How to Slowly Kill Yourself and Others in America Page 3
There is a price to pay for ducking responsibility, for clinging to the worst of us, for harboring a warped innocence. There is an even greater price to pay for ignoring, demeaning, and unfairly burdening those Americans who have disproportionately borne the weight of American irresponsibility for so long. Our grandmothers and great-grandmothers have paid more than their fair share, and our nation owes them and their children, and their children’s children, a lifetime of healthy choices and second chances. That would be responsible.
***
When David Rozier came back to school the day after we were kicked out, he started playing this game where he would fart every time Henry mispronounced “strong” like “skrong,” and “straight” like “skraight.” David had me dying! I put my head down on my desk so I wouldn’t get kicked out of school again and laughed into my forearm until I cried.
At recess, I asked David, “What happened to all that responsibility you were talking about?”
“Oh,” he said and took off running a post pattern in the schoolyard. “Nigga, that was yesterday!”
I threw David a bomb, and as the ball half-spiraled through the air, neither one of us thought about tomorrow or yesterday. We were just happy to be in the moment, happy to be alive.
How to Slowly Kill Yourself and Others in America
I’VE HAD GUNS PULLED ON ME BY FOUR PEOPLE under Central Mississippi skies—once by a white undercover cop, once by a young brother trying to rob me for the leftovers of a weak work-study check, once by my mother, and twice by myself. Not sure how or if I’ve helped many folks say yes to life, but I’ve definitely aided in a few folks dying slowly in America, all without the aid of a gun.
***
I’m seventeen, five years younger than Rekia Boyd will be when she is shot in the head by an off-duty police officer in Chicago in 2012. It’s the summer after I graduated high school and my teammate, Troy, is back in Jackson, Mississippi. Troy, who plays college ball in Florida, asks me if I want to go to McDonald’s on I-55.
As Troy, Cleta, Leighton, and I walk out of McDonald’s, I hold the door for open for a tiny, scruffy-faced white man with a green John Deere hat on.
“Thanks, partner,” he says.
A few minutes later, we’re driving down I-55 when John Deere drives up and lowers his window. I figure that he wants to say something funny since we’d had a cordial moment at McDonald’s. As soon as I roll my window down, the man screams, “Nigger lovers!” and speeds off.
On I-55, we pull up beside John Deere and I’m throwing finger-signs, calling John Deere all kinds of clever “motherfuckers.” The dude slows down and gets behind us. I turn around, hoping he pulls over.
Nope.
John Deere pulls out a police siren and places it on top of his car. Troy is cussing my ass out and frantically trying to drive his mama’s Lincoln away from John Deere. My heart is pounding out of my chest—not out of fear, but because I want a chance to choke the shit out of John Deere. I can’t think of any other way of making him feel what we felt.
Troy drives into his apartment complex and parks his mama’s long Lincoln under some kind of shed. Everyone in the car is slumped down at this point. Around twenty seconds after we park, here comes the red, white, and blue of the siren.
We hear a car door slam, then a loud knock on the back window. John Deere has a gun in one hand and a badge in the other. He’s telling me to get out of the car. My lips still smell like Filet-O-Fish.
“Only you,” he says to me. “You going to jail tonight.” He’s got the gun to my chest.
“Fuck you,” I tell him and suck my teeth. “I ain’t going nowhere.”
I don’t know what’s wrong with me.
Cleta is up front trying to reason with the man through her window when all of a sudden, in a scene straight out of Boyz N the Hood, a black cop approaches the car and accuses us of doing something wrong. Minutes later, a white cop tells us that John Deere has been drinking too much, and he lets us go.
Sixteen months later, I’m eighteen, three years older than Edward Evans will be when he is shot in the head behind an abandoned home in Jackson in 2012.
Shonda and I are walking from Subway back to Millsaps College with two of her white friends. It’s nighttime. We turn off of North State Street and walk halfway past the cemetery when a red Corolla filled with black boys stops in front of us. All of the boys have blue rags covering their noses and mouths. One of the boys, a kid at least two years younger than me with the birdest of bird chests, gets out of the car clutching a shiny silver gun.
