The Past

The past is mysterious
Sometimes as mysterious as the future

Hidden in it are old dreams
creased with edges of folding
dusty with old thoughts
and the remnants of desire

We know the future is blank
like a clean white sheet
yet we know it will be filled
we fill it with new dreams

Yet we forget how mysterious the past is
we forget that we’ve forgotten

it holds a special place for us
in mystery and majesty

these moments
that vanish right away
to be retold inside our minds

tracing over lines of partial truth
and romantic illusion

but how dear they are
these phantoms of the past
joy and pain
lust and loneliness

the past as mysterious as what’s going to come
wrapped in a cloak of imagined truth

 

YOUR LIFE IS AN ECHO OF WHO YOU ARE

Whoever you’re currently being, this is the life that is the result of that way of being. Rich, poor, happy, sad, in love, alone, on purpose, on accident.

The best predictor of tomorrow is not today but yesterday or last week.

To change, to become someone else, to live a different life you have to be willing to become someone you are not. And in doing so your life will likely stop working.

Because your life is designed to work for who you’re currently being.

YOUR LIFE ALWAYS WORKS

You may not like your life, you may not think it works at all, but it likely does work for who you’re currently being.

  • IF YOU FEEL CONSTANT PRESSURE . . . to achieve your goals and never seem to achieve enough.
  • THAT LIFE WORKS . . . for the person who is being constant pursuit and dissatisfaction.
  • IF YOU FEEL . . . lost and confused and can’t get anything started.
  • THAT LIFE WORKS . . . for the person who is being self-doubt and underachievement.

Change who you are, your life will go into dissonance.

It might be good dissonance or bad dissonance.
Easier or harder, but it will stop singing in the same key.

YOUR LIFE IS AN ECHO OF WHO YOU ARE

This is the reason people don’t change. Because when the song changes they get scared.

Ultimate change requires you stepping out of the key of your life. Often with very little understanding of what the new song will sound like.

Which is also called having faith.

Love,
Toku

 

YOU DON’T BELIEVE WHAT YOU CAN’T SEE

The first thing many people do when they hear a tornado warning is they go outside.

Even though they know it’s a bad idea, they just don’t fully understand the threat.

They want to see it. Because seeing is believing.

The coronavirus is no different. We can’t see it. We may not know anyone personally who’s gotten it or we might know someone but they were fine. We don’t see dead bodies in the street. We may not have even heard the ambulances.

So we don’t believe it. The charts are just charts.

Racism is no different. If you’re white especially you don’t’ see it. Police officers are generally polite to you. No one follows you around a store. You don’t say overtly racist things and you have never burned a cross on someone’s lawn.

So you don’t believe you’re racist.

If you don’t’ see it you don’t believe it.

Except what the world needs is your ability to see beyond what you see.

And learn that what you can’t see can still be possible.

 

The Edge of Happiness

Happiness exists on the edge of despair
things held
just so
balanced on what is happening now
the fullness of the heart
the depth of the mind

I find from time to time
myself balanced there
being so content
in my tiny house
in my simple life

While also wanting company
while also wanting success
while also wanting things to be just slightly different

I stare down
at the bowl of despair

sometimes sliding into its white milk
and oatey flakes

sometimes laughing as I tip toe around the rim
looking with subtle satisfaction at how carefully I tread

sometimes sitting gently
with one leg
on each side

here and now
future and past

it’s so simple
to sit on the edge of despair

so simple to fall in

this happiness is so simple
and perhaps that’s the lesson I most need to learn

 

The feelings are the same

The feelings are the same

That first kiss climbing the last few rocks and being struck by the view saying just the right thing on a coaching call

Remembering the old love feeling your sore knees fear that your business will fall apart

The feelings are the same there are subtle differences of course changes in the mixture

a few more hormones here a little more strategy there

but the feelings are so similar though the content changes

professional despair feels like the despair of being alone forever the exhilaration of adventure in love or in nature

the deeper I look the more the same I find

and yet the content the ego finds a new home to hide in the fear finding a new mask to wear the joy putting on a new outfit the excitement in a new dish or drink

the rollercoaster can only ever dip and twist in a certain kind of way gravity always pulls down energy always flies up

the feelings are the same but the content tricks us into thinking that if we fix the content the feelings will change

despair in deep blue and hard grey excitement in bright yellow and vibrant green love in endless red and soothing purple pain in bright orange and stark black

the feelings are the same deep down underneath the thoughts is a human animal painting with its fingers

 

Half Way

Today I’m halfway through my vision quest and so, I offer you this poem.

