Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Under Construction

A week from today, I will have been writing this blog for three years. We've been through a lot of changes in this internet space, from the name change (shoutout to people who've been following me since this was called AFROdisiAccordingtoMe) to all sorts of mood shifts. Blogging has helped me get through and document two major moves, getting into and out of various relationships, writing a thesis, and coming to understand Princeton as a place of the past. Getting into the "reblog" about a year and a half ago has helped me to feel like I exist in a community of scholars, thinkers, wonderers, and change-makers. This space has grown from a platform for introspection to a platform for celebration and for feeling celebrated. I am a blogger, and that's not going to change anytime soon, but a lot of things about my particular corner of the internet are going to change.

So please bear with me as I take a week-long hiatus to get everything ready for our dramatic 3 year blogaversary unveiling. I'm Such an AFROholic will return next week with all sort of nifty new trimmings!

Friday, November 2, 2012

It's National Blog Posting Month

And I wasn't particularly enthused by the official prompts on BlogHer--in fact, one might say I was particularly unenthused by them. But I am also disappointed in my 15-day hiatus last month, even if there were somewhat rational reasons behind it. So let's be interpretationalists and follow the spirit of the month instead of the letter of the month.

I, Maya Reid, of sound mind and body, hereby declare that I will write 5 real posts a week with words and original thoughts and ideas and social commentary throughout the entirety of the month of November. Since the month started on a Thursday, let's count a week as being Thursday--Wednesday, for the purposes of accurate record-keeping.

I'm not working from any sort of a template here, so if there's anything in particular you, lovely readers, have been dying to hear me talk about, ask away. You can comment on this post or ask anonymously via the "Whaddya Wanna Know" tab.

#ReadySetWrite  

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

The Politics of Sex Blogging

"I might seem to be a 'straight no chaser' blogger, but if you look back, you don’t see a lot of discussion on sex and dating.
That’s because every time I tried to write those posts, I was afraid someone would know too much about me. That I might be a bad girl. And bad girls are always punished, at least in the Black community. There’s very little room for a respectable Black woman to be erotic and talk openly about it. But I’d like to do that."
--B.C. Flippin aka Honoree Fanonne Jeffers aka PhyllisRemastered

"The erotic offers a well of replenishing and provocative force to the woman who does not fear its revelation, nor succumb to the belief that sensation is enough... The erotic is a measure between the beginnings of our sense of self and the chaos and power of our strongest feelings. It is an internal sense of satisfaction to which, once we have experienced it, we know we can aspire. For once having experienced the fullness of this depth of feeling and recognizing its power, in honor and self-respect we can require no less of ourselves... The function of the erotic is to encourage excellence and to give us the strength to pursue it... When I speak of the erotic, then, I speak of it as an assertion of the life-force of women; of that creative energy empowered, the knowledge and use of which we are now reclaiming in our language, our history, our dancing, our loving, our work, our lives...
The erotic is the nurturer or nursemaid of our deepest knowledge... Another important way in which the erotic connection functions is the open and fearless underlining of my capacity for joy... Our erotic knowledge empowers us, becomes a lens through which we scrutinize all aspects of our existence, forcing ourselves to evaluate those aspects honestly in terms of their relative meaning within our lives. And this is a grave responsibility, projected from within each of us, not to settle for the convenient, the shoddy, the conventionally expected, nor merely the safe... We have been raised to fear the yes within ourselves, our deepest cravings...but when we begin to live from within outward, in touch with the power of the erotic within ourselves, and allowing that power to inform and illuminate our actions upon the world around us, then we begin to be responsible to ourselves in the deepest sense. For as we begin to recognize our deepest feelings, we begin to give up, of necessity, being satisfied with suffering, and self-negation, and with the numbness that so often seems like their only alternative in our society. Our acts against oppression become integral with self, motivated and empowered from within...
When we look away from the importance of the erotic in the development and sustenance of our power, or when we look away from ourselves as we satisfy our erotic needs in concert with others, we use each other as objects of satisfaction rather than share our joy in the satisfying, rather than make connection with our similarities and our differences. To refuse to be conscious of what we are feeling at any time, however comfortable that might seem, is to deny a large part of the experience, and to allow ourselves to be reduced to the pornographic, the abused, and the asburd."
--Audre Lord, "The Uses of the Erotic"

A couple of weeks ago in my Black Women and Popular Music Culture class, we raised the question of whether Black female musicians can manifest images of their own sexuality that don't contribute to their own objectification. That question resonated pretty deeply with me when Professor Brooks asked it in class, and it wasn't until I started reading that post on PhyllisRemastered (which is a great blog, btw, and you should all check it out) that I realized how applicable it was to Black female bloggers as well.