He comes toward Shonda and me.
“Me,” I say to him. “Me. Me.” I hold my hands up, encouraging him to do whatever he needs to do. If he shoots me, well, I guess bullets enter and hopefully exit my chest, but if he thinks I’m getting pistol-whupped in front of a cemetery and my girlfriend off of State Street, I’m convinced I’m going to take the gun and beat him into a burnt cinnamon roll.
The boy places his gun on my chest and keeps looking back and forth to the car.
I feel a strange calm, an uncanny resolve. I don’t know what’s wrong with me. He’s patting me down for money that I don’t have, since we hadn’t gotten our work-study checks yet and I had just spent my last little money on two turkey subs and two of those large chocolate chip cookies.
The young brother keeps looking back to the car, unsure what he’s supposed to do. Shonda and her friends are screaming when he takes the gun off my chest and trots goofily back to the car.
I don’t know what’s wrong with him, but a few months later, I have a gun.
A partner of mine hooks me up with a partner of his who lets me hold something. I get the gun not just to defend myself from goofy brothers in red Corollas trying to rob folks for work-study money. I guess I’m working on becoming a black writer in Mississippi and some folks around Millsaps College don’t like the essays I’m writing in the school newspaper.
A few weeks earlier, George Harmon, the president of Millsaps, shuts down the campus paper in response to a satirical essay I wrote on communal masturbation and sends a letter to more than 12,000 overwhelmingly white Millsaps students, friends, and alumnae. The letter states that the “key essay in question was written by Kiese Laymon, a controversial writer who consistently editorializes on race issues.”
After the president’s letter goes out, my life kinda hurts.
I receive a sweet letter in the mail with the burnt-up ashes of my essays. The letter says that if I don’t stop writing and give myself “over to right,” my life will end up like the ashes of my writing.
The tires of my mama’s car are slashed when it was left on campus. I’m given a single room after the dean of students thinks it’s too dangerous for me to have a roommate. Finally, Greg Miller, an English professor, writes a supportive essay about how and why a student in his Liberal Studies class says, “Kiese should be killed for what he’s writing.” I feel a lot when I read those words, but mainly I wonder what’s wrong with me.
It’s Bid Day at Millsaps.
Shonda and I are headed to our jobs at Ton-o-Fun, a fake-ass Chuck E. Cheese behind Northpark Mall. We’re wearing royal blue shirts with a strange smiling animal and “Ton-o-Fun” on the left titty. The shirts of the other boy workers at Ton-o-Fun fit them better than mine fit me. My shirt is tight in the wrong places and slightly less royal blue. I like to add a taste of bleach so I don’t stank.
As we walk out to the parking lot of my dorm, the Kappa Alpha and Kappa Sigma fraternities are in front of the dorm receiving their new members. They’ve been up drinking all night. Some of them have on black face and others have on Afro wigs and Confederate capes.
We get close to Shonda’s Saturn and one of the men says, “Kiese, write about this!” Then another voice calls me a “nigger” and Shonda a “nigger bitch.” I think and feel a lot but mostly I feel that I can’t do anything to make the boys feel like they’ve made us feel right there, so I go back to my dorm room to get something.
On the way there, Shonda picks up a glass bottle out of the trash. I tell her to wait outside the room. I open the bottom drawer and look at the hoodies balled up on top of my gun. I pick up my gun and think about my grandma. I think not only about what she’d feel if I went back out there with a gun. I think about how if Grandma walked out of that room with a gun in hand, she’d use it. No question.
I am her grandson.
I throw the gun back on top of the clothes, close the drawer, go in my closet, and pick up a wooden T-ball bat.
