From the Desk of Jakebe T. Rabbit | Writing about stories, stories about writing

Web Name: From the Desk of Jakebe T. Rabbit | Writing about stories, stories about writing

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What can I say about this year that hasn t already been said better by someone else?A novel coronavirus has spread across the world like a less-virulent (and less-deadly) Captain Tripps, wreaking havoc on the already tattered social fabric of this country. The President of the United States thinks it either doesn t exist, will go away on its own, and can be cured by hydroxychloroquine, depending on the day you ask him about it. Under his mismanagement a good 35% of the country think that basic public health practices are some political oppression that must be stopped, and we re the only country in the world still struggling to bring the rising infection rate under control. Honestly, this reboot of The Stand is simultaneously less believable and more depressing.Like the rest of us, I thought I would use my time sheltering in place productively. Without the distraction of a commute or a social life, I could finally catch up on all the reading and writing I ve been wanting to do for years. Now almost six months later I ve written maybe 2,000 words total and half-read three books or so before diving back into my latest pastime, helplessly doom-scrolling through Twitter so I can keep up with how bad things are and despair that there s nothing I can do about any of it.The pandemic isn t the only thing we ve been dealing with this year, though that s been bad enough. There s also a severe economic recession that the government is using as an excuse to accelerate the increasing wealth gap between the uber-rich and well, the rest of us; there s the still continuing protests all around the country after yet another string of murders by police officers have claimed the lives of even more Black Americans; there s the dawning recognition that so many facets of American life, from health care to education to the social safety net to the legal system, are incredibly broken with no will from the people in charge to fix it; there s the still-looming threat of climate change dangling over the planet like a sword of Damocles.Oh, and there s Russia doing incredibly shady shit. White supremacists showing their whole asses in public. Murder hornets. Salmonella in our onions. Kanye running for President. Joe Biden running for President. Ellen s mean now; always has been. The Australian wildfires. The destruction of the Amazon rainforest. Brexit. The list goes on.Today I celebrate the 40th anniversary of my birth and I have no idea how to feel about that.I m a middle-aged jackalope watching the seemingly solid institutions of democracy crumble around me. I ve never been more shocked and dismayed at the naked, guiltless selfishness and proud ignorance of my fellow Earthlings. I ve taken multiple hits to my mental health this year and while I m surviving, I can t say I like the person I ve become.Living through this year with an anxiety disorder is not fun. Half of the energy I have is devoted to keeping myself upright and coherent; the other half goes to, you know, work and eating and stuff. More evenings than not I m exhausted by four o clock in the afternoon and I want something anything that will make me feel like I m not trapped inside a slow-motion apocalypse. I can t think of being creative; I can barely handle my day job. Making it through a normal day feels like an achievement in and of itself probably because it is. And while I recognize the need to be gentle with myself, a huge part of me is incredibly disappointed that these times haven t forged me into something harder and sharper.It s very easy for me to become overwhelmed and exhausted. I m scattered in my relationships with friends, frequently disappearing without notice in the middle of conversations. I fight a constant urge to withdraw into a fugue state, to run out the clock on my days until it s time to go to sleep. I am tired and scared and sad all the time.I hate that I can t be there for my friends, all good people who are also suffering through this shitbox year like I am. I hate that I can t do something that helps others make sense of what s happening, or feel less alone, or more hopeful, or even sufficiently distracted. There are so many folks out there rising to these times with passion and clarity, fighting for the future they believe in. Me? I just want the shouting to stop for like, two minutes. Just long enough for me to take a beat and wrap my head around what s happening.Earlier this year, Armando Iannucci debuted his follow-up to Veep on HBO, a bizarrely-prescient sci-fi satire called Avenue 5. There s a scene in a late episode where the panicked passengers on the titular spaceship become convinced they re actually on a reality show. Against the emphatic pleas of the ship s crew, a few of them decide to leave the set through the airlock. After their departure, more people leave the show in similar horrific fashion. Even after seeing what happened, the mob is so convinced of their own beliefs they refuse to accept the evidence right in front of them. Repeatedly. By the end of the season, we leave the Avenue 5 with several crewmembers pressed against a window, screaming helplessly into the void of space. It s an image I was dismayed to relate to so strongly.We re all trapped in this malfunctioning spaceship that even the best of us barely knows how to function, and the people with power think their power trumps expertise or, you know, basic reality. Everyone s shouting to be heard, and no one s listening. Anything I could say would just get swept up in this existential scream of the cultural moment.But scream I must. I ve got a good bit of air in my lungs, and I have to use it for something. As a birthday present to myself, I m giving myself permission to do the things that bring me comfort and happiness. I ll try to be more present with people, or at least tell them when I have to recharge. But I m not my best self right now, and I ask you all to be patient with me. I have no idea how to fly this spaceship, but I can at least make some small corner of it somewhat more calming and hopeful. I am a black man who lived his entire life in the United States, keenly aware of the fact that any encounter with the police could result in my death. It doesn t matter why they ve approached me. I could be stopped for a busted tail-light, or someone might be breaking into my house, or I might be at a protest. Any time I have the attention of the police, I might die. Chances are the police officer responsible for my death will not be charged or even disciplined. If my death gets national attention, there s a strong chance a good number of people would dig through the details of my life for any scrap of evidence they could find that I deserved to die. Sometimes I wonder how my character would be assassinated after my death. I know I m not perfect, and I know someone would find enough to spin a narrative that fit me into a ready-made stereotype. Would it be my mental illness? Would they talk about the fact I like to smoke pot? Or would it be the fact that I write furry erotica for fun and profit? Which details of my life would right-wing media go after to justify my extra-judicial killing by a police officer?It s a weird thing to think about, but it s the world that we live in. I ve had to watch this play out in the media again and again, and I think about what it must be like for the victim s family and friends, to know that the person you love has been killed, that their murder was tacitly approved by the state, that the killers will go free and possibly kill again. Then, to see people boil the life of that loved one down to a talking point, to see their name become the representation of an issue that we ve had to talk about far too often. The list of victims of police brutality is too long to count at this point. Black men and women have been killed during traffic stops, reselling cigarettes, carrying a gun they legally owned from the store they bought it, being in their backyard, being in their own home, jogging through their neighborhood. Over the past several years, it has become increasingly evident that there s nothing black Americans can do that doesn t carry the possibility of being killed by a police officer. It s an alienating thing to be a part of a culture that lionizes the people you re sure could end your life at any time and get away with it. All of my life, I ve been told to call the police in a dangerous situation, that they re here to help, that they ll keep the peace. This is a message backed up in almost every