“White people can be exhausting” is the first line of I’m Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness.
If that doesn’t signal what’s to come, I’ll tell you this book is a complete page-turner. Not like “I’m sitting on a beach” page-turner (although I would read this on a beach), but “I’m feeling this at my core” page-turner.
Channing Brown uses exquisite storytelling to take readers on an emotional journey through the life of a black woman in today’s America, from her childhood through to her professional life. From her girlhood days in a mostly-white communityâbut with parents who absolutely embraced their “blackness”âto when she learned to love being black, to when she was confronted head-on with the realities of a world that claims to embrace diversity, but had little to show for it.
Part of the conversation we as a society are having right now is how to relate to others, and how there’s a difference between relating and knowing. In other words, I can know Channing Brown’s experience as a woman, because I am one. I cannot know her experience as a black woman, because I’m not black. But I seek to relate and understand her position as a black woman, so that I can better empathize with her situation, inform how my own situation may or may not be different (and why), and move forward in a way that allows equal space for us both to progress.
It’s her combination of writing capability and powerful experience that gets me and other readers just about as close as we can to knowing, without being fully capable of doing so. That’s in large part why the book’s made my Tops list.
Without hesitation, go pick up this book.
Below is an excerpt from I’m Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness. Enjoy!
Why I Love Being a Black Girl
As a Black woman working in white spaces, my perception of racial dynamics has been questioned, minimized, or denied altogether. Over time, the exÂperience of not being believed, especially by people I thought were my friends, wore away my sense of self. As I entered the professional world and sensed this happening to me, it became vital to remind myself daily of why I love being a Black girl:
I am enlivened by our stories of survival. Even though white folks tried to steal our historiesâour lives, our labor, our culture, our originsâwe recover the records. We find the census, the phoÂtos, the certificates, the inscriptions. Thanks to my grandmother, I am filled with stories of triumph over slavery, over lynching, over Jim Crow, because dignity was too strong to crush. I have felt the cast-iron pot of my grandmother and held the Bible of my great-grandmother. I sit at the feet of my elÂders and listen to them honor our shared past.
When I begin to doubt myself, I remember that we are creators. We are pioneers of language itself. We invent new words and kill old ones. We smash syllables together and watch them reverberÂate across the nation. We have a language we share with one another. Though our words are stolen and often misused or misapplied, we know the depth of our vocabulary when used among ourselves. Our conversations are call-and-response. Someone unÂcolored might assume we are cutting each other off, interruptingâbut all we did was move church outÂside the building walls. We will shout âYes, amenâ and âYou better say thatâ in affirmation of one anÂother.
When my body stands out and I am tempted to forget my own beauty, I close my eyes and reÂmember the feel of my fatherâs fingers against my scalp, braiding each perfectly parted row while tellÂing me I am not tender-headed so stop squirming. There was the cooling sensation of Blue Magic and Pink Lotion and the smell of hot curling irons as I learned about all the special things my hair can do.
Natural or relaxed, braided or dreaded, twisted or knotted, cornrowed or weavedâour hair
believes in being free to do what she wants. When I rub cocoa butter into my skin, I remember the warmth of my motherâs hands when she used to tell me to get all the hidden spotsâbehind my ankles and around my knees. The memories of her care for my body are a reminder of the care my body deserves.
Black women are the backbone and muscle of every church Iâve attended. They are prophets speaking a word when it seems God is silent. They are hospitality, welcoming with food and kindÂness, with a seat at the table, with a place you can call home. We are capable of building community anywhereânot just at church or at work, but also in the âethnicâ hair care section of stores, in elevaÂtors, and other random places where we take the opportunity to simply say, âI see you.â
I love being a Black woman because we are demanding. We demand the right to live as fully human. We demand accessâthe right to vote, to education, to employment, to housing, to equal treatment under the law. And we do it creatively: Sit-ins and die-ins, signs and songs, writing and filmmaking. We demand because our ancestors did. We demand because we believe in our own dignity.
I could go on and on. I havenât touched the poÂetry of Nikki Giovanni, Lucille Clifton, and every southern grandmother who ever urged her children to keep on keeping on. I havenât covered the hugs and head nods and compliments from strangers; the Black cool of our photographers and dancers, politicians and teachers, and the everyday folks we love. There is so much beauty to share. But my point is this: I love being a Black girl.
Reprinted from I’m Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness by Austin Channing Brown. Published by Convergent, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC.
