.
Women are competitive
Women are prudish
Guys are more mellow then women.
Girls create drama.
Black women are overall less attractive than women of other races.
Poor Black women have bad attitudes.
Black people are conservative.
Black people are Christian.
Black people dont accept responsibility for their lives.
I am ashamed of Black people.
White men have money.
White men are more financially secure.
White men are freaky.
Black men would be much more sexually satisfying.
I am divorced from my body.
I am my mind.
My stomach must be flat.
My body must be attractive and slim.
I am more concerned with looks than health.
Fat people are unlovable.
Fat people are out of control.
Fat people are gluttons.
Fat people are sinners.
If I get fat I will not love myself.
If I get fat I will not be beautiful.
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If I get fat I will get depressed.
Fat people are losers.
Thin people are winners.
Intimacy is scary.
Enjoying sex is wrong.
I am frigid.
I have something to prove.
I dont know how to enjoy sex.
I can live without sex.
I cannot live without sex.
Sex with a stranger/ someone new would get me out of my head and into my
body.
All I need is a good fuck.
I have never enjoyed sex.
I am pretending I enjoy sex.
Opening up sexually is painful.
I am repressed.
I am hurting inside.
I am perverted.
If a guy doesnt go down on you, he doesnt love you.
Sex is about thrills and excitement.
Sex is about intimacy.
Intimacy is boring.
If I enjoy sex I might lose control.
Sex is unsafe.
Sex is about domination.
Sex should feel kinda dirty.
Men are irrational about sex.
I am going to be rich, so I dont have to worry about money.
I will always be poor, so why bother worrying about money.
Money will resolve itself once I am done with school.
I cant afford what I really want.
I am not free because I am in debt.
Debt is shameful.
Black people have debt.
I am a victim of my race.
I am a victim of my class.
Life is about having material things.
I will never own a home.
I will never have kids.
I will never get married.
I dont want a normal life.
I dont deserve a happy life.
I want to be the best.
I want to give back.
My voice wont be heard.
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I cant make a difference.
Im not good enough.
People wont like the real me.
I am an untrained singer.
I have a slow, lazy, flat voice.
I am uninventive.
I will not be acceptable if I just let it out.
What I have to offer is not wanted.
What I have to offer is not special.
People dont want to change.
You never know with money.
Some people are lucky, some are not.
Your parents have to have money for you to have money.
I wont have money because my mom doesnt have money.
I will never get out of debt.
Money is freedom.
I am not free.
I will never be free.
If I do what I love I wont be rewarded.
If I dont get my Ph.D., I have failed.
I dont want roots.
Having kids means fun ends.
Credit is bad.
White people are scared of black people.
White people have the power.
Sex is about power, not love.
Sex is financial.
Our government has failed us.
We have failed the world.
I am ashamed to be American.
If you have more, you should give to those who have less.
Having more is unfair.
Everyone should have the same.
Most people want to use me.
I need more time.
I waste time.
I am inefficient.
What I want to do is not what I should be doing.
I must be productive.
Productivity is good.
Laziness/ inefficiency is bad.
I own all of my lovers.
I might miss my chance to have kids.
My kids will be the most important contribution I make to the world.
I must be doing something productive at all times.
My needs are not important.
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Men dont really care.
My father did not/ does not love me.
I am not worthy of love by being me.
I have to do things to earn love.
I have to do things to prove love.
Love is earned.
Love is proven.
Love fades.
No one really loves anybody.
I love, but others do not.
I want the love of everyone.
Love is just ego gratification.
Love isnt real.
Addicts are out of control.
Addicts are selfish.
If I dont hold my boundaries, people will walk all over me.
My mother hurt me by leaving my father.
My father should have wanted to know me.
My father is lost, I cant find him.
I do not love my father.
Loving my father means not loving my mother.
Men do not love.
Men leave.
Men cant be trusted.
I am lacking because I dont have a relationship with my father.
I do not have a father.
I am not worthy of love because my own father did not love me.
All black men might be my father.
I reject my father.
Dirty people are lazy.
Laziness is bad.
Laziness is unacceptable.
Most people are stupid.
Most people are lazy and inefficient.
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