movie and TV show ever. In horror movies, entire acts are devoted to trying to get the police involved to stop the killer. In procedurals, police are often the only people willing to balance the scales of justice. The police are noble, and even the bad ones usually have mitigating circumstances that make them more objects of fascination or pity than true bad guys. But that s never been my experience with police. If I called them, even when I really needed them, there s a chance they might think of me as the suspect and not the victim. The only time I ve had an encounter with the police, I was 17 and working two jobs at the Towson Town Center. Multiple days a week I would open the mall at one store, and close it at a different store. Most of the money I was making was spent on mall food and public transportation; it took multiple busses, a subway ride, and over an hour each way to get to where I needed to be. Most of my riding was done near midnight, when even the urban center started shutting down. I was beaten and robbed at a closed subway station near Lexington Market and went to the nearest police officer immediately, bruised and crying. He gave me a ride home,  annoyed that I had allowed myself to get into this situation in the first place. He asked why I was in such a dangerous place to begin with, and advised I should be smarter or toughen up next time. Thinking back on that, it was one of the better outcomes I could have hoped for. A 120-pound snot-nosed crying kid was nowhere near a threat, but the disdain the officer showed me right after being mugged and beaten cemented the dissonance between what I was being told and what I knew: the police were not an ally for me. If I called them when I was in trouble, I could expect to be grilled on how I got myself into that situation. Over the years, I ve seen dozens of black Americans like me get gunned down, choked out, beaten and abused by the police for any reason, or no reason at all. We re always told that the officer feared for their lives, or that the subject was resisting, and that necessitated the use of force. But that same logic never seems to apply to say, white terrorists who ve been caught resisting arrest or murdering innocent people. What that tells me is that the police are afraid of black Americans and that fear allows them to kill us without consequence. But what about me? I m afraid of the police, but that only means I have something to hide, right? Some defect in my character or some criminal secret that makes me scared. The police are here to help, after all. They only want to keep the peace.These past few weeks have been traumatic, it s fair to say. All around the country there are videos of police officers injuring protestors, the media, and innocent people going about their lives. Even here in Silicon Valley, police have used rubber bullets and tear gas excessively. This isn t a surprise to me or most of your friends who are black and indigenous in America, but it is shocking to see it so naked and open now. Even more shocking to see people who still deny it, who still defend the police. It s also exhausting. I ve had to live with this reality my whole life. I ve had to square with the fact that one world exists for most of the people I know and I can t share in it, because for me the police aren t for protection. They see me as an annoyance at best and a threat pretty much all the time. I m not safe in their hands, and it s not because I m a criminal, or because I m hiding something. It s just because I m black. I ve been trying to write this for two weeks now, because none of this is easy to say. I really wish I could trust the police, share in the idea that they re here for my protection. But what I ve seen these past several years, and especially these past two weeks, tells me that I ll never be able to. If the police are called, for me it just makes a dangerous and stressful situation even more so. I have to manage my feelings while making sure the officer with the power in the room doesn t get spooked. Even talking about this, I have to constantly manage my feelings. Am I being too hyperbolic? Too absolutist? Will someone read this and see my fear as something silly or overblown? As black people, we re constantly being told that our experience and the insight gained from it isn t valid. Even when there s hundreds of pieces of video evidence. And even though I have an amazing set of friends and an awesome support network, I m not sure I ll ever feel comfortable talking about the way it really feels to be black in America. But now, especially, it feels necessary. So I ll try. Hey, it s (sort of) the first day of the new decade! Er, depending on who you ask. Judging from the many, MANY Best of 2010s articles I ve read over the past few months, the consensus seems to be that decades begin at Year 0. Since the significance of these markers is completely artificial, that s a good a sign as any to declare this the official start of the 20s. Between you and me, I m glad that we re looking back at the 2010s instead of living them.It s been an exhausting few years. There is no shortage of things to fight about, from systemic racism to climate change to our favorite pop-culture obsessions, life online has become a battleground instead of a refuge. Even those of us who use the Internet as an escape of sorts have found ourselves entrenched in the wars of the day. Furries have had to reckon with the rise of the alt-right in our ranks, addressing the constant and unapologetic toxic behavior of a few popular artists, and dealing with the increased visibility of the real-life marginalizations our fellows have to endure. It hasn t been easy, and we re still figuring out how to deal with very real issues as a community. So far, though, the work has been promising.There s still so much to do, though. In the United States this is a Presidential election year, so the tone of political discourse will grow louder over the coming months until it s a constant bullhorn in our ears. Whether we believe in it or not, climate change is still pushing our weather into unpredictable and dangerous territory. Vast wealth inequality will likely increase, meaning that a very few people will have outsized influence on our government, businesses, culture, and even our diet. Our problems are so huge and so varied it often feels impossible to know just what we can do about it. The options that seem to be available to us are go crazy or ignore it as much as possible.I ve gone mostly quiet because I don t know if my voice actually contributes to the solution. This isn t a bid for compliments or reassurance; I m not entirely sure anyone can contribute to the solution with the way things are right now. Everyone is shouting for their voices to be heard, but so few of us are actually listening. You can t have a discussion without that; otherwise, we re screaming into a raucous and deafening void.I spent some time with my husband s family over Christmas, and it was both wonderful and draining. My in-laws are a big clan, with a lot of different personalities carrying personal (and generational) baggage into any conversation. One brother is a Trump voter, but also someone struggling with anxiety and self-image issues. Another has recently defected from the Republican Party after the rise of 45 and his brand of politics. A sister is fairly liberal, but wrestling with the loss of her Christian faith. Even though they re quite different and building families of their own, their love for each other keeps them in each other s orbit through the inherent tension of clashing perspectives. It was a reminder of how important it is to accept people as they are, even as you push them to do better.That s not a popular message right now. There s so much anger over where we are as a nation (even as a species), so much frustration that we haven t solved so many long-standing problems, and it feels like our biggest priority is figuring out who to blame. While I certainly agree with my fellow progressives about where the fault lies, I m no longer sure it s productive to keep beating the drum of demanding consequences. I think the best thing we can do is accept the situation we re in and figure out how to do the best we can from here.This doesn t mean that people should not be held responsible for the awful things they ve done. We should prosecute the people responsible for putting children in cages and breaking up families at the border; they should be held accountable for the deaths suffered under their watch. The current President and his administration should absolutely be put on trial for their corruption and abuse of power. We should continue to call out bigoted speech and