136 days have past
136 days to go

To look back is to lose my breath
The grief, shaking on the floor, crying, wishing I could crawl out of my skin
The longing, deep and powerful and relentless

But also the orange
peeled slowly
the tough skin
releasing the soft center
my teeth
piercing the tender cover
the explosion of nectar

But also myself
falling in love
choosing me
my foibles
my flaws

and the simplicity
of just being with myself
penetrating all of my moods with love
becoming friends with
the parts
that seem, at times, so unfriendly

It is an odyssey
this life

An ordinary one

If the world wasn’t shifting around me
at the same pace as I shift inside
I’m not sure I’d notice
the experience in quite the same way

But it is
changing
unsteady
evolving

But I am
becoming
blossoming
resolving

So here I am
At the peak
or at the depths

or halfway down
or halfway up
or halfway through

But there is always only the middle of life
until we realize we’re at the crust all of a sudden

And more than anything
I find myself grateful

For my friends,
My teachers
My partner
the divine feminine

Who pours her love
and sultry beauty
and endless challenge
into every rock and crevice, I see

Who pours her love
into my heart
daring it to break open

Who pours her love
into chaos
begging me to grow and hold it all

Mostly I am grateful
and in awe

That life so full of tragedy, shame, violence, and madness
Can also be a life full of quiet walks with dear friends
A gentle opening inside oneself
An ordinary day

All at once.

So here I am.

Halfway
Between nowhere and nowhere
And yet
I can tell I’ve traveled far
And there is much adventure on the road ahead.

 

A Prayer for Wait Night Date Night

Recently as part of my no woman vision quest. I’ve been going on dates where I prepare for the date and then go sit in the parking lot of the restaurant, coffee shop, or overlook and wait for an hour.

It’s an act of ritual waiting.

THIS IS THE PRAYER I OFFERED FOR MY LAST ‘DATE’ –
Dear Sacred Feminine,

I made a choice and put my whole life behind it.

I choose to do so again. Gently and with love I offer this hour to you.

Perhaps someday this hour will be filled with rich conversation,
gentle playful flirting,
the beginnings and renewal of love.

For now I sit
patient,
trusting,
willing.

I give this hour to the unknown one,
the blank woman,
the empty lover.

I offer myself into your arms.
Love,
Toku


You can read about wait night date night here

I’m Inventing A Ritual
http://unexecutive.com/im-inventing-a-ritual/

 

Being White and Being Short

For the most part in my life, I’m incredibly privileged.

I am a white man who lives in a world that favors and benefits white men.

There is perhaps only one area where I feel a sense of injustice or unfairness about some aspect of my identity and that’s around my height.

But before I talk about I want to be clear that my height and any suffering I’ve felt about it pales in comparison to the pain caused to most people around their race, sexual orientation, gender, or class status.

I offer this simply an exploration of my experience not as a claim that being short is of the same variety or magnitude as being a person of color, a woman, LGBTQIA, or of any other marginalized group in our world.

Ok with that said, let’s dive in.

SHORT

  • Vertically challenged
  • A small guy
  • shrimp
  • hobbit
  • little guy
  • napoleon
  • of slight stature
  • etc.

These are all terms that can and at some point in my life been used described me.

There are some men who were tall at some point growing up and then who lost ground as other boys and girls outgrew them, but that wasn’t me. I’ve always been one of the shortest kids in my class. And not just short but small.

In middle school, I wrestled in the 75 pound weight class and while I’m sure there were people in my middle school that weighed less than me, there weren’t many.

I can’t even remember a time in my life where being short didn’t impact me or affect me in some way.

It was the subject of much of bullying or teasing I endured.
It was a reason why I couldn’t date certain people or a reason they gave me for not wanting to date me.
It became a context I have and continue to live in, to this day.

The Hardest Thing About Being Short

Perhaps the hardest thing about being short is that you’re not supposed to let it bother you.