My less-safe-for-work posts are generally the ones that get the most attention on this blog. And though nobody really has the gall to say it to my face, I feel like a lot of the reaction I garner from people (especially the people with whom I interact on a regular or semi-regular basis) is something to the effect of I'm "doing too much". Some individuals commend me for talking about things there are unwritten rules about not mentioning (shoutouts to BD and SM who are coming to mind), but sometimes I wonder whether people think I focus too much on sex and sexuality. I think about what would result from my being Googled by my boss (do they do that even once you're employed?) or by grad schools in the future or by my father again (though the disillusionment this would engender is on him this time; I told him not to) or some other member of my family. I wonder whether I should put my website or my Twitter account on my LinkedIn profile--are they "professional"? Well, this blog is about my passions and my passions inform my scholarship and interests...yet they remain unlinked. 

Can I, as a Black woman, be open about my sexuality (in ideology and in practice) without seeming hypersexual(ized)? Am I contributing to the Jezebel stereotype by openly being a Black woman with an interest in intimacy, a preoccupation with passion, an enthusiasm for the erotic? Am I hurting myself in some social aspect by getting to know myself [and others] intimately? Am I hurting some larger "us" of Black women?

...These are the kinds of questions I could let keep me up at night. But I value my sleep. And even more than my sleep, I value myself and my right to express all that I am in my own space. A non-trivial and growing part of myself is a sexual being. I am also a social being, political being, an intellectual being, an activist being, an ever-questioning being, a poetic being, a musical being, a creative being, a womanly being, a Black being, a fun-loving being, etc. etc. etc. And I won't be limited in any the expression of any of those selfhoods by pressures for "respectability" or "not airing my dirty laundry" or any such similar bullshit. I want my whole self to be a being centered in the erotic as defined by Audre Lorde. I won't see parts of that self diminished, disfigured, or dis-empowered by so-called strategies for avoiding or delegitimizing stereotypes that are just as restrictive as the stereotypes themselves. I will not be a "lady". Nor will I be a whore. I am neither and both and a million stops along the way. I contain multitudes.              

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

This is my 1000th post.

And I've been sitting on it for a couple of days now because I'm just not quite sure how to approach it. I just did the this-is-why-I-started-this-blog this-is-why-I-kept-going thing like a week and a half ago, so that can't be the focus of this post. I just talked about how blogging may or may not be affecting me IRL a few days ago. (I should plan ahead better.) But now there are other subjects I'd like to discuss, which means this post has to get done.

When I click the little publish button, the number of posts on my blog will move from three to four digits, and this is significant. This means I have put in WORK in this space. I'm still putting in work. As the great Lauryn Hill says in one of the interludes on Unplugged, "Anything that's not growing is dead, so we'd better be changing." 

I'm Such an Afroholic has certainly been through a lot of changes, the biggest of all probably being the name (for those who are just joining us, once upon a time I'm Such an Afroholic was AfrodisiAccordingtoMe). Sometimes I look back through the archives and hear the voices of Mayas past and chuckle at all the things that turned them into me. But more often I think about the future, and where I want to go with this space. And there are things I'm just not happy with. 

I don't like the way my blog is organized. (*gasp* That's a terrible thing for a blogger to admit, right? Too bad. I say shit.) I imagine right now that it might be a little jarring when I switch from talking about some egregious act of racism/sexism/homophobia to talking about sex/sexuality to waxing philosophical about life/love/relationships/whatever to talking about varied minutiae of my daily life from post to post to post. I recognize that that probably doesn't work so well, especially for new people who just stumble across the page, rather than like, friends/acquaintances who know me well enough to bear with me.

