My Newest Bias

 

I was listening to a segment on public radio as I was driving to get dinner yesterday and heard an interesting bit on “white privilege“.   A white rapper sung and wrote about supporting a black protest. In his solidarity with non-whites, he questions his own credibility as a white supporter with his white privilege.  (Read more)

I’ve been familiar with the term “white privilege” since the 1980’s.  The term has actually been around since about 1935, but race or privilege wasn’t discussed in my family growing up.  The only societal label that stuck to me was “poor white trash“…. And it was used to describe my family.

“Poor white trash” is a euphemism for lower social status white people usually in the rural south.  Other equally derided terms may be “redneck”, “Okie”, “hillbilly”, or “cracker”.  White trash, as a slur, has been around since about 1835.  Harriet Beecher Stowe even included a chapter about white trash in A Key to Uncle Toms Cabin.

I don’t pretend to know what it’s like to be black or brown in America.  I can only be grateful that I didn’t turn out to be what my dads expected from me …. “You’ll wind up dead or in prison” He frequently predicted prison before I was 30.

My dad was a violent man.  He was a World War II veteran and had scars on his arms from shrapnel wounds.  He never spoke of his experience. I found out he was an Army infantryman in Europe for 4 years, during the thick of war.

He’d grown up in the Appalachian foothills of North Carolina where he had a hardscrabble life.  His mother was a “working girl” and his dad was a “john”.  She lived in the city and tried to raise him for a while.  At about age 8 my dad was sent back to the hills where he was used as labor for familial friends.   There was no schooling for hillbillies in that area then. Completing the third grade was a triumph compared to some of his contemporaries.

He learned to fend for himself. He fought off sexual attacks, sometimes winning and sometimes losing.  He fought for food. He fought for a place to sleep.  His world was truly survival of the fittest. Some of the things he never outgrew…. As a kid, I remember him placing his wallet in his pillowcase while he slept.  Old habits die hard, I guess.

He suffered in that hellhole from 1927 until about 1937.  The Great Depression was in full swing.  He stole his uncle’s truck and left when he was 17.  Times were tough for everybody…. Particularly an uneducated, unsophisticated teenager with no skills and no prospects.

He lied about his age and joined the National Guard in 1938 to avoid being drafted into the war.  In 1939 his unit was activated and he served on active duty until 1946.  He made Corporal and Sergeant three times.  Of course he got busted three times.

After the war he worked several laborer jobs.  In the mid 1950’s he became a commercial baker.  He moved to Winston-Salem, North Carolina and tried to re-connect with his mother.  She’d settled into her life and was working at the RJ Reynolds Tobacco Company.  She was acquainted with my mother’s dad who worked at the same place.

My mom was just returning from Texas (with a two year old child) and no husband.  She was 19.  Her dad told her she needed to get some stability and knew a guy who she may be interested in.  They married when she was 21 and he was 40.   And I was the progeny of that union.

Life was not idyllic.  My dad wasn’t the stability he was purported to be.  He was violent, moody, and changed jobs often.  Usually his job changes came because of physical confrontations with management.  He worked as a laborer in textile manufacturing, a box factory, a jelly production plant, a fiberglass manufacturer, and a janitor in food service.

He was not a man to be trifled with.  He meant exactly what he said.  If he said “Stop it” he meant “Stop it”.  He didn’t say it twice.  He didn’t give idle threats.  Whatever he demanded, he could back up.  I saw it frequently.

When he told me “I’ll put you in the ground and make another one that looks just like you” I believed he meant it.  I saw him shoot our family dog, who loved my dad more than anybody else.  Dad showed zero remorse…. Just “boom, boom” of the shotgun and “yelp”.  Lucky was dead.

From about age 11 until I was 15 I took a beating from him about every other week.  I don’t mean a spanking or a paddling.  I mean a beating.  Fists, belts, sticks… whatever could inflict damage.

