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Tag: politics

I’m an immigrant too

This idea is new to me. I was adopted when I was eight months old, so I have no conscious memories of South Korea. The choice to bring me to America was made by my adopted parents who I never thought of as “adopted parents,” but simply my parents. Now, mind you, the fact that I was adopted was never concealed from me, nor would it have been plausible. I’m obviously Asian and they were White, but I spent a limited amount of my childhood peering into the mirror for answers. More accurately, the question of who my “real” parents were wasn’t a question that interested me very much.

That’s not to say that I wasn’t curious. I was painfully shy as a child, but curious about the world around me. My father, a fellow introvert, modeled reading as a safe portal to exploration. I didn’t find myself drawn to race and identity, but rather science, history, storytelling, performing arts and intellectual pursuits more generally.

I got married and divorced twice without thinking about myself as anything other than an American citizen. I voted for years, had children, worked and attended college without questioning it. It wasn’t until the Real ID requirements were rolled out that I learned I was actually a naturalized citizen rather than a homegrown one. My adopted parents had passed away without mentioning my naturalization papers, or where they put them. It never came up, but, suddenly, I had to scramble to find them in order to be allowed on an airplane or secure health insurance.

When my birth mother reached out to me several years ago, I did my best to communicate with her and tried to get to know her, but the gap between our cultures, languages and generations felt taxing to me. I’d finally reached a point of self-acceptance with the adult I’d become, and it was jarring to try to correspond with someone who wanted to drag me back to into my unconscious past. She was sorrowful and remorseful about my not growing up at her side: a version of my life that, despite my struggles, I’d never longed for and couldn’t find a desire to share in.

Although it seemed cruel to break contact with her, I tried to explain that I wasn’t and couldn’t be the daughter she dreamed of. Our separation happened too early for me to be Korean in the way she hoped. The idea of joining her to eat seaweed soup on my birthday sounded unappealing and foreign. I didn’t want to disappoint her in drips and drabs. It seemed easier to re-sever the connection cleanly.

But, despite my lack of thought about her over the years, she’d had decades to build expectations about the daughter she’d lost, to dream about the reunion she wanted… and she wasn’t going to give up on that dream lightly. She reported me as a missing person to the South Korean police. When I started receiving emails from someone purporting to be an inspector in their Missing Persons Division, I assumed it was spam, but the emails kept coming and I ended up reaching out to the adoption agency to authenticate the communication.

To my surprise, they were real. My birth mother who hadn’t seen me since I was two months old was trying to have me brought back to her – 46 years later. I declined the offer and did my best to explain the situation to the inspector.

Despite finding K-dramas intriguing and enjoying K-pop, South Korea isn’t first on the list of countries I want to visit and the idea of living there doesn’t appeal to me. For all the beauty and sweetness in their culture, I’m vaguely aware of a dark underbelly. They’ve had one of the highest suicide rates in the world for generations. They also lead the world in plastic surgery. Their societal focus on appearance feels perpendicular to my own. Despite working in fashion retail the last few years, I’ve done it without touching cosmetics or doing my hair. It’s not that I lack an appreciation for those who put thought into their appearance, but there’s a distinct difference to me between good hygiene and respectful attire and prioritizing superficial appearances above all else. There’s a difference when that’s the societal standard.

I’ve never been back to South Korea since I left on a Pan Am Clipper in 1977. The only nationality I know is American. I’ve never learned to like kimchi, not even Americanized versions like kimchi fried rice. Recent news articles have revealed widespread corruption, illegality and even human rights violations in the Korean adoption system which sadden me. More than that, they scare me. Denaturalization was a pet project of Trump’s first term and is expected to escalate this time. At a time when the United States, the only home I’ve known, seems adamantly set on expelling people from its borders, I worry this will become an excuse to add me to the list.

I’m not and have never been in favor of our current president. I haven’t hidden this. I’ve donated to Democrats, volunteered to support Democratic candidates. While I’ve been quieter about voicing my dismay about the state of Israel’s actions in Gaza and the West Bank for fear of alienating friends, I had strong feelings about that long before October 7th. I believe that suppressing dissent and humiliating those weaker than you never nets capitulation or peace. The party made vulnerable by those efforts will simply become more desperate, less rational, less risk-averse. And the instinct to live and survive is born into us and can’t be extinguished.

I grew up believing in the magnificence of our imperfect democratic republic, in the balancing nature of our three branches of government, in the rocky struggle of America to surmount our darker impulses and reach toward the betterment of ourselves and others. I never wanted to be anything other than an American.