I want to...do something about that. I often contemplate doing a big major change and switching to a different host, probably WordPress, which would allow me to have different pages for different topics. But I actually very strongly dislike WordPress, Tumblr, and the like, because of the exclusivity of their sites--I hate that I have to have a WordPress account to like or comment on most people's WordPress blogs, or that I can't officially reblog something from a Tumblr without also having a Tumblr. THAT'S NOT HOW THE INTERNET IS SUPPOSED TO WORK--IT WAS MADE FOR FREE INTERACTION AND SHARING. Gosh. So ideologically, I'm against making that kind of a switch, but practically I think it would be really cool to have a different page for, say, "My Awesome/Awkward Life", "Afrodisiacs (#sexytime)", "Politics and -Isms", "Style Crushes", "Hair-Raising", "Afro-musicality" and "Afro-Intellectualism" or things to that effect. 

But I'm pretty sure that there would be things that wouldn't fit into any of those nice categorical boxes, and then what would I do with those? So then I contemplate whether I should just re-do the tagging system on the blog as it stands, so that the tag cloud wouldn't contain basically every specific topic I've ever talked about, but be more like a way to organize things into large amorphous schools of thought/talk for y'all to peruse. I realize that it's kind of absolutely purposeless as it stands, but Idk if changing it into big headings rather than individual topics would make it any more purposeful. What do y'all think? Do you like the sound of option A (host-switch) or option B (tag re-doing) better?


And this brings me to the biggest change I want to see happen on this blog. I want more interaction! I would love to become the kind of blog that has lots of comments and/or reader questions, etc. When I'm talking about what I think about some worldly event or random topic, I'd love to know what you all think too. I also want more followers, but that's less important to me than developing an interactive relationship with the ones I already have. I'm sure there are concrete steps towards getting these things, which may or may not be related to options A and B. But so despite the fact that when an acquaintance asks me, "Oh you have a blog?" I still get a little nervous about sharing the link (and possibly fundamentally altering the way that person sees me), I want to work on continuing to put I'm Such an Afroholic out there.


Here's to a thousand more!


Maya

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Is blogging giving me a big(ger) mouth?

It has come to my attention recently that I might have gotten too used to putting my whole life out there. Or, that there's a difference between blogging about things in a situation where I control everything that is said and how it's said and talking about things publicly with people I'm not super close to (but whom may or may not read the blog), because questions are asked and badgering happens when I don't want to answer, and then sometimes bitches can start trippin and inserting themselves into situations they have no business being involved in and then I start questioning friendships.

But before, or at least alongside questioning who my friends actually are, I need to step back and question the actions I'm taking. KS has been trying to get me to see this for a while, but it's just now starting to hit me (#whyishealwaysrightaboutmylife) that just because I am asked a question doesn't mean I have to answer it. Just because I've gotten used to talking about myself and the situations in my life in one arena, a controlled self-created arena where names are never named and I'm the only person pressuring myself to keep going, doesn't mean that I have any sort of responsibility to talk about myself and these same situations with people, especially with people I don't completely trust. It feels weird saying this, but I have to remember that outside of certain social spaces, I can't walk around like I'm allowed to be comfortable with everyone and say whatever I want to say, because that's how drama gets started.

I need to work on establishing a blogger/real person balance of openness. I'm absolutely not going to start censoring what I talk about on here, but I absolutely am going to limit whom I'll talk further about things offline with, and to what degree I talk about them offline. I am going to work on establishing the idea that just because I put my own stuff on blast here doesn't mean that I have to provide more details. Saying no has never been a strong suit of mine, but I need to work on remembering that I have no obligations to tell anyone anything I don't think they need to know. I need to remember that being a blogger doesn't mean my business isn't mine.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

My girl (and possible #1 fan of I'm Such an Afroholic) EC asked me a question last night

that has been rolling around in my head ever since:
When did you start [the blog]? Why did you start it?
My larger conversation with her last night made me realize how much larger my "following" is than the 24 people following me via Google Friend Connect and the 15 additional people who've subscribed to my RSS feed. She made me aware of the idea that people gather in real life and read/discuss things I talk about here, which is a step above people approaching me in real life or via other spaces on the internet to talk about it. Sometimes I forget how transparent I've made my life (thanks for the adjective, MH). 