behavior in our spaces, and make it clear that won t be tolerated. We need to continue fighting against the degradation of compassion and empathy in the public square, wherever it appears.But we also have to focus more on what we re building with our speech and actions. If we spend all of our time focused on what s going wrong in the world, we train ourselves only to see these problems. We have to start thinking about what solutions look like, what kind of world we want to build. Instead of highlighting and excoriating toxic behavior, we should start building consensus on the behavior we need to replace it with and embodying the virtues we value instead. Shifting our gaze towards the things we want to love and encourage could have a powerful effect on how we fight against the injustice and corruption plaguing our society.I ve spent so much of these past several years being angry, despairing, overwhelmed. I ve lived it enough to know that I can t actually help anyone that way. I have to find the things that make me hopeful about the world we live in. I have to spread the things that make us feel less afraid and alone. I won t ignore the terrible things that happen, but I will change how I respond to them.Today is the final day of Kwanzaa, and the principle we focus on is that of Faith (Imani). Faith is not a popular idea in the circles I run in. Those of us who have escaped the orbit of fundamentalist or evangelical Christianity have had a poisoned relationship with the idea. But after all this time, I m re-examining it. Faith, after all, doesn t mean blind devotion to an unprovable higher power or even the people who claim to speak for it. It can be a choice, in the absence of evidence, to believe that there are more good people than bad and that we will do right by each other eventually.But faith without works is dead. Having faith in the goodness of people means we must behave as if people are good even when they do bad things. There has to be a way back into the light for those who voted for Trump, who have been shameless with their bigotry, who have done awful things. Even if someone has crossed an unforgiveable line for us, they have to be allowed some way to repent and rehabilitate. We can t keep punishing each other and expect a better society to rise from that. We can t keep shaming people into being better.We must show them how by being the people we want them to be. We have to imagine how we would want someone to call us out and how we would want to be forgiven when we mess up, and extend that same kindness to others. We can t get through our problems by forcing the people who ve caused them to accept blame, by making sure they re punished for what they do. It might be necessary for our sense of justice, and I won t argue with that. But it doesn t solve the problem, and to me that s the most pressing priority.In 2020 I will try my hardest to be the kind of person I think there needs to be more of in the world. I will do my best to be kind, as compassionate as I can be, honest and earnest, loving, joyful, equanimous. I will be firm in denouncing harmful actions, but I will engage the people who take those actions as gently as I can. Anger can be fuel, but we still have to be careful about where it takes us. I want my anger to fuel me towards a better world, and I want people to be mindful of how they re spending their fuel as well. Let s learn to sit with our anger, until we re sure we re taking a proper stand with it. After a couple of months out of work, it feels really good to be gainfully employed again. To respect the privacy of this secret burrow location, I won t say exactly where I m working. But I can say that what I m doing now adheres to the practice of Right Livelihood, which means I m not making my living by causing or contributing to harm. As I grow older, it s an increasingly important precept likely because it s becoming much more difficult to observe in too many areas of the country. During my time off, I got to think a lot about what I would be willing to do for a paycheck and what I would avoid for as long as possible. But a lot of us don t really have that luxury. In order to pay the bills, so many of us are forced to do unfulfilling work that doesn t do anything to make the world a better place. Some of us even have to take jobs that make things worse. That s because so many of us lack the power to choose the work we find most fulfilling, that calls to our purpose in life or at least lets us help our fellow beings.There are so many barriers to being able to land a decent, fulfilling job. Just pulling from my background, my family wasn t in any financial position to send me to a private school and I was exceedingly lucky to be placed in whatever gifted and talented programs were available. This gave me opportunities most children my age couldn t get like learning Latin, gaining access to extracurricular programs that furthered my studies, even meeting teachers who were lively and dedicated enough to make sure my lessons stuck. In high school I floundered because I had never learned how to study properly or work past frustration. My home life was a shambles, and there was no way to deal with that. I was woefully unprepared for college, and didn t have the institutional, community, or familial resources that most do to get help. I never got a degree, never developed a network in the workforce, never learned skills that could be applied to different positions. Now I m a 40 year old black man without college education or any certifications. If it weren t for the kindness and generosity of my professional network, I would have been in serious trouble. My age, my race, my education, my mental health all of them are working against me in the job market. I am so, so grateful to have such good friends and colleagues, and I m mindful that so many people like me don t have the resources I do.Having a job that doesn t fulfill you, or that you believe is harming your community it wears on you in a way that few other things do. It can poison your self-image and rot you from the inside. Being forced to deal with immoral people without the ability to assert your values is a quiet devastation of the soul. It changes the way you see people, and the way you see the world. In order to survive the experience, most of us either have to adopt the mindset of the colleagues trapped in such a system the attitude that life is a competition, and we all have to do whatever it takes to make it. This may include backstabbing our coworkers, lying to customers, damaging relationships in order to get ahead, compromising our integrity. We might quell the disturbed voice within us by adopting a new mantra: This is just the cost of doing business.We are incredibly adaptable creatures, capable of surviving and thriving in any environment. But sometimes, our efforts shouldn t go towards thriving in a harmful environment it should go towards removing ourselves from it, or, barring that, changing it. Most of us don t have the luxury of leaving jobs we don t like, so transforming it is often our only choice. That is often lonely, exhausting, thankless work. Without some sort of validation or recognition, we can fall to despair. Why even try to change things when we know it s not going to work? We re not going to be able to make a company think more about ethical behavior and less about money. Who are we doing this for?Ourselves. We may not be able to transform the world around us, even with hard work and persistent effort, but we can make sure that the world doesn t transform us. At the very least, we can take stock of our values and do our best to make sure we re handling our jobs in a way that aligns with them. That is difficult, I won t lie. It might require some creativity. But making the effort to transform our relationship with our work is an overlooked act of self-preservation. If we can t do what we love, we can find a way to do what we have to with love.In the United States, we ve largely shifted from an industrial economy to a service economy. A lot of us work for companies that put us in contact with people all day, every day. We encounter others who present themselves angrily, with unyielding expectations and an air of entitlement to treat us as terribly as necessary to make sure those expectations are fulfilled. Sometimes, both of us are trapped in a system neither of us want to be in, forced to protect a company s profit over true service to our fellow beings. Many customers see us as nothing more than an adversary, an obstacle in the path of the just treatment they deserve.And despite the names of the systems that trap us, like customer service/success/care , the systems themselves force us