Some of the KAs and Sigs keep calling us names as we approach them. I step, throw down the bat, and tell them I don’t need a bat to fuck them up. I don’t know what’s wrong with me. My fists are balled up and the only thing I want in the world is to swing back over and over again. Shonda feels the same, I think. She’s right in the mix, yelling, crying, fighting as best she can. After security and a dean break up the mess, the frats go back to receiving their new pledges and Shonda and I go to work at Ton-o-Fun in our dirty blue shirts. We wonder if this is just kids being kids.
I stank.
On our first break at work, we decide that we should call a local news station so the rest of Jackson can see what’s happening at Millsaps on a Saturday morning. We meet the camera crew at school. Some of boys go after the reporter and cameraman. The camera gets a few students in Afros, black face, and Confederate capes. They also get footage of “another altercation.”
A few weeks pass and George Harmon, the president of the college, doesn’t like that this footage of his college is now on television and in newspapers all across the country. The college decides that two individual fraternity members, Shonda, and I will be put on disciplinary probation for using “racially insensitive language” and that the two fraternities involved get their party privileges taken away for a semester. If there was racially insensitive language Shonda and I could have used to make those boys feel like we felt, we would have never stepped to them in the first place. Millsaps is trying to prove to the nation that it is a post-race(ist) institution and to its alums that all the Bid Day stuff is the work of an “adroit entrepreneur of racial conflict,” as I am called in a letter to the editor in the Clarion Ledger.
A few months later, Mama and I sit in President George Harmon’s office. The table is an oblong mix of mahogany and ice water. All the men at the table are smiling, flipping through papers, and twirling pens in their hands except for me. I am still nineteen, four years older than Hadiya Pendleton will be when she is murdered in Chicago.
President Harmon and his lawyers don’t look me in the eye. They zero in on the eyes of Mama, as Harmon tells her that I am being suspended from Millsaps for at least a year for taking and returning The Red Badge of Courage from the library without formally checking it out.
He ain’t lying.
I took the book out of the library for Shonda’s brother without checking it out and I returned it the next day. I looked right at the camera when I did it, too. I did all of this knowing I was on parole, but not believing any college in America, even one in Mississippi, would kick a student out for a year for taking and returning a library book without properly checking it out.
I should have believed.
George Harmon tells me, while looking at my mother, that I will be allowed to come back to Millsaps College in a year only after having attended therapy sessions for racial insensitivity. We are told he has given my writing to a local psychologist and the shrink believes I need help. Even if I am admitted back as a student, I will remain formally on parole for the rest of my undergrad career, which means that I will be expelled from Millsaps College unless I’m perfect.
Nineteen-year-old black boys cannot be perfect in America. Neither can sixty-year-old white boys named George.
Before riding home with Mama, I go to my room, put the gun in my backpack, and get in her car.
On the way home, Mama stops by the zoo to talk about what just happened in George Harmon’s office. She’s crying and asking me over and over again why I took and returned the gotdamn book knowing they were watching me. Like a loving black mother of her only black boy, Mama starts blaming Shonda for asking me to check the book out in the first place. I don’t know what to say other than that I knew it wasn’t Shonda’s fault and that I left my ID behind and I didn’t want to swing back to get it, so I keep walking and say nothing. She says that Grandma is going to be so disappointed in me.
“Heartbroken” is the word she uses.
There.
I feel this toxic miasma unlike anything I’ve ever felt, not just in my body, but in my blood. I remember the wobbly way my grandma twitches her eyes at my Uncle Jimmy and I imagine being at the end of that twitch for the rest of my life. For the first time in almost two years, I hide my face, grit my crooked teeth, and sob.
I don’t stop for weeks.
The NAACP and lawyers get involved in filing a lawsuit against Millsaps on my behalf. Whenever the NAACP folks talk to me or to the newspaper, they talk about how ironic it is that a black boy trying to read a book gets kicked out of college. I appreciate their work, but I don’t think the irony lies where they think it does. If I’d never read a book in my life, I shouldn’t have been punished that way for taking and bringing back a library book—not when kids are smoking that good stuff, drinking themselves unconscious, and doing some of everything imaginable to nonconsenting bodies.
