Thousands of years of exhaustion

I am tired.

I was able to donate blood for the first time this week, the first time in 17 years, due to anemia. 470 mls doesn’t sound like a lot, but it’s a lot when don’t plan, and start your period the next day.

There is not enough broccoli or spinach in the world at the moment. I know–I’ve bought out every grocery store in Portland of both of them. I tell you that as a warning for what comes next. I am blatantly hypoxic and anemic. But here I am, in all that low oxygen, low blood pressure glory, spilling my truth, because I don’t care about being PC. I don’t care about hurting feelings. This is my brain. These are my thoughts.

Elizabeth Warren dropped out of the presidential nomination race this morning. I feel like it’s a full on failure of women. That’s not accurate. But it feels accurate. I don’t want to put unnecessary pressure on her, but she was the best person in the race to run our country. I want a woman in the White House. I want someone running our country who has some semblance of an idea of what it’s like to be a woman in this country and how to make it better for us. Not just white women. Women of color, trans women, non-homonormative women. She was competent, willing, and sadly enough, totally incapable of beating Donald Trump. Not because of her inadequacies, but because of America’s. And all of this right now has me feeling that America either hates, or is scared of women.

Someone told me recently that women shouldn’t be in leadership rolls. Like, anywhere. The White House, the church parish council, the Senate, the Youth Camp Board. He told me women aren’t “made” to lead. It’s not what we’re designed by God to do. This is 2020. I’m in tears. Not because he’s right, but because people actually believe it, and the democratic presidential nomination proves it.

I’m so tired.

I’m tired of being sold short. I’m tired of being demeaned. I’m tired of being ridiculed. I’m tired of being minimized. I’m tired of not being believed. I’m tired of having to fight to even be seen. I’m tired of being presumed inferior. I’m tired of not contributing in a full way. (I don’t want to say meaningful way, because giving birth, raising children, and other historically traditional female rolls are incredibly meaningful and fulfilling. My point here is that it pushes women into only those rolls and stops us from providing, helping, and contributing to others and society in other ways which we may also excel in.)

I’m so tired. I’m so tired of it being so obvious and yet still incomprehensible to so many.

So yeah, this might be the low oxygen, the low blood pressure, but I think it’s more like thousands of years of ridicule and persecution that’s brought me to boil.

My Grandmother’s Education and Mine.

My paternal grandmother studied nutrition. In the 1930s and 1940s, teaching, homemaking, and nursing, were really the only options. My aunt, also a nurse, mentioned to me recently that she didn’t know until she helped her mother write her memoirs, just how much of her life, all of her life, it seemed to my aunt, revolved around clothes and food. She made the clothes for her children. She fed her family, and damn, she was going to make sure they ate as healthy as modern science could teach us. Unfortunately for my Dad, that meant liver at least once a week. Thankfully, we’ve figured out how to get our iron efficiently enough without my parents’ generation overcooking liver once a week and I am grateful for that scientific knowledge.

Clothes and Food.

I don’t think I can claim either of those interests alongside my grandma. Knowing her later in life, she was well-read, well-spoken on numerous topics like education, music, politics. She was active on boards of nonprofits. She helped form music programs for both children and adults. She’d travelled all over the world. And that is one of the attributes I really clung to of my grandmother. She travelled so she could learn. She wanted to learn about people, get to know the people, their culture, and their thoughts.

Clothes and Food.

I wish I could ask her, “was there something else you wanted to study in college?”

Part of this question comes simply because I am reading Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own for the first time. She posits the theory that historically, women have not had financial or physical freedom to gain an education and have uninterrupted time to develop their gifts, such as writing or painting.

My mother’s office is the thoroughfare to my parents’ bedroom. My dad used to use that as his office, but when the kids slowly moved out, he commandeered one of our old rooms as his office. My mother could do that. No one would blink if she did. I know she usually reads my blog though, so watch out for a comment below. There may be a good reason for it. But it seems a hectic place, it seems a place that one can’t close the door and think or study.

As a parent, either male or female, I think you lose that ability, the space, the room of one’s own.  But I also believe it’s important to fight for and maintain that space for ourselves. A place to think, to work, to write, to create.

One of the struggles in my relationship with my now deceased grandparents, was that when I announced I would be studying music history after highschool, they told my parents to make me major in something “useful.” After ending with a degree in music business, I went to nursing school. I think that’s what they meant. Something useful. I think music is more than useful, but that’s another blog post. I am grateful my parents stood by my side both literally and financially in my musical studies. I am a better person because of that training and education. I truly believe the experience makes me a better nurse. Read that again. Music and liberal arts training has made me a better nurse.

But I still wonder, given the financial backing, the emotional backing, by her parents and by society, would my grandmother have studied something differently? How many women would have studied something differently?

My brother made an interesting comment about the scouting experience of his children recently, in that through scouts, they see other options for careers than teacher, mailman, accountant. (The teachers at their school, my brother works for the post office, and his wife is an accountant.) What someone is exposed to makes their decisions for them. It truly is a cycle. After my music degree, I felt lost. I looked around at people in my life, friends, family, who were happy, and most of them were nurses. I’m grateful for my medical training and the experiences I’ve had as a nurse, but if I knew then what I know about myself now, I wouldn’t have gone to nursing school. I would study ecology or biology. (Part of that is my insecurity with math and science throughout college. I always thought I was “bad at math” when in reality, I think about numbers differently than most teachers teach about numbers. This began in 1st, I repeat, 1st grade. I remember having panic attacks thinking about math class as early as age 7. And this spread through math and science and lasted well in to my adult life. I love science and math. I am actually good at it. And if I had realized that at a younger age, my life would look very different. Encourage girls in STEM. We need all the help we can get.)  

What we see around us is normal and accepting. What we are encouraged in, we thrive in. Those freedoms are very much founded in the physical and financial abilities such as having a place to study in uninterrupted.  Provide and encourage—our world will be better because of it.