When he said I was “white trash” I believed it.  The “poor” was never in question.  I got my first job at age 12 to pitch in (and have been employed since).  I was earning huge at 65 cents an hour.  There weren’t many extras in our household.  I never remember our family never ate at a restaurant together until I was in high school.  My sister tells me we did.

There is a moral toll that comes with being labeled as a small child.  That early self-image is hard to shake.  I don’t know where my desire to prove him wrong came from. But I was determined to show my dad that I was more than “poor white trash”.

I was 18 when he dropped me off at college (I earned a full-ride scholarship for academics). It was the first time he ever said “I love you” to me. In fact, that’s the only time I ever remember him telling me that.

Eight years later I flew him out to Texas to see me commissioned as an Air Force Lieutenant.  He never told me he was proud of me.  I found out later he told anybody who would listen about his “military officer son”.

All this brings me here:

This week, in a leadership class (developed and delivered by my department), we had a discussion about bias.  I know I have them, but I didn’t realize this one until I heard the NPR report.

My newest bias is a distaste for you if you assume you know me because of my skin color.  I can’t reject “white privilege” because I know as a society it exists. But when I heard the radio commentary about “white privilege” I cringed.

While I may have enjoyed “white privilege”, I certainly have never felt it.  If anything, I still work against feeling like “poor white trash”.

Of course, your mileage may vary.

Dr Jay

No Quick Fixes

KidTVNO

I knew American society was in trouble13 years ago when Dan Rather had an “in-depth” report on drugs in schools that lasted about 2 minutes.  I can’t write a synopsis to this article in 2 minutes, yet here is a major news icon probing an epic issue with a TV presence about the length of a couple of car commercials and calling it “in-depth”.  Yeah, right.

I think our fascination with believing complex problems can be solved or explained quickly goes back decades.

Our problem began in the 1950’s with the proliferation of television.  GI’s came back from World War II and began living the American dream.  They created suburbs, tract housing, the baby-boom, and bought TVs.  Boomers (as we are called) were born from 1946 -1964.  Being children of “the greatest generation” was lost on us for most of our lives.  We knew things our parents couldn’t have imagined (we thought).  We grew up as TV watchers and TV taught us everything we needed to know (we thought).

TV was more influential that society imagined. In the 1950’s most television programming was a spin-off of vaudeville.  Vaudeville was the primary entertainment media before radios and moving pictures.

The 1950’s TV reflected vaudeville values.  TV shows were a way to generate revenue from commercials through wholesome entertainment. Based on success of some shows (I Love Lucy, The Honeymooners)  TV writers created one hour format dramas and half hour format comedies.  The situation comedy was born.  Television was changed forever.

Sitcoms are designed to fit into a half hour time slot with 22 minutes of programming and 8 minutes of commercials.  The plots are usually thin with familiar characters in a familiar setting.  A show usually starts with a misunderstanding or problem (often cloaked in humorous or sarcastic dialogue), a comic interpretation of the problem, and the resolution of the misunderstanding or problem.  All within 30 minutes.

TV drama series weren’t different.  Bonanza, Little House on the Prairie, Kojak, Star Trek, Baretta, Streets of San Francisco… etc… All had a similar formula: problem,  plot complication, conflict, and resolution.

The tropes, wardrobes, lingo, and attitudes may have been different, but what didn’t change is the resolution of the problem in 30 – 60 minutes.  This subtle suggestion that complex human problems can be solved in 60 minutes crept into the subconscious mindset of most baby-boomers who were subjected to thousands and thousands of hours of this misinformation.

Resolving complex human issues in 30-60 minutes is an illusion.   So is television, but a child absorbing this information does not know what is real and what is illusory.  There’s the problem.  As we know intellectually, are very few quick-fixes for people problems.  We now have a generation of parents/grandparents/teachers/leaders who don’t recognize this. They want results NOW!  They want an “in-depth” analysis in 2 minutes.  They want a “quick fix”. And most of us have no idea where the internal sense of “I want it now” comes from.

