Temporary Orders

Time has felt so confusing lately. Flashbacks, flashes forward, agonizing seconds stretching into days on end, all buzzing around my head. I barely remember the stillness.

My therapist says that what is happening isn't normal. Threats are not normal. Threats are not okay. Even when I'm the one receiving them, apparently. I'm still struggling to wrap my head around that part. These waves didn't come to punish me, but here I am again, caught in the undertow. It all feels the same. My body can't exactly tell the difference.

My therapist says that no one should feel safe while drowning at sea, but I've been practicing holding my breath. I have always been an athlete. My body aches, it always does, but I think I'll be okay. After all, it's sink or swim.

Sexual Assault Awareness and Prevention Month

I was in a coffee shop that I used to frequent the other day, and I took a moment to thumb through a journal that's always tucked in with the magazines. One of those perfectly worn, coffee-stained, "we left an empty notebook to see what would happen," sort of things. The kind with character. That particular journal has been sitting on the shelf since at least 2018. I didn't think it would be the same one when I went back, but it was. I have a single entry in it from April 29, 2019. In shaky, tiny text, I had written, "My body has not been my own in years." I still feel that way and have felt that way for a long time now.

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For this year’s Sexual Assault Awareness and Prevention Month, I am revisiting a recent favorite, Shout, by Laurie Halse Anderson, and Smear, a new, female-led collection of poems edited by Greta Bellamacina. Both do a beautiful job breaking down what it means to live in a female-presenting body. In reading these works, and with a trauma anniversary fast approaching, I have been thinking quite a bit about what it means to be a strong woman in society, especially within the context of rape culture. How do we as a generation learn to speak out when our mothers and our mothers’ mothers knew only how to swallow their tongues? How can we become a different type of strong? Not a silent strong, but a loud, uproarious, scream-at-the-top-of-your-lungs sort of strong. 

I am grateful for all the survivors who have shared their stories and paved the way for me. Despite how horrifically common sexual harassment, abuse, and assault is, especially amongst women, it is an isolating experience. And so, I cannot stress enough how important it is to believe the victims or survivors or whatever it is we are. There is power in speaking out, and there is power in validation. We deserve to feel powerful in our own bodies because autonomy is a human right.

For more information on sexual violence and resources for survivors, visit https://www.rainn.org/.

Father’s Day

I was raised in an addict’s home. We never spoke about it much. Some nights, I could hear them, their hushed voices drifting down the hall. Poker. Raceways. Money, but never liquor. When you learn about addiction in middle school health, they never talk about what it’s like to live with a gambler.

I could see it in his eyes; they carried a heaviness whenever the gambling was bad. As far as I can remember, his eyes were dark more often than not. I was thirteen the first time he was arrested. I remember sprinting down the sidewalk toward my house and seeing police as I turned the corner. My pace slowed and one of the officers ushered me inside. They had taken my father into the station so they could ask him some questions. Everything would be fine, I just needed to trust them. It wasn’t until last year that I found out how much he had stolen. He had gambled away most of our family’s savings and needed money to keep us going. When the police finally caught him, he had roughly $5,000 of stolen goods from Kmart thrown into the bed of his pick-up truck. 

Three years later, in a fit of mania, he smashed his laptop with a sledgehammer and set it out on the curb in an attempt to halt his online gambling. Somewhere in it all, there were sparks, and the fire they produced nearly engulfed my car in flames. Another six years have passed since, and he is still a gambler.

In high school, I made a promise to myself that I’d never become an addict. I’d never let something wash away so much of me that I lost myself in the undertow. Now, though, I can't help but wonder if it's even possible. Addiction is so painfully human. My father and I rarely speak these days even though we still live in the same home. He is often more mania or depression than he is himself. I have only caught glimpses of him, that strange man beneath the churning seas, but I know he is there. He is drowning in himself. As much as he has hurt me, I know he is a victim, too.

How to Be a Better Ally

On Sunday, May 31, I attended a protest at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, NY. I learned a great deal about history and social inequality and, for that, I am grateful.

Here are some takeaways:

1) Your single positive experience with the police does not negate the negative, and often fatal, experiences of many.

2) As an Asian, I am privileged. As a cisgender woman, I am privileged. Instead of shaming myself for benefiting from a racist, unjust system, I need to take that privilege and use it. Good allies aren’t here to talk for the Black community. They’re here to create space for the Black community to speak on their own.

Photo Courtesy of Michelle Castillo

Photo Courtesy of Michelle Castillo

3) I may understand what it’s like to live in a prolonged state of hyper-vigilance, but I do not wear a target on my skin. I do not carry it with me the way that black people do. I will never understand what it is like to be black, but I can learn to empathize and work to be better.

4) “It’s not our fight” is bullshit. It’s everyone’s fight. Institutionalized racism is so deeply woven into the foundations of this country that we need everyone to actively fight for change. If you settle for “good enough,” the violence will continue. When we look back on history years from now, know that those who were silent did just as much damage as those who fired weapons.

I feel strongly that these issues are coming to a head because the world is finally ready to change. It is important that we don’t find ourself swept up in the momentum only to crash again three months from now. We are directly responsible for whatever comes next.