Backstroke & Breakthroughs โ Post #12
Iโve learned that sometimes, before the world names youโyou have to name yourself.
Iโm half African American and half Native American. I was raised in a Muslim household. Iโm openly spiritual. Iโm biracial. Iโm bisexual. These arenโt separate labels to pick and choose fromโthey are my full self, woven together with every joy and contradiction that makes me human.
But growing up, that full self didnโt always have space to speak.
In school, I was too โdifferentโ to be just Black, too โBlackโ to be claimed by my Native peers, and too โstraight-passingโ to be embraced by LGBTQ+ folksโuntil I came out, and then suddenly I was โtoo much.โ Even my own friends began to create double standards. I started calling it what it was: toxic queerness.
Itโs when marginalized people replicate the same hierarchies and exclusions they claim to fight againstโwhen queer community turns into competition, performance, or gatekeeping. I wasnโt allowed to be spiritual and queer. I wasnโt allowed to set boundaries and still be considered a โsafeโ friend. I had to shrink to be palatable, and I refused.
Because my range is not for you to define.
Itโs 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 identityโBlack, Native, queer, spiritual, raised Muslimโwasnโt something these spaces knew how to handle. The queerness they centered was white, able-bodied, cisgender, and corporate-friendly. Mine feltโฆ inconvenient.
So again, I made space for myself.
This weekโs takeaway:
Your truth doesnโt 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.



Leave a reply to BRUFAY Cancel reply