Tag Archives: ashland

Black in a small town

I wrote this a couple of months ago and never got around to posting it, so, here tis:

Never before have I been so interested in being black. Seriously. It’s weird.

I grew up in a small, mostly white, town. My parents had friends who were white, but also many who were black. So I knew other kids growing up who’s skin would get ashy and who knew why I freaked out about getting my hair wet.

The first place I lived that wasn’t my small town was LA. Very different. Lots more Spanish everywhere. Where I was, there were far more latinos than black people. But I never felt out of place. I was just another freshman from the east coast.  (But I should also note that the campus I was on was mostly white, so maybe that says something about me too.)

Then I moved to NYC. Famously a melting pot, though it’s not quite as melty as NYC would want you to believe. I read an editorial in the Guardian (I think) the other day that made a good point – NYC has shared spaces (i.e. the trains, certain parks), but there are places that are less shared (look around the McDonalds and then look around a random East Village Thai place). I learned that I could more easily blend in certain neighborhoods (Washington Heights – Dominican; Bed-Sty – Black) than some of my friends; that I could blend as easily in other neighborhoods (the Village, Midtown) and that I had to work a bit and rely on learned behavior in others (uber fancy restaurants, Upper East Side). But I rarely felt out of place because of my skin color. When I did, more often it was because of my bank balance.

I’ve been to London, Hanoi, Saigon, Rio, Salvador da Bahia, Vienna, Athens, Prague, Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam. I’ve lived in Providence, RI. I’ve spent long periods deep in Trenton and Atlantic City as well. I’ve traveled to the American South – visited plantations in Mississippi and Louisiana. But I’ve never felt blacker in my life than I do in Ashland.

Now, this is not the kind of black that I feel when I visit family in the South, or see fields where people who looked like me spent thousands of hours in the hot summer sun.  Not the kind that says, “My soul is grown deep like the rivers.”  This is the Other kind.

My mother told me stories of when she first came to my home town. Children would come up to her in stores and rub her hand to see if the brown would come off. Many people there had never seen anyone who was black live and in person. I don’t think I really understood what that meant until I came here. The simple fact that I can’t buy stockings,
or hair products – things that I’ve always been able to get everywhere I’ve been – is a revelation. Thank goodness for the internet. How my mother did this before she could just order hair products from Amazon, I do not know.

On Privilege…again

I’ve been watching a lot of Top Gear recently and it’s got me looking at the world in a different way…
I used to count the number of luxury cars vs the number of Priuses (Priui?) I saw on my way to work. Luxury cars defined as – Mercedes-Benz, BMW, Porsche, Lexus (for pretensions to luxury), Jaguar and any super cars I saw (and I saw a couple in one walk). The Prius won by a nose. Then I counted how many luxury cars (this time including the Prius and any other hybrid) vs trucks. The trucks won, barely.  If I tried to count the number of Subarus vs luxury makes, it would probably end in a similar result.
In Portland, if I counted the number of luxury cars vs the transients I saw…I think the luxury cars would win. By a lot.
I don’t know what to make of that. Perhaps it was a function of the neighborhoods I travelled through in there, perhaps it was a fluke of weather or a local event. In Ashland, the number seems to stay fairly constant (today I saw a beautifully restored muscle car – big fins and all).
Maybe the number of BMWs and Mercs on a city street is not a good measure of that city’s wealth. But the ratio of luxury cars to transients does seem to be a ratio of privilege.

Mind The Gap

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I’m a New Yorker – I feel like I’ve said that more in this last week
than in any of my previous stints out of town. Even those that lasted
a few years. But in trying to understand Ashland, I keep coming up
against how different it is from what I’ve become accustomed to in
that East Coast metropolis.

Sitting in a clearly popular coffee shop (it can be hard to get a
seat), it has the same sepia glow of an Instagram photo that I’ve
become accustomed to in Brooklyn. But there’s a difference. Looking
around, I see the requisite hipster Macs, iPhones and beards. What’s
missing is the sense of an audience. There’s an unselfconscious air
about cool in Ashland. In New York, it’s studied, calculated,
documented with the target audience always in mind.

New York often gets a bad rep for being mean. It’s not really – most
New Yorkers are simply in a hurry. Everyone is vaguely impatient or
annoyed at any given point of day or night. Someone is always in the
way, walking too slow, or taking up needed space. New Yorkers can be
nice and are often considerate, but it’s always an interruption of the
daily rush.

In Ashland, not so much. Here, I have been on the sidewalk, waiting
for a break in traffic to cross and suddenly I find the traffic has
stopped to wait for me. Or I’m at the register at my local coffee
spot, the barista answers my questions with absolutely no sense of
trying to hurry me up, despite the long line behind me. Or the small
conversations I’ve had with the cashiers each time I’ve been to the
grocery store. Conversations about nothing, really, but the simple
act of talking to people that I may never see again as if they are my
neighbors is extraordinary to me.

It’s all done here with a sense that this is normal, a daily practice.
I’m not taking up someone’s time with a question, they patiently wait
but there’s no exertion of patience, it’s effortless. Friendliness and
patience seem effortless and genuine in Ashland.

I’m from a small town, and growing up I was used to running into
friends from church or school at the mall. Friends’ parents worked at
the bank and the grocery store – so even when I go back to visit, I
may run into them and have a brief chat. But with that – I do know
them, or my mother does, or we know people in common, so there’s a
reason to reach across that divide. But here…people reach out a
welcoming hand as a matter of course. A gap that in New York can seem
as deep as the Mariana Trench is bridged as if were a puddle. Ashland
is bringing a whole new meaning to “Mind the Gap.”