into that adversarial relationship. Often, the customer isn t given the right information at the right time to understand a company decision. Sometimes, the decision itself is terrible and we re tasked with justifying it. Sometimes, someone feels cheated and we have to protect the company that pinched their purse. When someone comes to us, the expectation is to deny what s being asked for and try to make the customer feel good about the experience regardless.When a customer rails at us, they are bringing that story with them already in progress. It can be incredibly easy to accept the role we ve been given and become enemies, especially if we feel attacked unfairly or the demands of our job has already drained our self-image. If we feel isolated in our lives, unsupported by our colleagues, and bound to anti-social company practices, our frustration only has one way to go towards the person attacking us. It can even feel like a karmic righting, denying someone who dares to treat us so poorly.That s a spiral I ve been down, and desperately want to stop. The anger I feel about our current social conundrum or the helpless loneliness I feel doesn t go away with perpetuating unkindness. Those feelings become fossilized with those actions, and we begin to not only accept the role of enmity we ve been given but the whole story our customers are our enemies, and the lot of them are stupid, ignorant, entitled. It s a horrible story that brings out the worst in me and denies me the chance to change the course of our interaction from combative to collaborative.But, in order for me to do that, I have to change the way I think about well, everything. I am not an agent of a company. I am a person with the ability to help another person who has come to me for help. I don t have a list of policies that determine what I can t do to help our customers; I have a small suite of tools for assisting people who need in the best way I can manage. I am not here to be screamed at by a customer; I am the only one who can hear this person s frustration with the system we re both stuck in, and I can offer a way out.For me, Right Livelihood isn t just about making sure the company you re working for does no harm. It s also about making sure your work doesn t poison you into spreading harm. Some of us have a lot of work to do if we expect to retain our compassion and equanimity in the face of a difficult situation; it s best to recognize where we are with that and do our best to proceed accordingly. Sometimes, the way out of the wrong situation is simply changing the way we respond to it. Even if we can t be in a place that does no harm, we can decide to help as much as we can, in any way we can.This Labor Day, I pray that all of us finds a way to find contentment with our work, and to keep striving to transform ourselves and our communities to the best possible versions of themselves. Each of us has the power to connect with our fellow beings, to change the hostile narrative we re trapped in, to encourage an attitude of love and helpfulness. I ll keep working on that here, now that I ve been given another chance to. Changeling: the Dreaming is a tabletop role-playing game where you play one of the Kithain, half-fae/half-human creatures who struggle to keep imagination alive in an increasingly banal, hostile world. I created Carver Bunkin Johnson for the game s recent Twentieth Anniversary Edition, and thought it might be fun to imagine him in his native Baltimore during the near-future where climate change is beginning to flood the decomposing city. You know, for varying values of fun . Carver laid out the contents of his backpack on his bed and considered what would be absolutely necessary to bring along with him. He had to travel light so he could grab as much as he could at the library, and he hated to think about the possibility of leaving a book behind because he brought some useless thing or another. He wasn t sure if he would be able to get down to the main branch again before it closed; this was his one shot to make sure the most important texts were rescued.The basement of the Enoch Pratt Free Library s Central Branch was already flooded. He heard that most of the old reference section ancient encyclopedias and specialized primers on everything from Baltimore s history to its surviving public records were damaged beyond repair. Vast sections of the city s knowledge about itself were lost, now, and chances are they could never be replaced. History would become heresay, whispered down the generations in obscure corners of the city s families. But the truth the truth would never be known.Carver sighed deeply and stroked his long ears to soothe himself. As a Pooka, he had a different relationship with the truth than most. Still, the truth was the template one used to build the more entertaining stories that were his bread and butter. It showed him which parts to exaggerate for effect, which parts to contradict, which parts to move. The truth, after all, often didn t inspire people to listen to their better angels. Stories did that. But even the best stories needed something true for their foundations; without it, there was nothing to tie flights of fancy to.The stimulation of the short fur at his eartips made him feel a little better. He opened his eyes and looked at his collection. There was his laptop, his prized possession, far too important to risk being stolen or damaged by water. He set that aside, along with the power cord and mouse. There were four books a fantasy novel, an anthology of post-apocalyptic short stories, a collection of essays about growing up in the city, and his journal. He kept the essays and journal; he d need to keep himself entertained on the way there, and you never knew when a drawing or random factoid would come in handy.Then there were the odder things: three chunks of concrete a bit smaller than his palm; a neon plastic toy that you held in your hand and shook to knock balls at the end of two hinges together; a sheet of molded, transparent plastic roughly five by eight inches; a Crown Royal bag filled with dice and marbles; a plastic sword that looked like it might be a cocktail stirrer for giants. These would be nothing more than trash for most folks, but for Carver they were extremely helpful tools for dealing with the odd runaway dream you sometimes found in the city streets. He kept the concrete, the knocker, the magnifying sheet and the Crown Royal bag they could be stuffed anywhere in the gaps between books on the way back, if it came to that.Carver took the rest to an ancient rolltop desk in the corner of his room and squirreled the items away. Then, he turned his back and named every other scrap of furniture in his room out loud. With luck, the desk was protected from anyone who might snoop in his room. It had been a while since Mom had let strangers into the house, but you could never be too careful.She was in her usual spot on the couch in the living room downstairs. The front door was already open in a vain attempt to cool the place down; a standing fan blew in the cooler air from the covered porch out front, while a box fan ushered out the hot air from the kitchen. That was the theory anyway, but to Carver it just carried the smell of the neighborhood into the house. He wrinkled his nose as he thumped downstairs, his backpack hanging loose from his shoulders. It was only 8 in the morning and the trash in the street smelled like it had been baking for an hour or so. Today would be brutally hot. Where you going? His mother looked at him in the hallway, obviously dressed to go out. You gonna get me some crabs? She was a small but indestructible woman. Her bony limbs and paper-thin skin belied a tireless, patient strength and remarkable resilience at least physically. Over the years she had gotten more forgetful and confused, unable to keep names and dates straight. Recently, she kept….travelling to other places in her own mind. There was no telling who she thought he was, or where she thought she might be.Carver smiled at her, swallowing the lump in his throat. The truth was he was losing her, bit by bit. Every day, the fog separating her from reality grew a little more impenetrable. One day, she would disappear entirely behind the glassy expression in her eyes. The story he wove from that truth was that she was preparing to go on a long vacation, and she was taking out the best memories from long-term storage to pack with her. It was his job to help her pick the best ones and fold them well. That s right, Mom, he said. Only a few this time, though. We can t have the whole place stinking like Old Bay and Rolling Rock. She laughed, and he broke into a relieved grin. She was with