As a generation we created faster everything: cars, bikes, clothing (wash & wear), Velcro, home appliances, microwaves.  We built speedier technology:  transistors over tubes,  calculators vs slide rules, the internet, facsimile machines,  mobile phones, computers, going to the moon, and more.  What we can’t do is solve complex societal issues or interpersonal problems through short cuts and technology.  Why?  Because you can’t fool mother nature.

Example: There is no short-cut to parenting.  Kids still go through developmental stages as they have for centuries. Technology can’t replace parental responsibility or human development.  TV isn’t a baby-sitter.

Example:  There is no short-cut to a good marriage.  Partners have to work together through issues.  Hurt feelings are not always cured in 30 minutes or less.  Technology can’t fix a failing marriage.

Example:  Farmers know you can’t fool mother nature.  If a farmer fails to prepare and plant the field there are no “hacks” to make crops grow.  There is a growing season and nature takes the time it takes.  If you harvest too soon the results are not good.  If you delay harvest the results are not good.  A farmer has to work at the speed of nature.  Period.

In contrast with nature, society moves faster as media speed increases.  Organic solutions do not get faster.  We can’t fix people problems in 30 minutes or less.  We’ve got to think like the  farmer… We have to work at the speed of nature.

There is no 2 minute “in depth” analysis.  There are highlights, talking points, main ideas… yes… But solutions go much deeper.  We need to forget about the quick fix when it comes to people problems.  In my job this is not a popular stance.  As a system we have to work on lasting solutions.

I’ve got some ideas to help move us through this problem…. What are yours?

  • Stop settling for the quick fix
  • Observe and understand nature
  • Become more mindful of what’s happening NOW
  • Think like a visionary… think long term… act that way
  • Stop, listen, learn, teach
  • Be patient with change
  • Remember humans are not technology

Of course, your mileage may vary.

Dr Jay

The Hardest Thing I Do

LostChild

If it comes up in conversation I usually say that my job isn’t hard. I explain I’m not paid for what I do… I’m paid for what I can do…  I’m a police officer working as a street cop in a medium sized city.

Whatever you think of police (and all the goofy negative press we’ve gotten recently) isn’t really any of my business.  My business is the “people” business.

Roughly 80% of what I do is engaging with and talking to people…. I help them find solutions for situations and crises that they don’t otherwise have solutions for.

The other 20% of what I do is:

  1. documenting what I did or did not do and
  2. training for what I do or do not do.

Like I said, it’s relatively an easy job.

I’ll admit, policing does have challenges:

  • Dealing with people on the worst day of their lives
  • Not having a “fix” when the public thinks I should have one
  • Being constantly targeted by real bad guys or people that would harm me because of my uniform
  • Being under a microscope 100% of the time
  • Either being run down by boredom or freaked out by extreme stress
  • Working shift work on a 24/7 clock (holidays, birthdays, anniversaries etc)
  • Being unable to be in all places at all times
  • Facing all the weather elements
  • Other drivers and traffic
  • Seeing things that can’t be ‘unseen’
  • Dealing with the seedy under-belly of society
  • And a 1,000 other challenges

But these are run-of-the-mill challenges.  The hardest thing I do is deal with kids.

Yesterday we responded to a fight in progress.  The caller reported two men fighting in the grass.  We found a father wrestling his 11 year old son to prevent the son from running away.  The boy was angry, sullen and almost non-communicative.  I thought he was mentally delayed or autistic.  He was not.  He’s just angry…. At 11 years old.  Dad, a non-English speaker, wanted the boy to go to a juvenile facility because of his aggression.  True, the boy was aggressive– he tried to kick and strike a police officer– but there is not a police solution for an 11 year old.

I could only wonder what issues created this aggression in the child.   As a father and an old guy, my heart was wrenching with his pain.  But there is no solution.  It was hard, but we finally got the conflict resolved for the moment….  Father and son climbed into the family van (where the rest of the family had been waiting for 90 minutes) and left back to a neighboring city where they reside.  It was hard to witness.

