Brufay

Where Communities Unify to Discover Solutions

BRUFAY Stories is a creative space hosted by J.R Rudolph and Erusla Shine. Every week, we embark on a journey into the realm of classic literature, characters, and scripts that have found a home in the Public Domain.

Backstroke & Breakthroughs โ€“ Post #12

Iโ€™ve learned that sometimes, before the world names youโ€”you have to name yourself.

Iโ€™m half African American and half Native American. I was raised in a Muslim household. Iโ€™m openly spiritual. Iโ€™m biracial. Iโ€™m bisexual. These arenโ€™t separate labels to pick and choose fromโ€”they are my full self, woven together with every joy and contradiction that makes me human.

But growing up, that full self didnโ€™t always have space to speak.

In school, I was too โ€œdifferentโ€ to be just Black, too โ€œBlackโ€ to be claimed by my Native peers, and too โ€œstraight-passingโ€ to be embraced by LGBTQ+ folksโ€”until I came out, and then suddenly I was โ€œtoo much.โ€ Even my own friends began to create double standards. I started calling it what it was: toxic queerness.

Itโ€™s when marginalized people replicate the same hierarchies and exclusions they claim to fight againstโ€”when queer community turns into competition, performance, or gatekeeping. I wasnโ€™t allowed to be spiritual and queer. I wasnโ€™t allowed to set boundaries and still be considered a โ€œsafeโ€ friend. I had to shrink to be palatable, and I refused.

Because my range is not for you to define.
Itโ€™s for me to desire, discover, and declare.

That lesson followed me into adulthood. And now, into the workplace.

I was excited when my job introduced LGBTQ+ employee resource groups. But very quickly, I started feeling that same subtle silencing. My intersectional identityโ€”Black, Native, queer, spiritual, raised Muslimโ€”wasnโ€™t something these spaces knew how to handle. The queerness they centered was white, able-bodied, cisgender, and corporate-friendly. Mine feltโ€ฆ inconvenient.

So again, I made space for myself.

This weekโ€™s takeaway:
Your truth doesnโ€™t need approval. It needs air. It needs voice. It needs you.
And if no one in the room is ready to hold space for you, then you make your own room.

You are not too much. You are whole.
And being whole in this world is one of the bravest things you can be.

In truth,
โ€“ J.R.

5 responses to “Naming Myself”

  1. bravo! well said. great post!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you! ๐Ÿ™‚

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Beautifully said. The courage to stand whole, even when no room is offered, is what turns truth into light. Your words are a reminder that wholeness is not a burdenโ€ฆ itโ€™s strength.๐Ÿ™

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you! ๐Ÿ™‚ for commenting on my post and recognizing the reflection in us all~!

      Liked by 1 person

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