2013 Clutch Reading Challenge discussion

This topic is about
Sister Citizen
Sister Citizen
>
The Crooked Room: Intro and Chapter One
date
newest »




What a statement! I work with young ladies between the ages of 18-23 and I see it daily. I use my position to encourage them to be themselves and that their worth is not measured by what others think. I use my life experiences as examples to do such...I think part of the problem is women my age (43) tend to act like we were never or aren't in the crooked room ourselves.

Coming from my experiences, that is something I yearn for at times. I know I can personally say if I had that woman in my life as a guide to the crooked room, then maybe I could have had less slip ups or better ways to cope with my own experience in the crooked room. However society wants every black women to be a Claire Huxtable or a Michelle Obama so our weaknesses, mistakes and alternative perspectives become secondary. That alone creates conflict with our complexities as black women.
Your comment definitely alludes to the chapter on shame, which plays a huge role on why we can't seem to stand up straight in the crooked room.

I also really appreciated the crooked room metaphor, and am still sitting with how I've seen this metaphor in my, and other Black women's lives. I'm also considering what it means to be a Black woman trying to, and/or successfully, standing up straight in the crooked room.
Black women "standing up straight" in the crooked room/society is a burden in itself... It is something else we have to take on in order to claim and maintain our citizenship.





All three types have pros and cons - how can we get our views out there in the mainstream and turn a potential negative into a positive?
Since I'm working on this book about black women and relationships/marriage, these chapters really made clear for me how much both of these ideas are present in discussion about black women and marriage.
Also, I want to frame The Bridge Poem and read it every morning!