I got a call about a 13 year old who was ready to hang himself.  This was not the first suicide attempt…. He’d tried before at 11 years old…. but was unsuccessful.  There were marks on his young neck from the attempt 2 years ago.  Mom and step-dad were yelling when I arrived.  Yelling at each other and passive-aggressively including sniping remarks about the boy.   They were concerned about how much it was going to cost them because “he’s f***ing up again”.  I wanted to take them to jail…. but I couldn’t.  I drove the 13 year old to the hospital to get some help….. I checked back a couple of weeks later and the family moved out of town.  It was hard to not be able to follow through and help more.

My partner and I walked through the dark woods to a tree house about 200 yards from the home.  Up in the darkness was a 15 year old boy.  The tree house sat beside the creek and there was a rope swing across the creek.  The boy fashioned a noose out of the rope swing and had it around his neck.  He was gathering the courage to jump and end it all.  We were able to talk him out of the tree house to safety and get him help.  The hardest part was knowing how close we came to finding a dead 15 year old swinging in the darkness.  All because of parents selfish and ignorant rejection of his sexual identity and confusion.

A neighbor called in at 5:45am one morning…. Two kids (ages 5 and 3) were going from door to door knocking because they were afraid.  A rat ran through their apartment and there were no parents home.  I found the kids were alone since about 9:00pm the night before. Apparently this wasn’t an uncommon occurrence.  Dad was off in another city on a construction job and mom had a new boyfriend.  Mom decided to leave a 3 year old girl and a 5 year old boy alone because she needed to spend time cheating on her husband with a new, more exciting man.  It took 10 hours to get mom to return the phone calls.  Child service workers, police detectives, even her husband tried to get her to call but she would not.  Yes, she was arrested, but it’s still hard to know these beautiful sweet kids probably don’t have a chance with a mom like this.

The 11 month old baby was alone screaming in the child seat in the back of the car.  As much as it disturbed me, I was happy to hear the child scream.  The child had wriggled around in the seat and she was close to getting her neck caught in the webbing of the car seat and seat belt.  Once caught in the webbing the child would have strangled. Then there would have been no screaming.  As officers broke into the car to rescue the baby I went into Macy’s to find a parent.   She was an apparently cosmopolitan mother who was “just making a return” on an item.  She was in the store almost 40 minutes (according to the security video I found) when she came shrieking out the door.   She saw all the police lights and activity around her car she was mortified… Not that she’d almost lost a child…But that we would take her baby out of the car….Apparently police were ‘interfering’ in her life.

A next-door  neighbor called because the kids across the hall weren’t in school.  I found 3 kids there.  They’d been alone 2 days.  They were 5, 8, and 11 years old.  The house was wretched, stinky, and unsafe.  There was fetid meat rotting on the counter top.  Flies, gnats, and maggots were buzzing and crawling in the over-flowing garbage can. Bags of rancid garbage sat beside the full canister. The kids hadn’t eaten in 2 days.  They had munched on dry cereal and tortilla chips. But the cereal and chips were all gone now.

I found fresh eggs and cheese in the fridge. I scrubbed a fry pan from the filthy sink.  And while my partner tried to find mom and I waited on child services to arrive, I cooked.  In my uniform, on a crud encrusted stove, in a nasty apartment I was a hero to 3 kids.  They were amazed that a man (much less a cop) could and would cook for them.  The kids ate a dozen cooked eggs with cheese.  With some coaching, the kids cleaned the apartment and took out the trash.  When mom was finally contacted she asked “What’s the problem?”  The hardest part was …. well you get the picture.

And the list goes on:   the 3 year old lost on a busy street…. the autistic girl wandering away from the park… the boy who hits his mother and aunt and is then beaten severely by dad….the 12 year old ‘fire bug’ who stole his grandpa’s lighter… or the girl smacked in the face with a wooden spoon (because she cried)…. or dozens of other stories… And knowing what I do makes only a little difference…..That is the hardest thing I do….

Of course, your mileage may vary.

Dr Jay