him today. You know I can eat a dozen of them. Pick me up half a watermelon, too, you hear? Carver nodded slowly, revising his mental map to swing by Lexington Market on his way home. You got it. I ll be back by this afternoon. He watched as she sunk into the couch, her attention stolen by the old movie about a Mormon miracle playing on one of the few channels she could get clear. You d better. You know I don t like being by myself at night. Carver did know. The night was when Mom s brain turned sour, and what feverish nightmares she had stepped out of her head into the shadows. Sometimes, he thought she knew when it would happen. He considered this a warning. I won t. I love you, Mom. His ear flicked at her mumbled response, and he stepped out into the day. Carver Johnson was left packed away in his rolltop desk. He was now Bunkin, Savior of Knowledge and Servant of Muninn. He had a job to do, and it would take all of his courage and cleverness to avoid highwaymen, bandits, floods and unhelpful, unpredictable caravans to his destination. He traded one set of worries for another. Life was hard, and living a double life was so much harder. The most shocking thing about Aldous Huxley s Brave New World is how pleasantly it presents its dystopian setting. The World State as it exists in AF 632 (or the year 2540 as we know it) is a paragon of monolithic stability where nearly every aspect of life is manipulated by the government. Human beings are lab-grown, given chemicals that will assure their development into one of five separate castes. Once their development is complete, they re immediately indoctrinated into the beliefs the World State wants them to have: that they are glad of the caste they re in, they like the activities appropriate to their castes, that consumerist pleasure (sexual and otherwise) is the ultimate goal in life, and that all troublesome feelings are to be deadened through the liberal use of soma, an opiate drug. Everything that could inflame the human spirit like art, literature, religion, even monogamy is seen as ridiculous and savage by the enlightened citizens of the World State. One man, at least, is not satisfied by this blissful status quo Bernard Marx, an Alpha human who nonetheless doesn t conform to the physical or emotional standards of his class. He s shorter than most Alphas, and his depressive nature exacerbates an inferiority complex stemming from that. Instead of seeking out company and casual sex, he prefers his own company and melancholy thoughts. Lenina, a fetal technician at the Central London Hatchery and Conditioning Center, seems to like him anyway even though his insistence on being sad is something she can t understand. Bernard and Lenina travel to a Savage reservation on holiday and find a World State expat who disappeared decades ago, now quite advanced in age and with a strapping young son. Lenina is horrified by the simple living, different cultural morality, sickness, infirmity, old age, and poverty; Bernard is fascinated by it. When he learns that John, the expat s son, is the illegal offspring of the Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning, Bernard is all too happy to charitably bring both of them to London for a family reunion. It really doesn t work out well for anyone. Linda, the expat, was so devastated by culture shock and the subsequent rejection of her native society, that she disappears into a soma hole. John, her son, is much like Bernard. They re both disaffected outcasts failed by society, with no emotional outlet to even begin to understand their longing. What s interesting, though, is that while John rejects the World State that wants to embrace him, Bernard abandons his dissatisfaction as soon as he gets that taste of fame and acclaim. John is determined to remain true to his personal experience, even in the face of alienation and suffering. Bernard starts blowing his social capital like he s won the lottery, confusing his luck as a mandate to tell the world the way he really thinks. The World State rejects Bernard, ultimately exiling him to an island where he can t participate in society any more. John, however, remains stuck in its suffocating grip to the very end. Both men are ultimately broken by the monolith they rail against, and what s worse nothing is changed by it. The vulgar orgies and soma abuse continue. No one treats them as anything more than a curiosity.And that s because neither Bernard or John are good advocates for their anti-society stance. Both of them have been emotionally stunted by their background in different ways, and their inability to express the difficult emotions roiling them end up isolating them from anyone who might be able to help. Bernard, to me, confuses his depression for depth in the manner of high school and college kids everywhere but lacks the courage of his convictions to really explore the root of it. Instead of examining his emotions, he turns his unhappiness outward on anyone he feels deserves it. His dissatisfaction isn t borne out of idealism or empathy; ultimately, it s selfish and self-serving. John, on the other hand, is self-focused because he was never given the opportunity to actually join a society. He was an outcast on the reservation and wasn t allowed to participate in the rituals and ceremonies that marked his maturation into manhood or the connection to the land that all of his fellows shared. His own mother was too entrenched in her own pain to guide him through his, or to teach him how to work with his ideals. What results is a rigid and miserable man who clings to the devil he knows, unable to find any kind of balance that he might be able to work with. Contrasted against the relatively happy (if vapid) citizens of the World State, Bernard and John feel more like warnings about the dangers of individuality than anything else. Citizens are conditioned from birth to be satisfied with their lot in life, given jobs appropriate to their predetermined abilities, and allowed their choice of leisure activities. All they have to do to keep society humming along is what, if the conditioning holds, would make them happy to begin with. No one even misses high art or literature. As far as dystopias go, the one in Brave New World is almost seductive in its completeness and effectiveness. It s actually disturbing to me that it feels that way.Because, looking around in this day and age, doesn t it feel like all people want is some way to feel marginally meaningful, occupied and content, with no reason to think any further than their own pleasure? What have free thought and expression provided for us? If the only way to stabilize the human race and ensure its survival is through biological and psychological manipulation, wouldn t that be better than the suffering and war we have now? Brave New World was written in response to the popular utopian novels of the time, a kind of parody to the shiny optimism that had taken hold in post-World War I Europe. Huxley was concerned by the overreach of government, the radical shift in industry brought about by Ford s assembly line, social manipulation through media, and how the short-term pleasure of people could be weaponized as an element of control. Scientific and cultural advancement is purposefully stunted by the World State in favor of stability and unity; technology as a disruptive influence is simply unheard of.The World State is a strange hybrid of the worst excesses of capitalism and communism, with its strictly-defined castes and coercion to consume material goods above all else. People are straight-up brainwashed into being agreeable, discarding their own thoughts and feelings to keep the peace and happiness of the group intact. But the craziest thing is that, for the most part, the society works. Even the people who aren t on board, for whatever reason, are given a place where they can be who they want to be without the pressures of groupthink. The effectiveness of the World State is what sets Huxley s work apart in the canon of dystopian fiction. Most authorities rule through oppressive fear, secrecy, or a more incompetent social manipulation that cannot hold. Seeing an authoritarian society that has somehow managed a (more or less) contented populace forces us to really think about why the World State is a dystopia and not a utopia. Is it simply that our cultural values are so far removed from theirs, or is there some fundamental aspect of the human experience being violated? The citizens of the World State are free to do as they please only the State has conditioned them to be pleased by State-sanctioned activities. Is it really freedom if society has programmed us to make specific choices? If not, can we truly be free