So, to those who haven't been around for a while, or anyone who is curious, I started this blog in January of my sophomore year at Princeton, as soon as I'd come back to campus from Christmas break. And looking back on it now, it was a time of pretty major transition in my life. Within that same month, I 1) decided that I wasn't ever straightening my hair ever again and began my journey to embrace my natural hair, 2) applied to my first real-person job (an internship which I wound up getting in Chicago that following summer), 3) turned 20, 4) bought my first vibrator (happy birthday to me!), and 5) decided to join the eating club that has become both my home and a reflection of who I am. 

Soon thereafter, I began creating what have become some of the deepest, most meaningful, and most wholly real friendships I have ever had the privilege of knowing, and I'm just beginning to realize that all of these things may not have been unrelated. 

I started this blog when I woke up and realized that I didn't quite recognize myself and/or my circumstances. I had become all these new things, made all these new friends, and taken on all these new roles, and I wasn't exactly sure that all of them were me. I didn't know exactly whom I was doing all of this stuff for, but I was pretty sure it wasn't myself, and I wanted to stop living for things that weren't necessarily making me happy. So, I created this blog as a space to explore myself, to get to know who I am again for what felt like the first time. I created this as a space in which I could be honest with myself and with anyone who happened to stumble across it, in ways that I didn't always feel like I could be honest with people in my everyday interactions. I created this space because I was beginning to understand that my thoughts, opinions, and voice deserved room to exist and be heard, and I was determined to carve that space out for myself.

I wasn't sure I was going to stick with it when I started the blog. I was kind of afraid of becoming like a dear friend of mine from my pre-Princeton life, who came out on his blog and had the support of lots of strangers on the internet but didn't feel like he could talk to the people who had known him every day for years. I was unconvinced that anything I did here would matter in real life.

But I committed to this blog because I feel like it did. Correlation doesn't imply causation (fuck I should be writing my thesis), but I feel like embarking on this journey towards self-discovery and honesty and openness in a space that *feels* private (even if it is actually way more public than I ever really let myself understand) inspired me to be more honest and open in my relationships and various other social locations. I feel like writing in this space has helped me discover who I really and truly am and what I'm about, and being secure in that has allowed me to give (more of) my real true self to other people. I feel like I re-learned what "personal" means. The relationships and emotions and spirit of connection that have arisen in my interpersonal relationships since I started putting myself out here like this are invaluable. 

So for now I can say that for as long as I still feel like I have shit that needs to be worked out (thus, ostensibly, forever), I will work it out here in this public forum, because it just works for me. And if you guys like living in my head, then welcome. :) 

Monday, January 30, 2012

Things that make me feel like I'm winning:

A friend (and fellow blogger) said to me on Facebook chat, "...youve definitely been talking about ish that i think about but dont usually talk about with people"
To which I replied, "yeah that's kind of what i'm going for. like, why don't we talk about this stuff? it's IMPORTANT."
And she said, "haha so much agree!"
So if you're wondering where the giant smile on my face came from...
 

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

"I’m not writing to be included in the canon. I’m writing to save something precious. I’m writing to get my pencil dimensionally around my little idea and work it out. Waiting for somebody to invite me to belong to something or be included in something was never my idea of being a part of this thing amazing journey called life. I just want to continue being a creative thinker and doer. I want to keep saving things and making history more inclusive by way of my particular alphabets and word arrangements."
--Nikky Fenny

Reblogged from Sister Outsider

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Two. Dos. Duex. Due. Mbili.

(I had to look that last one up. It's Swahili and seemed appropriate.)

 
That's how old my blog is today. I published my first post on January 10th of 2010, halfway through my sophomore year at Princeton. (Side note: oh my word, my hair has come such a long way since then.) For the vast majority of my life, January 10th has held no particular significance, but on that date in 2010, I decided that straightening my hair was no longer a lifestyle choice I was going to make. I was on a mission to get to know who I was underneath everything I'd been doing for other people, and to bare that self to the world in the process. "Crisis" is a strong word for where I was this, but this was definitely the beginning of my quarter-life identity struggle. 

And today, two years later, I'm pretty amazed at how far this weird little project I started has gone, and how much farther I expect it will go. When I hit the "publish" button, this will be my 809th post. I had 155 pageviews yesterday, which is a record for the blog. I have 21 followers through Google (shoutout to the 5 that have joined me within the last week! Glad to have you!), 8 people who subscribe to my RSS feed, and it has actually gotten to the point where it's not uncommon for me to be walking around campus and have someone mention my blog or one of my recent posts. Getting an email telling me someone has commented on a post can put a smile on my face for the rest of the day. Basically, I think that over the past year, I've really embraced my identity as a "blogger," rather than just being a person who happens to have this little blog thing. This blog and the people who read it are so important to me. 

