Friday, April 10, 2009

How I Learned to Be Non-Violent

I know that I am an old hag because this morning as I was leaving for North Carolina to visit my inlaws for the annual crucifixion-resurrection special, a street in my neighborhood was closed off because some New School students had barricaded themselves inside a building as a sign of protest and my first reaction was "how fucking lame". The details of what they were proesting were sketchy, I know that they wanted the school president to resign (the superhandsome Bob Kerrey. Seriously, I hope they're protesting for him to resign so that he can court me. What? I told you already that Husbandrinka doesn't read my blog) and they were also upset that tuition was going up while scholarship money was dwindling. And also they wanted more study space. I'm sure that previous protests resulted in Starbucks being served in their caferia, so no further energy had to be expended on that cause.

It made me wistful for college, for a time when I thought that if I didn't like something, all I had to do was protest. Of course this magical thinking was really helped along by the fact that apartheid in South Africa was abolished in the early 1990s and the Berlin wall came down in 1989, both while I was (a) in a college mode, and (b) really annoyed by both racial and German East-West segregation.

College flash back sponsored by Gordon's Gin

When I was in college, I was a superduper feminist. I didn't shave and was totally hardcore about the ways that my sisters were persecuted by The Man. I went to a single-sex college, so a lot of time was spent in pursuit of this elusive Man, a co-ed from our brother school or a visiting student whose oppression I would rebel against.

It exhausted my friends.
"Can you bring tonic and limes if I get the gin?" Daisy would ask. And I'd sigh heavily because the time that I'd allotted in the afternoon to feeling opressed would now have to be spend drinking gin and tonics and eating Doritos.

I joined with my sisters of color and sexual minorities in solidarity for justice and the donuts served at the many organizational meetings. We referred to ourselvces as wommynnm, to rid the "man/men" from the word "woman". For a short period I even went braless. "Is this a political statement or are you just too lazy to do laundry?" mama insulted me.
I attended a March on Washington to demand abortion rights, which was memorable because my "all this back and forth sounds very tiring" mother reminded me not to forget to bring a hanger, as she'd seen them in local protests and because I broke a four year vegetarian streak by eating a hot dog or three at the March..

But what really stands out from that time period is when I saw a flyer for a nonvilence seminar that was going to be held over the weekend and peer pressured my friends to go. "It'll be fun!" I told them. "And non-violent." I'm not sure why Daisy and Kristin agreed to go with me, if I had to guess, it would be to shut me up, but there we were, at some ungodly hour on Saturday morning, hair still wet from showering and a desire to finally learn the way to resolve our differences nonviolently.

The best thing about the program and what the three of us remember to this day is that we had to pick an adjective that started with the same letter as our first name to call ourselves as a sign of empowerenment. I was Mighty Marinka. Daisy transformed into Delightful Daisy (which sounded like she was trained in the art of pleasure) and Kristin called herself Krispy Kristin, foreshadowing the Krispy Kreme donut invasion of the east coast a decade later.

Our cult names firmly in place, things rapidly went to shit.
"The way it works," our hippie-hairy group leader told us and then turned to face Krispy Kristin, "is that you look at your boyfriend and say, "You are my lover and I respect you, just as I expect that you will respect me. But you are also an opporessive motherfucker." Kristin was nodding with a smile frozen on her face, the same way that she'd smile if our hippie hairy leader were holding a machete and talking about a recent alien abduction. I was starting to have second thoughts about this workshop and thinking of ways to extricate myself from it while still saving face with my friends. Delightfully Drowsy Daisy was asleep in her chair.

"Now we will go around in a circle," our leader told us, releasing Krispy Kristin momentarily from her focus, "and introduce ourselves with our empowerement and tell the group about a situation that we resolved without resorting to violence."
This was not good news for me, I hated speaking in a group of people that I didn't know and with my milquetoast personality, I didn't have many chances for conflict. I couldn't focus on what the people preceeding me in a circle were saying because I was too focused on "remembering" a story of my own. I "remembered" a few Indiana-Jones type scenarios, but discarded them because they seemed sort of outlandish.
"I'm Mightly Marinka," I announced once my non-violent Charlie Manson gave me the go-ahead nod,"I had a problem with my boyfriend once in high school. He wanted to date other girls. No, wait, it was the other way around, I wanted to date other gi--, guys, I wanted to date other guys and he didn't want me to because he was madly in love with me," I avoid the astouded gazes of inKredulous Kristin and Doubting Daisy and continued. "I was afraid that the situation would escalate into violence, but I was able to resolve it, nonviolently."
"How?" Kwestioning Kristin asked. If there's one thing I can't stand are friends who question my methods with imaginary boyfriends.
"Mostly by explaining that violence is not the answer," I elaborated. It's like I had to draw diagrams for these people.

It ended well in the sense that we didn't all engage in mercy killings and survive. It is one of the more ridiculous things that I've done in college. But I'm infinitely grateful for the luxury of being able to do it. So as I was stuck in traffic this morning because of the sit-in and I rolled my eyes at the kids staging it, I also felt a little proud. Proud that they'd take it on, proud that they stood up for whatever injustice it is that they understood to be inflicted on them, proud that they wanted to make a difference. Now if I could harness their energy to scrub my bathrooms.