in any form of social structure? This is the thing that will stick with me long after I ve forgotten the name of the Savage in Brave New World. The World State really forces you to think about the value of the individual over society, and what one would be willing to give up for stability. It s disconcerting to face those questions in a way that makes you reconsider the answers, but that s precisely what the book invites you to do. If you re one of the original five X-Men and your name isn t Jean Grey or Scott Summers, chances are you ve got a bum deal. Angel is mostly known for having his wings torn off and replaced by cybernetic ones as one of Apocalypse s Four Horsemen. Beast was arguably most popular during his stint with the Avengers team in the 70s and 80s before rejoining his old team and curing the Legacy Virus in the 90s. Iceman, however, doesn t even have an iconic storyline or fan-favorite supervillain to boost his street cred. Mostly, he s just known for well, being a member of the Original Five.Writers have spent years looking for ways to make Bobby Drake more distinctive. He was classified as an Omega Level mutant sometime ago, but unlike others with the classification (like, say, Jean or fellow X-Man Storm) he s not one of the first names you think of when an extinction-level threat rears up. Several writers have put work in justifying Iceman s designation, but nothing s really stuck in the popular consciousness. More recently Iceman made headlines when a past version of himself was outed as gay by Jean, which raised all kinds of questions. How could he have been gay for this long without any inkling from anyone else (including readers)? Especially when he s had a bit of a reputation for his love life?During one of their many recent X-Men relaunches, Iceman was one of the two Original Five X-Men to get a solo series. (The other of course was the time-displaced Jean Grey.) The first five issues debuted back in 2017, and I have to admit I gave it a pass at the time. It wasn t a great time to be an X-fan, and the constant upheavals in the status quo with subsequent relaunches didn t give me much faith that this title would last. Sure enough, it was cancelled after 11 issues, renewed months later, then cancelled again after six more issues. In this particular age of Marvel, 17 issues is a decent run but what about the story that was told in that space? The first collection of Iceman, Thawing Out, establishes the new normal for Bobby Drake as he tries to figure himself out and live up to his Omega-level potential.He s smiling because he s finally figured an ice-based gay punIf I had to describe the first five issues of Iceman in one word, it would be accessible . Writer Sina Grace has the unenviable task of making sense of Bobby s controversial status quo while also providing readers with a compelling reason to see him as a potential leading man . Iceman has never felt like a big deal; for the ongoing to work, the first arc really needs to establish him as someone capable of anchoring stories as well as Spider-Man or Captain America. However, Bobby s recent embrace of his sexuality means that he might need to seem like the same old Iceman so he doesn t further alienate a vocal contingent of the comics fandom. It s a tricky balance to strike, and for various reasons it feels like Grace and the editorial team made a series of choices that put the title into a place that doesn t appeal to anyone who might be willing to give it a shot.In the first arc, Iceman struggles to come out to his parents as gay which makes sense, since they still haven t fully accepted him as a mutant. The whole affair is complicated by an appearance from the Purifiers and a dust-up with Juggernaut, but when the dust settles there s at least hope that the cold war between Bobby and his parents can thaw given time. Grace wisely echoes audience sentiment Who IS Iceman, really? within Drake himself, who states from the jump that his legacy isn t very strong and he doesn t have a well-defined self-image. By bundling the audience questions into the narrative, Grace acknowledges the challenge directly while offering an implicit promise we ll get an answer through Bobby s journey of self-discovery.And we get an idea of why it s so difficult for Bobby to reconcile what makes him different through his parents. It s clear that his parents inability to accept him for who he is makes it hard for him to accept himself; he s torn between who he feels he is and who his parents want him to be. Anyone who s spent some time being closeted in their family can relate to this. The tension that comes with weighing your desire to be a part of your family against the need to be true to yourself is so hard to reconcile. But it also feels like Bobby should have pulled the trigger on a decision about this by now. He s been living this way for years at this point, and he s been his own man for long enough to decide for himself who he is.I think that s one of the reasons why this first arc doesn t quite work it feels like it s speaking to a dilemma we ve gotten past as a society. Folks who don t accept LGBQTIA people aren t likely to be swayed by this story, and the folks who are LGBQTIA don t quite see themselves in Bobby s situation. Those still closeted under their parents roof don t have a team of superheroes to lean on, no superpowers to save themselves (or their family) from bigots, no external threats to unite their family. The resolution with Bobby s parents feels at once too small a win to celebrate but at the same time too easily achieved he hasn t really learned to address the flaws keeping him from a resolution, and his parents haven t really budged from their vague disapproval or dealt with the reasons they have such trouble accepting their son.Iceman s core conflict doesn t drill down into the specifics that would make the story more compelling and Bobby Drake a superhero worth rooting for. We still don t quite understand why Bobby decided that he didn t want to be both gay AND a mutant, especially since Northstar is around; we don t understand how being forced to confront his sexuality is connected to living up to the potential of his mutant powers. Instead, we re left with the idea that the process of accepting himself has begun and that s satisfying in its own way.Sina Grace has spoken out on his Tumblr about his experience writing Iceman, and it is not pretty. According to him, he had little support on the title itself and with the cultural fallout that comes with being a lightning rod in the industry. While paying lip service to the potential to tell diverse stories, Marvel apparently asked him to keep things relatively beige to help its slight chances at being a hit. More assertively gay stories were dismissed, and the arrival of a trans superhero named Shade was not given any publicity. I could easily see Grace being hamstrung from telling the kind of story he wanted by a nervous editorial group, which is a shame.Because Iceman really does feel like a half-measure on Marvel s part, telling a difficult story with a series of mis-steps designed to reduce offense instead of speaking truth. It simultaneously acknowledges the hard truths of being gay while diminishing how hard they can be to cope with; it still thinks that featuring a gay character is enough to be progressive. The fact of the matter is they were going to take heat from the same corners of the comics world no matter how gay they made the title; it would have been better to take a big swing than the sacrifice bunt they ended up with.Still, there s enough to recommend Iceman as a title especially if you re a fan of the X-Man himself. It s just too bad it s yet another example of a Bobby Drake story that fails to live up to its potential. It s decent enough, but not nearly what could have been. The runaway success of last year s Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse raised the profile of Miles Morales in a big way. Created by Brian Michael Bendis in 2011, Miles became the second Spider-Man of an alternate Marvel universe after a cataclysm took the life of that reality s Peter Parker. It s been an eventful eight years for Miles. He was a controversial figure during his debut, but has won over fans with amazing stories. He made his way over to the main Marvel continuity in 2015 after a Crisis on Infinite Earths -type situation that destroyed then drastically reconfigured the multiverse, and since then he s been a key figure of the emerging young superhero community. When Into the Spider-Verse dropped, Marvel thought it might be a good idea to give Miles a fresh look with a new ongoing title and a new creative team. Thus, Miles Morales: Spider-Man