It’s perfectly ok if it bothers other people. It’s ok if women don’t want to date you because you don’t check the Tall box of being Tall dark and handsome. It’s perfectly ok for other men to poke fun at you because of it, to call you chief or champ or buddy or tiger.

But you CAN’T let it bother you.

If you admit for a second that it’s not very much fun to be called short, the teasing simply gets worse. In fact, you’re not really even supposed to stand up for yourself at all.

Because if you do people will whip out their favorite phrase:
Napoleon Complex

Which is a bizarre concept in and of itself because Napolean actually wasn’t short.

You can look it up. I’ll wait.

Calling him short was actually a piece of British propaganda, used to downplay his power. Such is the power of calling a man short. It’s so effective that even when not true it can take the shine off the apple.

In any case, you are supposed to be completely ok with being short. You are expected to have a zen-like exterior of calm and peace when you get picked on, poked fun at, and generally made light of something you’ve been aware of your whole life and can do nothing about.

I remember once in college when I was sitting with my Acapella group a member was talking about getting to meet a famous female singer. He said, she was so small, he’s even smaller than Sam! (which is the name I went by in college).

Everyone laughed. And I did too.

Because that’s what was expected of me.

I remember thinking afterwards how I couldn’t have made fun of anything about him. I mean I could have, but it would have seemed mean and nasty. He was a man of color and a large man. But I couldn’t make fun of these things or even comment on them.

And while I think that’s actually better. (I don’t think it’s ok to make fun of someone’s weight or their race) it struck me as incredibly unfair that it was ok for them to make fun of my height.

And yet somehow this is still ok.

Worse if you get made fun of for your height and get upset, you’re the one who’s ruining the joke.

ADAPTING

As an adaptation, I learned to make fun of it myself. I learned to be more confident. To come into a room with more energy and verve. My comfort with myself became as much a performance as a practice.

  • LOOK HOW COMFORTABLE I AM WITH MYSELF BEING SHORT
  • LOOK HOW IT DOESN’T MATTER TO ME
  • LOOK HOW I MAKE FUN OF MYSELF BEFORE YOU DO HA HA

I don’t mean to sound bitter.

You might even think I should “just get over it”? which something I’ve been asked to do my whole life. I’ve often thought, how about you go first?

In many ways, it’s actually helped me in life. I’ve had to rely on my charm, my wit, my seduction, and the power of my will to get what I want. But it frustrates me at times that I’ve had to do these things because of the heightism that exists in our world.

A friend of mine once said that when he met me he “never realized a short man could be so confident” and while the compliment touched me at the time, later on, I realized how much better it would have felt if he had removed the word ‘short’ from the sentence.

Even my confidence is held in a context of shortness.

And yet I can’t escape it.

Though there are long stretches of time where I forget about it.
Every time I go to a concert I’m reminded of it, especially when a taller person comes and stands in front of me, which invariably happens.

Every time I’m in a relationship I am likely one of my partner’s shortest boyfriends.
And it leaves me to wonder
– Would they be happy with someone taller?
– Would this kiss be better if it was coming from a foot higher?
– Would they be more turned on, feel more safe, trust me more, if I was at least six feet tall?

Even in my kitchen, I’m reminded.

I’m reminded every time I have to get a footstool to get things on a top shelf. It’s either that or jump onto the counter, a trick I learned from a very young age and still do, though I imagine a day when I’ll be much too old or spry to actually achieve this.

My height is almost always there.

Of course, I don’t want you to think it’s all bad.

I mean playing hide and seek, sitting in coach on a long flight, and whenever someone needs to get something from under a car or in a crawl space my size actually comes in handy, but those are generally the exceptions to the rule.

I’M SORRY

In general, my height makes me feel like I need to apologize.

Apologize for not being taller, for not attaining a height that the world has deemed a requirement for being a powerful, sexy, trustable man. Someone people naturally see as a leader.

My height is something I am and probably will always be aware of.
And though I don’t let it hold me back nor do I allow the insecurity it produces to drag me down it impacts me as much as it benefits me.

One small benefit it grants is that it does give me a small peek inside the world of other people who live in a context they can’t escape.

