Tuesday, December 18, 2007

13 Ways to Look at A Black Woman



Today I babysat for my friend. She had a job interview and needed a favor. While I was "on the job" in her home, several workmen were there finishing up some repairs in her kitchen. The foreman introduced me to the rest of the crew as the "housekeeper," even though my friend had told him the night before that her best friend from college would be watching her chubby-cheeked, blue-eyed son. I guess he forgot and just decided I must be the housekeeper. Not the babysitter or the friend.

Later today, a very high-end public relations firm contacted me because they wanted to handle the publicity for my new book, Kinky Gazpacho. They came looking for me after they read a positive review of the book in Publisher's Weekly magazine.

Yesterday I worked a shift as a waitress in a cozy little restaurant near my home. One of my customers, a distinguished-looking White man of a certain age, waited until he'd had enough to drink and his wife wasn't looking to plant a wet slobbery kiss upon my face and whisper nonsense in my ear with his hot, stinky, breath. Ugh.

When my children see me come to pick them up from school they yell "mommy" and jump into my arms, safe once again.

In the eyes of the world I am so many things. I am a servant, a potential gold mine, a whore and a mother. I do not get to speak to define myself. I am a Black woman in America. I am so many things. I am nothing.

Does anybody else feel this way?

Peace!

Monday, December 10, 2007

Translating International Adoption



As many of my readers know, I have a mild obsession/fascination with Spain. Lived there for a year. Married a Spaniard I met along the way. Wrote a book about my journey, (Kinky Gazpacho: Life. Love & Spain(Atria, 2008). Hablo Espanol...

In addition, my latest obsession/interest is international adoption. How does it work? How are cultures preserved or lost when a child is transferred to a different country to start life anew? Will Brad and Angelina stay together long enough for their rainbow coalition to really thrive and prove the naysayers wrong?

So imagine my great joy when I discovered the book, Daughter of the Ganges by Asha Miro, an Indian woman adopted by a Catalan family in Barcelona, Spain in the early 1970s. The book details the author's journey back to India to search for her past. The writing in the book is kind of bland (perhaps due to the fact that it is a translation from the original Spanish) but the story in and of itself is fascinating. Miro provides a new face and perspective on the nature vs nurture question and also just gives us a different version of international adoption to admire.

Even better, once Miro started this incredible odyssey, she decided to dedicate herself to adoption work, including penning a comic strip called Asha about, you guessed it, a little Indian girl who is adopted. The strip is published throughout Europe. Check out Asha Miro and all of her good work at her website.

Peace!