was born.For his fourth(?!) solo series, Marvel brought in Hugo Award-winning writer Saladin Ahmed and Javier Garron. While it can be a bit of a risk to bring an unproven talent to a new title, here it s an absolute genius call. Ahmed clearly loves Miles Morales and, even better, knows how to write stories that speak to his multi-racial experience while also being an incredibly fun superhero book. Unlike Bendis, who often came across like he had a dad s understanding of what kids are like these days, Ahmed s writing feels relatable enough to play in middle America while also providing an authentic window into the life of a 15-year-old New Yorker. If you re looking to jump in to Miles further adventures after Into the Spider-Verse, the first collection of his solo series Straight Out of Brooklyn is an excellent way to do it.Ahmed has a natural talent for comics pacing, quickly establishing Miles status quo. He s a student at a boarding school called Brooklyn Visions, where he shares a dorm with best friend Ganke Lee (who knows his secret identity) and a poet named Judge (who doesn t). His parents both know about his after-school job, though it appears secrets run in the family his father, who Miles thought was a cop, revealed himself to be a S.H.I.E.L.D. agent, while his uncle Aaron was unmasked at the super-villain Iron Spider. He s holding down his grades as best he can, but being Spider-Man doesn t give him much chance to sleep, so his schoolwork is suffering. But he s sweet on fellow student Barbara, so things aren t all bad.Of course, things won t remain quite so manageable for long. Barbara s little cousin, visiting from California, has gone missing! While tracking strange, uniformed people committing crimes, he runs into the Rhino a gamma-irradiated member of Peter Parker s rogues gallery whose attempts to go straight often fall apart. The Rhino is tracking the daughter of an estranged girlfriend who also went missing; after the initial obligatory dust-up, the two form an uneasy alliance. Even though he s just a supporting character for the first arc, Rhino is fully-drawn: it bothers him that people make assumptions about him based on his enormous size, and there s a weary resignation beneath the frienemy banter he shares with Miles. Even Eduardo, the cousin who serves as the macguffin for the story, is allowed to have problems completely unrelated to what s happening. His father was deported, and his mother is drowning in a sea of bureaucracy trying to gain citizenship for her family.The first arc is just three issues long, enough to get us grounded in Miles world and acquaint us with how he handles the frequent conflicts he has to deal with. So much of his character is revealed through how he interacts with other people in his orbit whether it s calming down the hot-tempered Rhino or reflecting on how being around Captain America affects him. Miles is determined, laser-focused, principled, but with the swagger of a Brooklyn teenager. It s the same heroic template that s been fueling Peter Parker s stories for decades, but expressed through someone with a different culture and background. If nothing else, it carries the central idea of Into the Spider-Verse that Spider-Man has become so iconic he can work as an archetype as well as a character and proves it through practice. The next two stories are brisk a stand-alone issue further complicates Miles world by making Barbara certain he s keeping something from her, and a two-part story introducing an intriguing anti-hero ends on a nice cliffhanger that bookends the collection really well. Ahmed knows how to work with momentum here, and it s impressive the way he juggles the personal and professional crises thrown towards Miles. They connect and complicate each other in interesting ways, constantly throwing our hero off-guard.Garron s art is a wonderful complement to Ahmed s art, dense and lively. The composition is a controlled chaos; figures from one panel bleed out into the next, connecting the disparate parts of Miles life in a way that confirms how impossible it is to keep his two lives separate. There s a great blend of expression panels that ground the characters emotionally, mid-range panels that carry conversation and exposition, and huge splash panels that sell super-powered action. But what s most impressive is how Garron manages to give each character small touches that provide a sense of consistency. Rhino, for instance, is always looming in every panel he s in; wherever he walks, he stands in small craters of broken cement or floor. Judge s body language screams bravado and a devil-may-care attitude; Ganke has a geek s body language; almost everyone is depicted in a pose that speaks directly to who they are.Even Miles different spider-powers are shown in novel ways, from the ever-reliable Spidey-sense to his Venom Sting, to the invisibility that comes in handy for scouting and stealth. Both author and artist are in sync, and it shows. The world they ve created is crowded and chaotic, but always interesting much like New York. It s a fruitful pairing that I hope is given enough time to deepen and mature.Miles Morales: Straight Out of Brooklyn is a great first collection for anyone looking to continue this Spider-Man s adventures post-Spider Verse. While it s anyone s guess how long the title will last given the whims of Marvel and its endless appetite for new #1s, this is a story that s worth investing in. Spider-Man has been given a 21st-century update that allows him to keep being your friendly neighborhood superhero, and we even get to visit neighborhoods that feel a bit closer to the ones we live in today. This time last year, I had just begun a new job that felt like a new chapter in my life. I had spent nearly ten years at a company that invested a lot in me and gave me an opportunity I ll always be grateful for, but after a merger had brought about too much change and tanked morale, I thought it would be best to move on. The new job was at a company I was genuinely excited to be a part of enough that I didn t mind a pay cut to get my foot in the door. I was optimistic about my ability to grow, and the future of my career.Now, as I turn 39 years old let s say I m in a very different place. That opportunity didn t work out, but I learned a lot in what turned out to be a tumultuous year. Now I m between jobs, looking for my next chance to apply all I ve learned. I m less optimistic about the future, but not because I no longer think I can change. I don t think the world can.Our leadership is encouraging the worst aspects of our society, and it s a genie that won t be put back in its bottle any time soon. Over the course of decades, we have learned to be scornful and distrustful of expertise, become immunized to factual evidence that defy our beliefs, allowed ourselves to be distracted by the constant shouting to assign blame or argue the minutiae of our arguments while the world burns around us. The world has become not smaller but more interconnected, and the intricate nature of those connections require stability to function well. Our relationships to each other, from the personal to the political, have frayed and grown shallow. Because it s so easy to cut ties with one another, I don t think many of us even see the value in making deeper bonds. We would rather sit alone in ideological purity than come together to exist as a supportive spectrum.Meanwhile, dissatisfaction and a sense of entitlement has lead to increasingly brazen attacks on those of us without the institutional power to protect ourselves people of color and of alternate sexuality, poor people, people with disabilities, people of different faiths. Our government is branding the effort to fight this rising tide of bigotry as terrorism, a literally Orwellian abuse of power that we ve forgotten about because something worse happens the next day. And the next. And the day after that.And on top of that, the effects of climate change are happening way faster than anyone thought but our government has hamstrung the ability to fight it, study it, or even discuss it. The rest of the world is moving on without us, even though it might be too late to mitigate the most disastrous effects. The people who would champion a better, greener world are marginalized by their own party in order to preserve what small power they have on the national stage. The party in power has subverted democracy to the point that they only have to cater to a shrinking minority of the population to remain in power, poisoning the system of checks and balances in the service of their own greed.I m in a society that doesn t look kindly on the middle-aged, no matter how kind or thoughtful. I m