These have been my thoughts, feelings and beliefs for most of my adult life. I’ve worked hard and raised my kids with the aim of helping them grow into conscientious, thoughtful adults and responsible citizens. I’ve found friends who expand my heart and awareness, rather than focusing on shared interests. I am someone who’s volunteered at a prison, but has never been arrested or prosecuted for anything; someone who has a checkered work history and love life, but who has stayed on the “right side of the law,” there are very real ways in which I have little to worry about – even in the current political climate. If I’d been brought here from Venezuela – or any of the other countries in Latin America rather than east Asia, it’s likely I’d have been dancing with the complexities of my citizenship long ago.

And yet, going from nothing to something is noticeable. There’s nothing quite like thinking a thought you’ve never been exposed to before to draw one’s attention. For many, the SAVE Act will be our first reckoning with enfranchisement in several generations. (Passport anyone?) For the first time in my life, I’m aware that I’m an immigrant to this country. This awareness and its corresponding vulnerability have made me want to cower – even as my friends have begun to stand up. I’m someone who’s been called brave – fairly often, but not this time. I’ve felt muted and quietly scared – without even feeling fully entitled to the nervousness inside me. I know how hard anyone would have to look to find reasons to deport me, and I recognize the improbability of a jump from the present to a world where I find myself on a one-way flight, eastbound across the Pacific, reversing the trip that brought me here nearly 48 years ago. I recognize the dangers of giving into slippery slope arguments, and, at the same time, I’m attached to the life I now have – yes! as a result of having grown up in the United States of America, to the degree that I’ve been afraid of jeopardizing it.

Yet, there’s never a good time to step up. It’s never convenient, and if I wait until it is time to help fight for the country that I’ve believed in – it’ll be too late. I’m grateful I’ve been able to live here, and I’ve loved it –despite its imperfections. If you’re insulted that I’m admitting the country has imperfections, well, for starters, I’m surprised you made it this far through my post. Second, people and things that we need to believe are perfect aren’t real. It may be radical, but, in my experience, love isn’t a devotion to perfection, but an acceptance of imperfection. It isn’t brittle, but flexible, evolving and forgiving.

I’m unwilling to give up on the idea of America as a place that can overcome its complicated history and reach for something better, but I don’t think betterment can be achieved through censorship, pandering, temper tantrums and oversimplified narratives. I’m not sure how to get there from here. Not anymore. But I’m also deciding to be brave again. I’m not sure how, but this feels like a start. I’m no longer seeing immigration or the other challenges our country is facing from the outside. I’m an immigrant too.

In contrast to my last two posts (and at the risk of distancing those who’ve signed onto following my writing project)…

I haven’t been writing very much since getting back to California, but something’s been increasingly bothering me and for whatever (extremely) limited say I have at present, I need to share them now.

I’ll admit that I tend to prefer facts and figures to anecdotes. While I realize the power of personal experience, I see simplified narratives vaunted over facts on a regular basis to obscure a larger picture – and I don’t want to contribute to it. That being said, the following is all about how one woman changed my life – for the better.

Last year, my older child who was 21-years-old at the time, let me know that she was trans. I greeted the news with tentative support and tried to mask my concerns and even skepticism. I can be honest: it scared me. It was something I didn’t necessarily foresee and didn’t understand. It felt like a product of a particular moment and trend. I was concerned about my daughter making permanent decisions that would affect her body, her long-term health and safety, in order to resonate with her generation.

I took these concerns with me when I decided to temporarily move out-of-state. I thought about whether I needed to stay close by in order to support her through her transition, but I eventually decided that voicing my support and leaving her to step into her independence was a way of trusting her. At least, that’s what I told myself.

One of the first friends I happened to make when I arrived in the Midwest was a woman named Liara. At the time, she was a crisis counselor for the Trevor Project. She was also trans, having begun hormone therapy four years before I met her. From our first visit, we resonated with one another and became fast friends. She was thoughtful and fanciful and complicated. We got into heated debates about politics and societal norms, but we also broke bread together, went on hikes and shared our triumphs and heartbreaks.

And, she became a very safe person for me to express my concerns to about my daughter, the ones I was afraid to share for fear of not seeming supportive. She was able to address those with, not just her own experiences, but the tragedy, challenges and acceptance she’d found within her community and work at the Trevor Project, with other transpeople and within her personal journey. She opened up to me about the relief she’d felt in finally being able to resolve the discrepancy she’d known existed within herself since her teenage years, but also the fear she had in the world and the hate she’d seen directed at her.

Through these discussions, my fears subsided. The surface support I’d offered my daughter deepened into something real and, while my fears weren’t gone, they shifted from concerns about her health and whether it would be a phase, to concerns about her safety amidst an ideological clash that’s focused on her newfound demographic as a flashpoint – in many cases, for political gain.

I will also say that, in “red” Iowa, I found a tremendous number of people who didn’t raise an eyebrow when I shared that my daughter was trans. I found people who believed in supporting their kids and families, regardless of their choices. Who agreed that you’ve got to love your kids no matter what and who stood behind acceptance as a primary virtue.