Because even though I can’t forget that I’m short.
I can forget that I’m white, that I’m a man, and that I’m cis-gendered.

Unlike shortness, these aspects disappear for me all the time.
I get to think, I’m just a person.

And my ability to forget these things are a distinct sign of the incredible privilege I experience in the world.

Sure I’m short and yes it does impact the people I date and the respect I’m given from time to time, but it’s nothing compared to the suffering caused by racism, sexism, genderism, or heterosexism.

As we go through these difficult times my height helps me remember that other people have it much worse than me. And while I can largely overcome my vertical challenges with a step stool and a bit of swagger, it’s going to take a lot more than that, if I want to live in a world where the most important context people live into, is related to the content of their character vs the color of their skin.

So yes I’m short and yes I’d like for you to pause and consider the judgments you make about short people and certainly to stop before you make a joke about it.

But I don’t want you to stop there. I want you to keep going and to consider the jokes or assumptions you make about all people. People of color, trans people, and blue-collar people.

Height might still be a thing you’re allowed to make fun of openly, but just because you have to hide your other prejudices doesn’t mean they don’t exist.

It is impossible to free of judgment and the very nature of assumptions is that you mostly don’t know you have them. So please slow down, become more responsible, and own up to the unwelcome things you naturally and with no effort think about these groups of people.

While racism is a systemic problem, you can address it personally every day by noticing your thoughts words and actions. It may not always be comfortable but I assure you, it’s definitely worth it.


Adam Quiney and I decided to write about the intersection between two aspects of our identity. I chose my height. This is my essay and I encourage you to go over to his profile and read his.


Are you interested in collaborating with me? I love writing with people. I love the challenge and enjoyment.

Because of my no woman vision quest right now I’m only collaborating with those who identify as men. If you’d like to jam on a common topic just drop me a comment or shoot me a message.

 

What I’m Creating (So I remember)

What I’m Creating (So I remember)

Love for myself
– Even when I’m alone
– Maybe even especially when I’m alone
– Even for the parts of me I’d rather not see or know or share about
– Maybe even especially for those parts

Depth of Practice
– Standing inside my practice fully and completely
– Choosing my practice and putting my whole life behind it
– Even when I don’t want to keep going
– Maybe even especially when I don’t want to keep going
– Learning to be ok with everything
– Learning to be ok with being lonely
– And horny
– And sad
– And hopeless
– And angry
– And lost
– And happy
– And content
– And bored
– Maybe especially learning to be ok with being bored
– Learning to be ok with things so I can be easier being around
– As well as easier for myself to be around me
– Maybe even especially for myself to be around me

To Become a Man
– A man others can count on and rely on
– When things are good or when things are tough
– Maybe even especially when things are tough
– Not just a man, but a man who shows up with heart, and love, and gentleness, and fierceness
– Not some other man, but who I am as a man
– Maybe even especially who I am as a man
– The kind of man other men can count on to be their brother
– The kind of man a woman can count on to hold her through all the sunny days and storms
– The kind of man a child can count on to stand for them and care for them and accept them
– The kind of man who can count on himself
– Maybe even especially the kind of man who can count on himself.
– The kind of man who’s own inner children and past versions can love and respect
– A man who makes art with his life
– Even if his life is not how he’d like it to be
– Maybe even especially if his life is not how he’s like it to be

I do this to remember that time by myself is precious. TIme to fully be with me and love me and penetrate all my feminine moods fully and completely with my own deep loving. Time to learn and discover and struggle and push and relax and feel all the ways I want to stretch into the world. I am not merely spending time by myself as I wait for someone. I am spending time with myself as I become myself and as I learn who myself truly is. For whether I’m alone or partnered I will always have to be with myself and to be with myself in love is of the highest calling.

This is why I am doing this for myself.

But I am also doing this to create a relationship with the feminine
And not just any relationship.