Blog Business: It's spring cleaning! Recently, Nap Warden redesigned my blog and made it more friendly and happy and peace-loving. She is very talented and `incredibly easy to work with and really knows what she's doing. So, for a well-priced face lift, please visit her and get a makeover already. Everyone's been talking about how drab your blog has been looking. Thanks, NW.

Also, I'm walking in the March for Babies walk in NYC in honor of Maddie Spohr who passed away on April 7th. Some blogging superstars are joining me, so please join our team or just throw some money at us. Click here to do either.

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21 Comments:

Blogger anymommy said...

I'm sure I should have found something deeper to comment about, but Kwestioning Kristen Kwacked me up.

April 10, 2009 at 4:26 PM  
Blogger Unknown said...

Hi- I've been lurking on your site for a while, but decided to delurk to say I would be interested in joining your team for the March of Dimes walk. (I was 3 months premature!). So if you see my name pop up on the team, you'll have some context.

April 10, 2009 at 4:32 PM  
Blogger blognut said...

Oh man! This story makes me want to protest something, but I don't know what that would be, because the world is, like, totally perfect right now and we shouldn't change a thing. Wait! What?

Can we protest EVERYTHING, or is that cause too broad?

April 10, 2009 at 4:32 PM  
Blogger mo.stoneskin said...

Mighty?

Fastforward sponsered by Bombay Saphire. I don't shave much now.

April 10, 2009 at 5:04 PM  
Blogger Unknown said...

Hi- I might have done it all BassAckwards, but I tried to and seem to have been successful at joining your March of Dimes team.

April 10, 2009 at 5:11 PM  
Blogger kimberly said...

if you tell anyone this, I'll deny it. But I grew up in a hippie beach town in CA where protesting was practically a sport. In high school, I was so cool that I formed a group with my friends to promote peace. We even applied to go to Russia (remember when you had to do that?) and had groovy cookies, I mean speakers every month. It was called SPARKS. That gem stood for "Students promoting a really kick society"

Yeah, I'm cool.

April 10, 2009 at 6:07 PM  
Blogger MommyTime said...

I wish I were going to be in the city sooner, so I could walk with you. I'll send my virtual support (aka $$), though -- which is at least something.

April 10, 2009 at 6:45 PM  
Blogger Ann Imig said...

See, you're not a JewWhore.

You're a CommieJewWhore!!

(only can be said by another CommieJewWhore)

Who says our generation is apathetic...

April 10, 2009 at 7:50 PM  
Anonymous peajaye said...

uh, isn't the march of dimes walk sorta like a protest march, but with sponsors and better hair?

and btw, you're still a superduper feminist. it's what makes your blog so awesome. (well, one of the things.)

April 10, 2009 at 8:09 PM  
Blogger jmt said...

I never did understand how NOT shaving was a feminist thing. I personally hate the feeling of hair prickles, so it's a comfort thing for me...weird. Braless, ah. It certainly won't happen anymore after two children who sucked their way to happiness in that nether region.

April 10, 2009 at 8:52 PM  
Blogger María said...

I don't shave. I'm totally a feminist. :P

And uh - I live in North Carolina. Just throwing that out there.

April 10, 2009 at 11:13 PM  
Blogger Jill said...

ooohhh, like the new look. :) obviously i need to stop by more and not just visit via my reader!

April 11, 2009 at 12:56 AM  
Anonymous Andrea's Sweet Life said...

Damn, I KNEW people were whispering about my drab blog.

I learned how to be nonviolent, too, and it was easy: my doctor prescribed me some Xanax.

April 11, 2009 at 1:15 AM  
Blogger Jennifer S said...

Before I die, I want to get arrested once for nonviolent protest. I'm embarrassed to say I never protested in college. Or had a clever, alliterative nickname. So many regrets.

April 11, 2009 at 2:02 AM  
Blogger Imogen Lamport, AICI CIP said...

I never understood the point of going braless - if you've got big boobs like me it just hurts.

April 11, 2009 at 4:17 AM  
Blogger Jeanne Estridge said...

The first day I arrived on campus, someone handed me a petition to sign saying that the Communists deserved a chance to be on the ballot. The second step, they told me, would be to register to vote. Although I was pretty smooth-shaven at that point, I signed it, but was too lazy to register. Which turned out to be a good thing, because the fine print on the petition (which, of course, I didn't read) affirmed that I, myself, was a Communist. I've never tried to get a security clearance, and always wondered if that would prevent it.

April 11, 2009 at 7:31 AM  
Blogger The Dental Maven said...

So, um, how'd the crucifixion go?

April 11, 2009 at 7:47 AM  
Blogger Deb said...

Have fun in NC. Stage a protest at your inlaws.

April 11, 2009 at 8:45 AM  
Blogger bernthis said...

I was never a good protester I guess because I used want everyone to like me, even the people who were doing things I didn't like.

But, now, oh, yeah, I'm so totally different.

April 11, 2009 at 11:50 AM  
Blogger Vodka Mom said...

I am not shaving my legs today in support of the MIghty Marinka.

April 12, 2009 at 7:45 AM  
Blogger annie valentine said...

I used to think non-violence was the answer, then I had kids. And a husband. I now have a tendency to kick people who bother me.

April 12, 2009 at 10:38 AM  

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