struggling to land an opportunity to sacrifice my time and energy for a company that demands loyalty and sacrifice from me, but refuses to offer its loyalty in return. I m stuck in a system that tallies a list of traits it considers undesirable and diminishes my options based on how many I hit. At this point, it s a lot.Given the way I perceive the world as it is, it s strange to me that I feel happier than I ve ever been. Even though I no longer have faith in the world, I have more than enough faith in myself and the people around me. I know who I am, and I know who supports me. I know my worth. I know my flaws. And I know how to work towards being the best version of myself at long last. Best of all, I know all the things I cannot control, and have learned how to let go of my desire to control them. All I can do is the best I can. I have to accept whatever happens beyond that.It s a scary and uncertain world, but I ve never been more certain of my purpose in it. This year, I m resolving to work on deepening my connections with people, becoming a more reliable person, and doing my best to become more openly and unapologetically myself. That s really the best gift I can give myself at this point. Hopefully, it at least makes my small sphere of influence a better place. Personal confrontations among friends are a special kind of hell. No matter how much you brace for the conflict, or how hard you try to keep calm, eventually the anxiety takes hold and restraint goes out the window. It s such an awful experience most of us will do anything to avoid it. Unfortunately, in today s political landscape, avoiding conflict is increasingly impossible.After the 2016 election, I found myself struggling to interact with a lot of online friends I had known for a long time. As Trump s particular brand of bigotry took hold in the US government and we were assaulted with increasingly brazen, cruel policies, a lot of the people I thought were in my corner stepped back and tried to downplay their apathy or even tacit approval. As 2017 rolled on, I found myself in surprise confrontations that still stress me out to remember. I still struggle with being able to speak openly about my values because I fear the inevitable conflicts they will lead to.However, near the end of Trump s first term, as the damage to our social values continues to deepen, I feel it s more important than ever to be vocal about how unacceptable this is. We have to talk about the bigotry spilling unchecked into our streets and on our computers, and stand up against the violence it has inspired in emboldened right-wing extremists, white supremacists, and Christian fundamentalists. But in order to do this we have to be mindful about our engagement, and that means understanding how our anxiety expresses so we can work with the often counterproductive instinctive actions we take.As someone with Generalized Anxiety Disorder, my trigger for the fight-or-flight reflex is much more sensitive think of it like your car s low tire pressure going off if it s anywhere close to the minimum PSI. Mildly stressful situations feel like stomach-churning ordeals; real intense confrontations are simply overwhelming. Everyone who has GAD may have a different experience, but for me even a roll of the eyes or a terse response can be enough to make my heartbeat quicken with worry. The lizard brain takes over and provides you with two options: fight or flee.In social justice discussions, fight can look like arguing with someone online well past the point of productive discourse, or ruminating on an exchange so much it ruins your day, or even lashing out at friends and allies because agreement wasn t swift or complete enough. Flight can look like being silent in the face of unacceptable behavior, or avoiding any news because it s just too upsetting. Sometimes, it can even mean withdrawing from social contact altogether. The behavior varies, but can often be distilled down to one or the other. I ve learned that whatever your instinct, the best way to break the reflex and become more mindful is to do the opposite. Engage instead of withdrawing, or hang back instead of going all in.If, like me, you re conflict-avoidant in the extreme, sometimes that means you have to stop looking for the exits and stand your ground. I know, I know it s stressful just thinking about it. But it really does help to think about different ways you can engage an issue according to the amount of conflict you can handle. There s absolutely no shame in bypassing direct engagement to find a way to fight back that works for you.Indirect engagement can be as simple as thinking about the messages you spread on social media, and whose voice you decide to boost. We live in an age where the most enraging take spreads the fastest and farthest; making the choice to be more considerate with what you say online is a wonderful way to push back against that trend. Are the people or organizations we re sharing and retweeting honest and direct about what s happening? Do they offer ways to channel anger into action? Are we engaging in discussions in an open and constructive manner? Do we try to keep our focus on solutions, understanding, or finding common ground? If we look through our social media feed and find that the things we retweet frequently make us feel angry or despairing, choosing to change the word we spread can be a subtle but effective way of fighting back against our coarsening discourse.Another way to fight is by donating your time, money, or effort to a worthy cause you feel passionately about. I really like this method because it keeps you focused on working towards solutions and helps you learn about what people are doing all around us to build a better world. Your time is the most precious finite resource you have, so spending time with volunteer work is honestly one of the most important things you can do. Some of us don t have the time to spare, so money can work just as well in those cases. Donating to organizations like the ACLU, RAICES Texas, or The Nature Conservancy makes sure that there s enough in the tank for these groups to keep fighting the good fight.Sometimes, though, direct action is what s called for especially if inappropriate language or behavior is directed towards an underprivileged group you re not a part of. It s up to me to make sure other men know it s not OK to be misogynist or transphobic; it sends the message that even people who aren t personally affected by an issue stand in solidarity with those who are. And as much as I hate confrontation, I take that responsibility seriously. I think we all should. That being said, there are a few things we can do to make the confrontation as productive as possible.Remember that you re interacting with a person. This person is making bigoted remarks, and they might even have a history of bigoted behavior, but try to avoid branding this person a bigot (even though they likely are). Empathy matters, even towards people who we feel might not deserve it. Think about how you would want to be confronted if your behavior needed correction? At the very least, respond the way you would want to be responded to in that situation. Concentrate on the action or statement, and be firm in your disapproval of it but don t extend that value judgement to the person. This makes it more likely they ll be put on the defensive, and defensive people harden against criticism. In order to change someone s behavior, they have to be receptive. Finally, choose your limit for the interaction. If you decide that a line has been crossed and things aren t productive anymore, simply restate your disapproval with the action and walk away. You get to decide how to interact with others, and you don t owe them any more of your time or attention than you re willing to give.I m a runner. I avoid confrontation whenever I can because it stresses me out and ruins my ability to engage with people for a long time afterwards. But over the course of these last three years, I ve had to learn how to push past that anxiety to have difficult conversations with others. I wish I could say that it gets easier, but it doesn t; we just get better at handling the anxiety and doing what s right anyway. And even if a particular exchange doesn t result in any real change, the encouragement and support I ve received from others really helps. There s a community of us out there who are appalled at what s happening in the world, and who want to do whatever we can to make things better. Just knowing you re not alone, and that by speaking up you re letting others know you re with them, is often enough to remove the block and push me forward.

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