An incredible relationship
– Relationship as transformation
– Relationship as spiritual practice
– Relationship as a clearing for love, and joy, and friendship, and possibility
– Relationship as simplicity and happiness
– Relationship as a stand for expecting the best and getting it
– Not by complaint or suffering
– Not by pushing each other or driving each other mad
– But by loving each other, being humble enough to do our own work, and trusting the mirror that is our partner, when we are unwilling to see ourselves

Incredible sex
– Being fucked and fucking god
– God and goddess fucking
– Fun, playful, experimental sex
– Sex that heals
– Sex that lightens the load of life and opens space for pleasure in the world
– Sex that brings us closer together
– Sex that is simply fun, because fucking can be fun
– Sex with our broken hearts
– Sex to make a baby
– Sex when there simply isn’t time for it
– Sex because we know it matters even if we don’t totally feel like it at first

Family
– Two people with a shared culture
– Learning to love where we came from
– Even when where we came from drives us mad
– Maybe especially when where we came from drives us mad
– Three people, one a baby
– Losing ourselves in the spiritual practice of parenthood
– Making all the mistakes
– Teaching love through loving
– Letting go of all control
– Trying so hard to do it right and remembering how futile it is
– Falling in love with each other as parents
– Falling in love with myself as a parent
– Falling in love with a child again and again
– Even when they break my heart
– Maybe even especially when they break my heart
– Maybe another baby (or two?)

Life
– Taking trips to places we haven’t been
– Losing people we love
– Cooking new kinds of food
– Even when the recipes turn out bad
– Maybe even especially when the recipes turn out bad
– Inside jokes that no one will ever get
– Time with good friends
– Hard times with good friends
– Maybe even especially hard times with good friends
– Living in a home
– Making it our own even when we disagree with what our own should look like
– Maybe even especially when we don’t agree
– Owning pets that we will outlive
– Being with the loss of tiny beings of light
– Learning something new together
– Forgetting things together
– Wishing that it weren’t so easy to forget
– Learning anyway
– Maybe even especially learning anyway
– Losing ourselves to old age
– Maybe one of us dying suddenly
– Not knowing when we’ll die
– Having that as a reminder, to be here with one another, to spend time listening to the trees, to spend time slowly drinking water from a cool glass with sweat dripping down the edges, kissing just to kiss, finding new ways to tussle and dance with one another, learning to accept what is unacceptable and love what is unlovable, mostly in ourselves

This is what I’m creating. By letting go of not this. By spending 9 months by myself. By choosing to let go of knowing how this is going to get created. I offer this to the divine feminine, the divine masculine, to the empty space of the one bright mind.

I sacrifice my vision on the altar of your knowing. And I pray for the strength, the love, the courage, the humility, the willingness, the guidance, the support, and the grace to create it.

I sacrifice it knowing that I can’t possibly create this by being clever, by doing it right, or through any plan of my own.

I sacrifice it as I sacrifice my own life. To nothing at all. But what I choose. And how I choose to back my choice up with my life. I sacrifice it to the hopelessness that this will free me from suffering. Or change anything about how the world works.

I sacrifice it. And let the blood drip into my dreams and sleep. I put myself on the altar and leave a space open for who will join me even if the space remains empty forever. I let go of knowing. I try to know. And I let go again.

This is what I’m creating (So I remember)

Love,
Toku

 

Dear Son, You are a Racist

Dear Son/Daughter,

I write you this letter many years before your birth. Though I have no idea really if you’ll ever be born. I have yet to know who your mother is or where life will lead, but I wanted to write to you either way.

What I am about to tell you may be difficult to hear. In fact, you might not want to know it or even understand it. It may be that you need to return to this letter again and again, to really get what I’m talking about. And that’s ok.

Here we go . . .
My sweet, you are a racist.

The hard thing about telling you this is that you may think that you are a bad person for being a racist. You have by now probably learned that being racist is bad, that you shouldn’t comment on people’s race, or make racist jokes, or think of yourself as better than others.

I tell you this not to shame you or make you feel bad. I see in you such natural and incredible love for others, such sweet caring, such kindness, and such curiosity.

So know that I don’t love you any less, or think you worse for being a racist.

I too after all am a racist as are probably most of the people we know. My father was a racist and his father before him. Even a generation or two back this becomes more and more obvious, but it’s increasing subtlety does not change the truth of our racism.

And though being a racist isn’t exactly your fault. It can be your responsibility if you choose.

You might be wondering what I mean by calling you a racist.

