First Birthday Observed

I have returned to my cold compact home unit after five days spent at my in-laws where the climate indoors is warm and dry enough to make you have Hard Booger Nose. The last five days were much like a religious retreat, the kind where you're forced to go without television and internet and where you spend a lot of time talking about epiphanies and reading and sitting around on couches in a circle and laughing and being reminded that family and laughter and navel oranges are really the essentials in this life. Of course, the retreat was held in honor of Baby Girl, in celebration of her first birthday, which is on the horizon but which we observed with my entire immediate blended crazy fabulous family all around, too. I am glad to be back in my own home where my nose runs naturally and where I eat sparingly the soy and kimchi and rice-based foods that are the cuisine of my in-laws but which make me start tweaking for some greasy cheese pizza after a few days. But as I sit here on my commodious couch with freshly-folded laundry and half-read books and write this account for all of you dearhearts while Lovey Loverpants watches Jack Bauer say serious things to threatening villans, my heart feels very filled and I am still on my retreat high. An excellent spirit to carry into this new era of hope and change and Together We Can....

***

Auntie Shannon

auntie shan

Harmonee

harmonee

Nana Red

nana red

cupcake

first birsday

Auntie TP

auntie tp

Pennie the Weiner Dog Roasting by the Open Fire

pennie the bandit

double straw

...and a preview of her Korean Princess photo-shoot:

one

Home of the Brave

I pulled my ballot from the envelope after passing the Vietnamese clerk, the Cambodian registrar, the African-American police officer, and, looking down at my Korean-Irish daughter, the firstborn American citizen on her father's side, I began to tell her how important it was to vote, and I couldn't get the words out, I got so choked up. This happens to me almost every time I vote - the swell of pride, the taste of tears. It is such a precious freedom to me, right up there with the right to worship the god of the corn muffin (if you so choose) and not be sent to the slammer, as well as that whole freedom of not being set aflame if I leave the house without my male escort. That's a nice one. It's a beautiful E-Day here in Bostonland.  The ladies at the coffee house down the street gave me a free cup, not for voting, but because I had no cash. Baby Girl is going commando around the house as a home remedy for this pernicious diaper rash of hers. Yes, we're feeling mighty free in all respects today. It is good to be an American, today and everyday, you betchya.

you betcha

Chagrin, circa spring 2000

I am breezing out of Sociology 101 as I head to catch the shuttle back to my apartment. I am feeling uncomfortably disconnected from the hyper-involved life I once knew as a college student on campus. Then I see the flyer. "Come help the sisters of Alpha Kappa Alpha help the community." They are making peanut butter sandwiches for a soup kitchen. I call the number.

"I'm just studying here with the Washington Semester program," I explain to the sorority community service chair over the phone, "I go to school in Pennsylvania. And I really miss doing community service."

Her tone is hesitant but polite; it is as though she is fielding a call for a modeling gig with someone she knows fell out of the ugly tree and hit every branch on the way down.

"And you said your name is Kendra?" she asks one more time before giving me the details of the dorm lounge they will be meeting to make the sandwiches.

***

The next night I take the shuttle to main campus and I feel like a proper co-ed, riding the bus with a motley crew of overprivileged, overcaffeinated co-eds on their way to all manner of classes and activities and bars.

I approach the front desk of the dorm asking where I can find a particular lounge. The student receptionist looks at me, hesitating, you're going to the AKA meeting?

It is at this moment that a cardboard match strikes the flimsy sandpaper of my brain and I am enlightened.

I have signed myself up for an event hosted by a black sorority.

They were trying to recruit women. Maybe women whose names are Kendra. Kendra is the blackest name for a white girl in the book.

I am an infiltrator.

***

The doors of the lounge have an narrow window peering through. My worst fears have come true. If I don't go in, I can turn around and no one will miss me. If I don't go in, I will also never know what it is like to force myself to go into a room where I am in the complete and total minority.

***

I try to compensate for the silence with my Mid-Western friendliness; I am so overcompensatingly friendly, I sound like I have swallowed a helium tank.

We make sandwiches.

My sandwiches are inconsistent. I am sweating like a pig.

"I just saw your flier, yep! Just really miss doing community service. Yep, just here for a semester!"

The women are strong-faced. They are proud. They have no idea why I am there.

***

One girl calls her white roommate to come down and it is obvious she is a pity pinch-hitter called off a bench of illegal substitutes, there to make me feel better.

***

I tell this story over and over as if by telling it, the utter chagrin will eventually evaporate. But every time I tell it, I just feel more ashamed of how small my worldview was, how ignorant and presumptuous it was to assume my right to join, to be.

***

Happy 100th Birthday to the Sisters of AKA.