This past year saw a name change (for those who don't know, I'm Such an Afroholic used to be AFROdisiAccordingtoMe), which was a pain in the butt to execute, but which I'm so happy I did. The new name feels more like me. It saw me learning how to find balance between talking about my life and talking about the lives of other people who are in my life; my own personal openness doesn't mean I have the right to put other people on blast. It saw an unplanned hiatus in the Spring, followed by more blogging than I'd ever done before through the summer and continuing into the present. It saw the introduction of various new page elements: The Hits, the Twitter log, updates from other websites I like, as well as of the "reblog," as I have started following almost 200 other blogs and want to share their awesomeness with you all. 

I really like the direction I've gone in with the blog, even if it is somewhat awkwardly half-Tumblr half blog at times, and I hope you guys are happy with it, too. I'm learning so much about myself and getting into such fabulous discussion with other people as a result of this project, and here's to another year of that and more! It wouldn't be the same without you guys, readers, so here's a round of applause to you. 

Much love,

Maya

Thursday, January 5, 2012

A conversation with my little brother:

who is 16, after he learned my Twitter handle:
 
W: Your Twitter name is @SuchanAFROholic?!?
Me: Yeah...so it matches my blog.
W: You have a BLOG?! My sister is a ...blogger?
Me: Yup! It'll be my two year blogging anniversary next week! 
W: *looks at me quizzically* You've changed a lot since you started wearing your hair like that. (By "like that" he means in its 3c/4a kinky-curly natural texture, rather than fighting losing battles with flat irons and humidity on the daily.)
Me: This is me. I just finally started letting it show. 

Monday, January 2, 2012

I have no shame.

By which I mean, I adamantly refuse to feel ashamed of desires or actions that sit well with me just because they may not jive with what other people think is right for them. And since becoming a blogger I've gotten used to just putting all my business out there (while trying to maintain some level of privacy for the people in my life whose business could be spread in the spreading of my own business), and my sexual business is far from excluded on this list. 2011 was the year I finally threw that door wide open and took care of business, if you know what I mean, and I am so much happier for it. I am not ashamed to say that coming into my nature as a sexual being has enhanced my overall identity and partially reshaped my relationship to myself as an entity. I feel free from frustration and restriction I hadn't really even been acknowledging.

But still, sometimes people judge me and I have this fleeting moment where I wonder if I should be judging myself.

And that's why this passage from a  Clutch Magazine article by Arielle Loran resonated with me SO HARD:
"Shame is your enemy, and silence will stifle your growth. There’s no reason to feel guilty about natural desires, and if you haven’t already, this is the year to throw shame out of your life. Refuse to ignore your curiosities, urges, and intuition. Talk to your lovers, friends, and family about sex, sensuality, and sexuality. Use these relationships as a classroom for your growth. The more you open up, the more people will respond with wisdom, guidance, and affirmation. You need community to grow. You cannot become your best sexual and sensual self without the support of others."

Friday, September 9, 2011

Pro tip:

"If you can write when no one is listening and continue to do so for months,  you can be a blogger. If your voice is unique enough, the audience will come - it just takes a minute." --JC of THE NATURAL HAVEN
*crosses le fingers* 

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

This is my 500th post

and not all of these posts are created equal, I know. There was that time I went through the Formspring phase and a lot of my posts were just answering random and sometimes stupid questions people asked me [glad that's over, though I still welcome intelligent questions/comments via the Whaddya Wanna Know tab]. As I started reading more and more blogs (this summer, especially), I have fallen into the habit of reblogging like a fiend, hence the insurgence of photographs and words that are not mine. But I like it, because celebrating things that I stumble across elsewhere and love is still celebrating myself. And so, some of these posts have required more work and time than others. Sometimes I just post things that make me smile. Some posts come from places of joy, some from places of pain, some come from places of puzzlement, and many of a myriad of categories come from a place of introspection. I've talked about things that some people think I should keep to myself, and I'm sure that some of you are hardcore judging me for at least a few of them, but whatever, this is a safe space to be me and express my ideas, and I cherish that. I hope I've surprised some of you at least once or twice. I've gotten more and more comfortable with this whole putting-my-entire-life-on-the-internet-for-friends-and-randos-to-see thing as time has gone on, and I think it's turning me into a person who is more open generally in life. So even if some of these posts are more valuable than others, and there are some things I've said that I wouldn't even stand by anymore, 500 posts feels like a milestone. 

