“Two or
three things I know for sure, and one is that I would rather go naked than wear
the coat the world has made for me.” Dorothy Allison, Two or Three Things I
know For Sure.
I remember
the first time someone called me trash. The first time I really realized, oh
hey, yeah, I guess this is white trash. I was in fifth grade; I was working on
my fifth school in two years. I was at New Market, which is comical because the
year before I lived in Indy. I went to three schools that year on quite literal
opposite end of the class spectrum. The first was on the side of town that a
kid could get shot standing at the bus stop, and actually did that school year,
where I was one of three white kids in my class of 300+. The other end being Garden City, a nice public school where people
were genuinely proud to have their children attend. Of course the first time didn’t
happen at a place like that, too obvious, no, instead, at my longest elementary
school, good Ol’ New Market. It was during gym, this pushy boy tried to tell me
what to do, naturally being the stubborn ass I have always been I responded
with “make me!” I clearly, have always been clever. The boy’s response still
catches me off guard even today when I replay it in my mind. “I don’t make
trash, I burn it.” I had never been called trash before. He and his friends
pointed and laughed at me, citing my perpetually disheveled look, unkempt hair,
and the fact that I lived in a trailer to substantiate his point. He then said
I wasn’t just trash, but his momma told him that me and my family were white
trash. And he was kinda right. I did look rough, and I did live in a trailer, I
got free lunches, wore mostly hand-me-downs never had new gym shoes, but I never
thought anything of it. Before that moment it was nothing I had ever really
been ashamed of before. To be quite honest the trailer was quite nicer than other
places the family had stayed: living out of a rent by the week hotel, a women’s
shelter a home where we lived in constant fear of making a singular mistake. In
comparison our trailer was basically the Ritz Carlton, and I had never really
been happier. I had woods to play in, a horse to run barrels with, and the best
climbing tree in Montgomery County (footnote my childhood diary). But
everything changed that day. After that incident I remember suddenly being
nervous to invite friends over, to tell anyone where I lived or who I lived
with. I didn’t want to be white trash, I mean redneck, sure fine, but white
trash, that one cut deep, but I didn’t know how to change it. My family simply
didn’t have money. We never really had, it was just a fact.
Flash
forward fifteen years, past graduating high school, something I was told as kid
I wasn’t smart enough to do, being accepted to college, graduating, being
accepted to the Peace Corps. Almost eight months into service listening to a
conversation between other volunteers. One says to the other: “Yeah my dad didn’t
come from much, he sent art of his childhood living in a trailer, he was total white
trash.” The connection between the words “white trash” and “trailer” cause me
to wince. I am 25 years old, and it still makes me flinch. Knowing that no
matter who I become, what I make of myself, stupid, bullshit, classist comments
like that will always undermine any success I attain.
In my group
of PCVs I am one of the only kids who grew up in a low class background. Since Peace
Corps requires Volunteers to have at minimum a BA (though a good number also
have their masters), extensive medical testing, and the financial ability to
just up and leave for several years it tends to attract a certain demographic. Generally speaking, upper-middle to upper
class white kids. There are obvious exceptions to this, however the number of
people of color in service is quite low, and the number of people from lower
class backgrounds is below even that. Since there is this almost unspoken
understanding of homogenous socio-economic status people tend to get sloppy,
talking about poorer people as “them” and whenever anyone’s childhood differs
from the norm people take notice, generally with comments like “oh, I am so
sorry to hear that” or “well, good for you for getting here”. Both comments,
obviously well intended, come off as condescending bullshit.
As a result
I have just stopped talking about my childhood. I have been the homeschooled Jesus
freak kid too much in my life; I certainly don’t need that to follow me here.
This however, has resulted in me building these protective walls around where I
come from and who I was, and only allowing for this tiny sliver of me, who I am
at this exact moment. That gets lonely as shit though. And even I, an expert at
the art of keeping people out, get tired of those Jerichoan barriers. So, I’m
not going to anymore. I have told people bits of my background, where I came
from, why I am here, but have never been forth coming. But, to hell with it, if
I could come out as a big ol’ mo, I can come out as someone from a low class
family, a former-white trashian.
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Ours was almost identical to this, Single wide, baby. |
However, I
would like to go ahead and warn people that the term “white trash” hurts, and
for some people, causes a visceral reaction, it’s an inappropriate, narrow
minded slur, and I implore you to find another phrase. I choose to claim it now
only as I might identify with it in the past tense, and in an order to reappropriate
and say that it doesn’t define me. But for those folks who don’t have a firsthand
experience with this, who don’t, nor ever have identified with the term: don’t
fucking use it. Because remember, white trash bitches fight dirty, so don’t be
a bigoted asshole and make me show you how we do it in the trailer park.
Two photos from my white trash childhood.
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we had fancy tea parties |
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future peace corps volunteer |
Sam, brilliance. Can I have your permission to teach this piece?
ReplyDeleteI would be remarkably honored, Heather.
ReplyDelete