I moved back to California in February and Liara and I stayed in touch. We talked about her visiting me here and discussed the possibility of my bringing my daughter to meet her when she played a DJ event at Pride in NYC in the summer. We had plans and hopes that our paths would cross again and talked regularly.

Then, in June of this year, she died tragically and violently. The details aren’t relevant here. While I don’t believe her death was the result of a hate crime, I hate that it happened. I hate that her beautiful soul isn’t among us anymore and that I won’t get more walks and animated talks with my very dear friend. And while I’m careful not to whittle her down – she was complex and I appreciated her for that, there is a new thing that’s happened for me in the months since she’s been gone: the demonization of transpeople (not new in and of itself) – something I previously understood – it’s a topic many of us, even those who’ve liked to think of ourselves as relatively progressive, I think, find is outside of our comfort zone… I can’t hear those arguments without mourning my friend. Not only her death, but also the fears she lived with – and fears for my daughter.

Let me be clear: I’m triggered by the word “triggered.” I think that being thin skinned and overly sensitive is its own issue. Despite having a trans-daughter who I embrace and want to see thrive, I still haven’t adopted the practice of announcing my pronouns because I believe that it often does more harm than good. I believe that our society isn’t necessarily antithetical to change, but that it does need to be allowed to do so at a pace that people can bear.

And, at the same time, I’m grieved that those changes didn’t arrive soon enough for my friend to enjoy safety and security in her own skin. I now fear that acclimation will be too slow for my daughter to avoid harm.

When I hear that the Trump campaign is hammering swing states with fear mongering about trans-athletes… I fully admit that the challenge of what to do about trans-women in competitive sports is a clusterf*!%. It presses against a lot of nerves and we in the US care a LOT about our sports. I don’t have an easy answer. I’m not saying that we won’t have to grapple with the complicated question of how to handle sports. But I also think it’s a terrible distraction and the use of a tiny fraction of a tiny minority to denigrate and demonize that minority in the eyes of people who don’t know them. For a lot of people who’ll never get to meet a Liara.

Mind you, this is a demographic that the Harris campaign isn’t even claiming and embracing. It’s not like the Harris campaign has been outwardly pro-trans-rights. But that’s enough for us. It’s enough that they’re the party that isn’t trying to tell ugly falsehoods about the imminent dangers of navigating this latest tangle of biology being less binary than we’d like it to be, medical science being more advanced than we’re ready for it to be and our societal norms being what they are – within a democratic republic that’s quarreling over its fundamental character.

It’s enough for me that the Harris campaign is willing to abide by the legally mandated levels of support for trans-rights. It’s enough for me that Kamala Harris and Tim Walz, although they haven’t hugged the trans community, aren’t demonizing them either. In fact, it’s one of the issues they really haven’t touched at all, despite the amount that it’s being used and leveraged by their opponents for fear of confirming fear. I’m sure, out of fears that they’ll “prove” themselves as the “radical liberals” they’re accused of being. Still, they’re my choice, by a landslide – not only because of this, but for so many other reasons.

That being said, I’m deeply troubled about the toxins that are being pumped into the bloodstream of our social media “feeds.” I’m concerned about the way they’ll continue to deepen mischaracterizations and fears about an already vulnerable part of the population.

Please

Dear Friends, dear Americans, dear Fellow Citizens,

I tried reaching out to you recently and I may have reached a few of you, but it’s hard to make it through the noise. There’s such a swirl of noise out there and that noise is just about to get so much louder and worse.

I want to start by talking to those who have tuned out though – because it is necessary for all of us to do that sometimes, right? I get it. I do. Take a minute, take a day, take a week even. There’s a lot to try to cope with these days and I’m right there with you… almost.

For those who say that you’re just not political, that you hate politics, I want to remind you that politics happens with or without you. We can’t reshape it into something less alienating, more civil, more relevant without you and people like you. Politics isn’t just people in offices and century old buildings with columns making speeches. It determines whether we have the resources to fight fires and repair after tropical storms, whether some are given legally recognized marriages or not, whether jeopardized species go extinct, whether we pursue peace or war. Your right to download an app or mail a birthday card to your friend, the cost of vegetables at the supermarket – these are all in their own way political acts. Our standing in the world and as individuals depends on the functioning of our democracy.

Please, do not wait for the moment when one of these laws deprives you personally of something vital to recognize your power.

For those of you who say that it won’t make a difference, this isn’t a butterfly effect kind of thing. Whether you live in a swing state or not, this election is shaping up to be close. Votes will matter – across the country. In the local elections, state and nationally. If you spend two hours reading your election booklet, I bet that there’s one ballot measure or proposition or candidate that you’ll connect with, that will matter to you. Find the issue where you can really make a difference and then while you’re marking your ballot, please fill in a vote for president too.