You know, I'm not sure I've ever felt like as much of a writer as I have since really embracing myself as a blogger. The closest thing to this I've felt before, I think, is that period of sophomore and junior years of high school where I was a poet and wrote poems every couple of days. Poem was what I did, like blog is what I do now, but the conventions of poem are less akin to "writing" in my head. I feel like I've found my voice through this, and I wasn't even aware that I had lost it. I feel...vibrant. My dad once told me a long time ago that I needed to stop being so afraid to put myself out there. He will never know this blog exists, but I sometimes wish I could tell him, "Mission accomplished."

I started this just for myself, entirely as a space to be selfish and focus entirely on me. That's still very much a large part of it, but an increasingly large part of me is really glad that you, readers, are (presumably, or else why are you still here) getting something out of this, too. Maybe it's just a voyeuristic thrill; maybe reading about my life, my successes and my fuck-ups, my joys and pains and fears and thrills is like watching a reality show. But I like to think that, sometimes at least, I talk about things that other people think about and want to talk about, or that other people can relate to. I hope I'm not just on the road to developing carpal tunnel syndrome to keep myself busy: I hope I'm entertaining; I hope I'm inspiring from time to time; I hope my thoughts and reflections are applicable to more than just my life. When someone tells me they "get it/me," or they "co-sign", or even just that they appreciate this little corner of the internet I have created, I feel as though I have accomplished something beautiful.   

Sunday, August 28, 2011

HAHAHA! I actually think this sometimes...

Reblogged from On the Bright Side
Stranger who pissed me off, you are about to be put on blast / acquaintance who made me smile, you will be recognized

Friday, July 8, 2011

“Writing is a socially acceptable form of schizophrenia.” --E. L. Doctorow

^Love

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Cheesy Blogaversary Post

Sunday marked a whole YEAR of me keeping this blog, and that should be celebrated! I don't know if I thought I'd stay with it this long when I started it...I hadn't really put all that much thought into it, but though school/life sometimes wins over me updating this regularly, it means so much to me and here's to hoping I have another year of wonderments and misadventures to share with all of you! Yay!

Monday, December 27, 2010

Habari gani? Kujichagulia!


Habari gani? Kujichagulia! Kujichagulia means self-determination and is the second day of Kwanzaa. On this day, we pledge to define ourselves, to name ourselves, to create for ourselves, and to speak for ourselves, instead of being defined, named by, created for and spoken for by others. On this day we design for ourselves a positive future and then vow to make that prophecy a self-fulfilling one.



Kujichagulia is my favorite day of Kwanzaa. Do you, Kujichagulia says. Be a rebel. Find something--anything--to throw your fist in the air and yell about. Today is the day to say FUCK the establishment, FUCK the status quo, FUCK people who are resistant to change, FUCK anyone who can't appreciate your beauty and your truth.


Africans. Niggers. Negroes. Coloreds. Blacks. African-Americans. Niggas. Persons of the African Diaspora. Multi-generational African-Americans. Self-definition is an interesting concept to me, particularly as it relates to identity markers. Black people in this country have been struggling for centuries to answer these questions: What is blackness? Who gets to define it? Through time it has been the whites, then the upper-middle-class blacks, then the militants...no one's really sure who it is now. There are lots of people who say blackness should be whatever every individual black person wants it to be; but then how do the non-black interpret blackness, and how do we honor yesterday (unity)? I ask the same thing about gender identity, sexual orientation identity, political party identity, class identity, age identity, religious identity...labels in general. I always say I don't like labels. I don't like generalizations. I don't like that if I said I was a feminist, you would have a prescribed notion of what feminists are, a mold you'd try to put me in. I worry about the same things when I say black. When I say female. When I say 20 year old. When I say Princetonian. I WILL NOT BE COOKIE-CUTTERED TO FIT YOUR NOTIONS OF REALITY.

Heh, Kujichagulia is kind of why I started this blog to begin with...