When you're the forward-thinker in your family/community
Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2014 11:22 am
I was reminded of this here today, but it's something that comes up here a lot, so I wanted to say something about it.
In a word, what the title says: this is for those of you who are in a place or position, and make choices, where you're someone thinking or speaking out more progressively than others immediately around you, especially with families if and when you don't have a choice yet to stay with them or not. For example, those of you in xenophobic, racist, sexist, homophobic or transphobic, or anti-sex environments or communities and either stand against that just by virtue of who you are as a member of a group the -ism is directed at, or do so as an ally or just as a plain old compassionate person.
In my mother's family, my mother was a person who seemed to challenge and advance thinking and general ethos, through things like sex out of wedlock (and a young pregnancy), being a part -- through in her case, not so much by choice -- of very radical politics, being a working mother without shame or apology, and later, being outwardly pro-choice and LGBTQ-supportive. Then it was me, and it seemed -- still sometimes, but less than when I was younger -- like even with my mother being the forward-thinker in her family, what I was bringing to the table was usually well beyond where she was at, let alone the rest of her family (one of whom earnestly used to tell me I deserved abuse for basically being the antichrist in their opinion, when I was not yet even in my teens). Before her, from what I can gather, that person in the family was my great-aunt Ina, who was a nun, so I'm sure my mother felt the same way about where her own thinking was relative to hers like I did about my mother and myself.
There sometimes is more than just one person in families like this, perhaps obviously. But in my life and work experience, there usually is at LEAST one, and that person winds up having a much bigger impact over time than they probably think or anticipate when they're younger. In my own family alone, I know that who I am per both my life circumstances and experiences and what I do and say has made a big impact on my mother's family: with every year that passes, one of my aunts, uncles or cousins -- as well as my mother and sister -- express that to me clearly in some way. I also have found that being who I am has made me a sort of safe haven for members of that family sometimes, per talking to someone about issues or dynamics that have been problematic or outright destructive, but where they don't feel able to disclose to anyone else or even just talk to anyone else freely.
The way I am treated within that family has also changed radically over time, with a respect often afforded to me I never would have expected back when.
When I was younger, the way it felt was that the impact of who I was and what I spoke out about was only, at best, going to be much more immediate, like only -- if I was lucky -- influencing the thinking of my immediate family. Everyone else either seemed pretty hopeless to me, out of reach, or like nothing could change because I wasn't around them much or at all. But it's since become clear that -- duh, I know -- people talk amongst themselves, including about people they only hear things from or about second or third-hand. People also are often seeing you from afar when you don't really realize it or have your attention elsewhere. My mother's family, on the whole, has changed IMMENSELY just in my four-and-a-half decades of life, and I know a lot of those changes have to do with us folks who challenged old, tired or just-plain-wrong ways of thinking or behaving. That's pretty amazing, I think.
But it is often very stressful and scary to be that person in a family or any other group or community (and more so when you're young, I think, and you often feel under attack and under a microscope no matter what, from pretty much everywhere). Being a maverick in any way is challenging and asks a lot of a person. It also shines a light on that person that can make them more vulnerable than others, sometimes a lot more vulnerable. We risk being ostracized or worse sometimes. Our opinions will often be challenged by standards the status-quo opinions or beliefs are not challenged by. Same can go for our behaviour.
So, for one, I want to be clear that any of you who are this person or aspire to be this person? Kudos to you. It's a big deal. It matters. A lot. It's a really big gift to give to people (even though some don't view it that way at the time, and some never may see it that way) and the world, as well as to yourself, IMO. I'm glad you're in this world, and I, personally, feel more supported, less isolated and much more hopeful because you are.
I also just wanted to open up an avenue for folks to talk about this, support each other around it, and give some room to get a breather when it's stressful, including room to take some time off from being that person.
In a word, what the title says: this is for those of you who are in a place or position, and make choices, where you're someone thinking or speaking out more progressively than others immediately around you, especially with families if and when you don't have a choice yet to stay with them or not. For example, those of you in xenophobic, racist, sexist, homophobic or transphobic, or anti-sex environments or communities and either stand against that just by virtue of who you are as a member of a group the -ism is directed at, or do so as an ally or just as a plain old compassionate person.
In my mother's family, my mother was a person who seemed to challenge and advance thinking and general ethos, through things like sex out of wedlock (and a young pregnancy), being a part -- through in her case, not so much by choice -- of very radical politics, being a working mother without shame or apology, and later, being outwardly pro-choice and LGBTQ-supportive. Then it was me, and it seemed -- still sometimes, but less than when I was younger -- like even with my mother being the forward-thinker in her family, what I was bringing to the table was usually well beyond where she was at, let alone the rest of her family (one of whom earnestly used to tell me I deserved abuse for basically being the antichrist in their opinion, when I was not yet even in my teens). Before her, from what I can gather, that person in the family was my great-aunt Ina, who was a nun, so I'm sure my mother felt the same way about where her own thinking was relative to hers like I did about my mother and myself.
There sometimes is more than just one person in families like this, perhaps obviously. But in my life and work experience, there usually is at LEAST one, and that person winds up having a much bigger impact over time than they probably think or anticipate when they're younger. In my own family alone, I know that who I am per both my life circumstances and experiences and what I do and say has made a big impact on my mother's family: with every year that passes, one of my aunts, uncles or cousins -- as well as my mother and sister -- express that to me clearly in some way. I also have found that being who I am has made me a sort of safe haven for members of that family sometimes, per talking to someone about issues or dynamics that have been problematic or outright destructive, but where they don't feel able to disclose to anyone else or even just talk to anyone else freely.
The way I am treated within that family has also changed radically over time, with a respect often afforded to me I never would have expected back when.
When I was younger, the way it felt was that the impact of who I was and what I spoke out about was only, at best, going to be much more immediate, like only -- if I was lucky -- influencing the thinking of my immediate family. Everyone else either seemed pretty hopeless to me, out of reach, or like nothing could change because I wasn't around them much or at all. But it's since become clear that -- duh, I know -- people talk amongst themselves, including about people they only hear things from or about second or third-hand. People also are often seeing you from afar when you don't really realize it or have your attention elsewhere. My mother's family, on the whole, has changed IMMENSELY just in my four-and-a-half decades of life, and I know a lot of those changes have to do with us folks who challenged old, tired or just-plain-wrong ways of thinking or behaving. That's pretty amazing, I think.
But it is often very stressful and scary to be that person in a family or any other group or community (and more so when you're young, I think, and you often feel under attack and under a microscope no matter what, from pretty much everywhere). Being a maverick in any way is challenging and asks a lot of a person. It also shines a light on that person that can make them more vulnerable than others, sometimes a lot more vulnerable. We risk being ostracized or worse sometimes. Our opinions will often be challenged by standards the status-quo opinions or beliefs are not challenged by. Same can go for our behaviour.
So, for one, I want to be clear that any of you who are this person or aspire to be this person? Kudos to you. It's a big deal. It matters. A lot. It's a really big gift to give to people (even though some don't view it that way at the time, and some never may see it that way) and the world, as well as to yourself, IMO. I'm glad you're in this world, and I, personally, feel more supported, less isolated and much more hopeful because you are.
I also just wanted to open up an avenue for folks to talk about this, support each other around it, and give some room to get a breather when it's stressful, including room to take some time off from being that person.