Please. Every district matters this time. Every state.

For those who feel you don’t know enough, there is still time. I know that you’re busy, maybe you’ve got little kids. Read about the candidates with them. Sure, maybe they’ll think it’s boring, but it might help them take a nap and then you can finish reading. Or maybe you’re busy with work, but it’s worth burning some midnight oil to get this right. Check your sources. A lot of these candidates are depending on us to stay disengaged or they’re betting on us being dumber than we are. I don’t think we’re dumb.

Please, find the time because this is about us and our kids and our neighbors and their kids and the people hundreds of miles away and their kids.

We are so lucky and I know a lot of us are tired of this word “privilege.” It feels like a weight around our necks that we didn’t ask for and don’t have time for, but it is ours and ours alone. This vote doesn’t belong to people living in the European Union or Iran or Israel or South Korea. It doesn’t belong to the nearly 35 million lawful permanent residents who have come from all over the world to work in our businesses, pay our taxes and abide by our laws, who may live here for years without ever being able to vote. It doesn’t belong to the billions of people around the world who are affected by our military decisions, environmental decisions, diplomatic choices, and who, when we’re at our best, look up to us and the stable democracy that we have perhaps resided in for so long that we have forgotten how fragile governments can be.

And no, no one asked you whether you wanted to be born here and the condition of our individual lives spans the spectrum. I know that there are so many of us who would be hard pressed to feel fortunate at the moment. And others of us who are sick of being called it in an era when our lives are unfamiliar and disrupted and we can’t operate under the weight of it all.

… but we can, and we do. Think about it. We can and we do. It’s almost frightening to think about, but we’re all survivors of something and our bodies and minds persevere even when it feels like our hearts may give out – and they can carry our hearts along with them.

Please vote. I am trying to do what I feel suited to – reaching out to those who feel tired and done and disengaged. Admitting that I myself feel tired and done, but that I cannot allow myself to be disengaged. I don’t want to add to the text messages that you’re getting on your phone or the email in your inbox. I don’t want to be one more person raining ultimatums down on you. I want to encourage you. Please ask questions. Please, don’t be intimidated. Please, don’t wait. Please – VOTE.

One step at a time…

All of my posts up to this point have been related to our summer travel, relocation or the like. This one is political and I realize that that can source a whole different set of readers. Please note that I have no illusions that the following represents anything other than my humble perspective, but it’s all that I have to cling to at the moment and on the off chance that it helps someone else feel less alone, helps someone else feel heard or comforted in the slightest, I am sharing it.

I feel like there are a lot of people out there right now, most of whom I don’t know, who are feeling hopeful now while the rest of us are feeling like our lives are upended and our guts have been spilled out on the floor… and we’re staring at them and don’t know what else to do… And it’s not that I am mad at them for feeling hopeful, but I’m concerned that they made a miscalculation. I’m scared that they made decisions that we’re based on searching for someone to blame because life isn’t what they thought it would be, because the world doesn’t look the way it “used to,” and because, despite the fact that a lot of them have tried, life is really f#%€}*!-ing hard. And it’s true. Life is not fair. You can “do the right thing” all your life and not get recognition and things won’t be fair or easy. A lot of the time…

And when we don’t get attention and when we don’t feel heard, it makes us irrational, it makes us want to blame someone. The American Dream wasn’t a promise. No one broke their promise to you. And I know what it’s like to feel broken. I know what it’s like to feel so hurt and broken that it feels like the world owes you something. When you’ve gotten up off the mat so many times and nursed so many bruises that you can’t possibly picture how you’re supposed to survive things without a reward, without revenge. And the real answer is that surviving that doesn’t mean that you’re owed a damn thing. It means that you survived and you have a life and you still have to keep going and trying. And life is still hard.

And wonderful. And terrible. And people and connection and beauty and strength and love and kindness and nature and our kids and our friends and… there’s so much. And it’s messy and great and horrible and incredible. But it’s not easy or fair.

Hope is this tricky thing. It’s strong and it’s fragile and we all need it and a lot of our country went out and “got itself some” last night, but that cathartic “achievement” comes at this extraordinarily high price. Decency and civility were put on the altar, intelligence and honesty were sacrificed. (That’s right. I’m saying he’s lied. It’s hardly the worst of his crimes.) Responsibility to the world and to our own, to our common future and to the vulnerable among us was auctioned off and sold for scrap.

We can get it back. It’s like the Neverending Story, folks. The hope and goodness is inside us. We will get through this, yes, but the nature of things is that damage can be done quickly, but repair, healing and remediation are a long road. We’ll need each other. We need many of those people who felt desperate or lost or scared enough that they made the choices that they made yesterday too. But I’m not sure that I can today. Today, it’s enough to cry, to hug each other and to make it through this. One – step – at – a – time…