That’s what I tell all the newspapers and television reporters who ask. To my friends, I say that after stealing all those Lucky Charms, Funyons, loaves of light bread, and over a hundred cold dranks out of the cafeteria in two years, how in the fuck do I get suspended for taking and returning the gotdamn Red Badge of Courage?
The day I’m awarded the Benjamin Brown Award, named after a twenty-one-year-old truck driver shot in the back by police officers during a student protest near Jackson State in 1967, I take the bullets out of my gun, throw it in the Ross Barnett Reservoir, and avoid my grandma for a long, long time.
I enroll at Jackson State University, where my mother teaches political science, in the spring semester. Even though I’m not really living at home, Mama and I fight every day over my job at Cutco and her staying with her boyfriend and her not letting me use the car to get to my second job at an HIV hospice since my license is suspended.
Really, we’re fighting because she raised me to never ever forget I was born on parole, which means no black hoodies in wrong neighborhoods, no jogging at night, hands in plain sight at all times in public, no intimate relationships with white women, never driving over the speed limit or doing those rolling stops at stop signs, always speaking the King’s English in the presence of white folks, never being outperformed in school or in public by white students, and, most importantly, always remembering that no matter what, the worst of white folks will do anything to get you.
Mama’s antidote to being born a black boy on parole in Central Mississippi is not for us to seek freedom, but to insist on excellence at all times. Mama takes it personal when she realizes that I realize she is wrong. There ain’t no antidote to life, I tell her. How free can you be if you really accept that white folks are the traffic cops of your life? Mama tells me that she is not talking about freedom. She says that she is talking about survival.
One blue night Mama tells me that I need to type the rest of my application to Oberlin College after I’ve already handwritten the personal essay. I tell her that it doesn’t matter whether I type it or not since Millsaps is sending a dean’s report attached to my transcript. I say some other truthful things I should never say to my mother. Mama goes into her room, lifts up her pillow, and comes out with her gun.
It’s raggedy, small, heavy, and black, like an old dead crow. I’d held it a few times before with Mama hiding behind me and a friend of hers around the corner.
Mama points the gun at me and tells me to get the fuck out of her house. I look right at the muzzle pointed at my face and smile the same way I did at the libr
ary camera at Millsaps. I don’t know what’s wrong with me.
“You gonna pull a gun on me over some college application?” I ask her.
“You don’t listen until it’s too late,” she tells me. “Get out of my house and don’t ever come back.”
I leave the house chuckling, shaking my head, cussing under my breath. I go sit in a shallow ditch. Outside, I wander in the topsy-turvy understanding that Mama’s life does not revolve around me and that I’m not doing anything to make her life more joyful, spacious, or happy. I’m an ungrateful burden, an obese weight on her already terrifying life. I sit there in the ditch, knowing that other things are happening in my mother’s life, but also knowing that Mama never imagined needing to pull a gun on the child she carried on her back as a sophomore at Jackson State. I’m playing with pine needles, wishing I had headphones—but mostly I’m regretting throwing my gun into the reservoir.
When Mama leaves for work in the morning, I break back into her house, go under her pillow, and get her gun. Mama and I haven’t paid the phone or the light bill so it’s dark, hot, and lonely in that house, even in the morning. I lie in a bathtub of cold water, still sweating and singing love songs to myself.
I put the gun to my head and cock it.
I think of my grandma and remember that old feeling of being so in love that nothing matters except seeing and being seen by her. I drop the gun to my chest. I’m so sad and I can’t really see a way out of what I’m feeling but I’m leaning on memory for help. Faster. Slower. I think I want to hurt myself more than I’m already hurting. I’m not the smartest boy in the world by a long shot, but even in my funk I know that easy remedies like eating your way out of sad, or fucking your way out of sad, or lying your way out of sad, or slanging your way out of sad, or robbing your way out of sad, or gambling your way out of sad, or shooting your way out of sad, are just slower, more acceptable ways for desperate folks, and especially paroled black boys in our country, to kill ourselves and others close to us in America.