A racist is simply someone who consciously or unconsciously participates in a system that favors one ‘superior or dominant’ race over another. And you and I have participated in this system our whole lives.

MY LIFE

I grew up in a place that was called ‘sheltered’. We often referred to that town as being in a bubble, the ‘Brentwood bubble’ we called it. And for a long time, I thought that what was on the outside of that bubble was life and real experience, but I have come to see that what was REALLY on the outside of that bubble was people of color.

Now it’s not your grandfather’s and grandmother’s fault that I grew up in this place, they chose a place with the best possible schools. The school I went to had test scores as high as any private school in the state of Tennessee. In fact, my high school was once listed in the top 100 schools in the country.

The problem is that in this country at the time I grew up (and likely still in the time you’re growing up) going to a ‘good school’ also meant going to a ‘white school’ (though because I’m white I get to avoid that tag altogether.) I could simply call it a good school.

Though coded inside this phrase ‘good school’ for most people saying my school was good or that my town was ‘sheltered’ also communicated that my school was ‘white,’ located in the suburbs (which are mostly white) and led by a staff of excellent teachers (which you’d be correct in assuming were also mostly white.)

The impact of this was that I grew up mostly around white people and lived in a very white world.

Yes, there were people of color in my school. I even participated in a diversity club called project understanding. I tried to grasp and fully get the whiteness of my circumstances more than most people. But it didn’t really have much impact.

Despite those efforts small and large I still developed and absorbed the culture of subtle white supremacy that surrounded me.

White spaces were better, safer, and more elite. And I came to believe the myths of meritocracy and individualism that hid from me the distinct and pervasive privilege I’ve enjoyed my whole life.

When a violent crime happened on campus my senior year, many in my school were scared and I can still remember how we were surprised that it had ‘happened here.’ Which I realize now was also a code for being surprised that it had happened in such a ‘white place’.

Had a stabbing occurred in a school in the middle of Nashville or at school with a large population of students of color I doubt anyone in my school would have batted an eye. More telling is that I doubt I would have batted an eye.

YOUR LIFE

I hope that in raising you I’ve done a better job of talking with you about race.

I hope I have encouraged us to live in a place where you have friends of color and have encouraged you to maintain those friendships. But even if I have been a paragon of racial diversity and understanding in raising you I no doubt have failed to overcome the strong social and cultural messages about race that are everywhere.

You have still grown up in a world in part little different than the world I grew up in.

Most of the images you’ve seen on TV and the movies are of white people. The books you’ve read have been largely about a white experience of the world. And I have no doubt that because of your intelligence and kindness you dream of having a life of joy and success which in our society is primarily about being in white spaces.

I’m not foolish enough to believe we live in a post-racial world or that the problems of racism will be solved before or even long after your birth.

Even though you are still young and have done so little, even if your mother and I have done more than most other parents, it still is likely not enough. Certainly not enough to exclude or exempt you from the system of privilege and preference that has oppressed and held down people of color for centuries.

And that’s perhaps the hardest thing about this news.

Because I want to blame myself or offer you a simple way to escape the burden of racism you bear. But I cannot.

Simply by being raised by a white father who himself was raised inside a system of racism means that you inherit this burden from me. It’s almost as if I had a genetic condition that I’ve passed onto you.

I say almost because I am certainly not free from fault.

I have on the gross level, laughed and told racist jokes, moved away from people of color out fear or anxiety, considered myself entitled because of my intelligence which really was a way of hiding the entitlement I felt for being white.

In fact, I’m sure there are racist and privileged thoughts and actions I’m not even aware of that I have participated in or perpetrated in my life. And I’m sure I will continue to think and say things that are subtly racist (though I’m committed to working on this)

On a subtle level, I’ve done very little to address racism in our country or our world.

I have mostly chosen to live in white spaces, talk to white people, make white friends. My chosen religion (Buddhism) and my chosen profession (coaching) are both overwhelmingly white in this country.

I did these things not thinking it had anything to do with my whiteness, but it’s clear to me now that that was at least one of the factors.

I enjoyed being in places where people were ‘like me’ and that really means that I enjoyed being around people who were white or that acted ‘white.’ And as a result, I have a personal culture that is built largely around this whiteness.

I am sure I have passed this onto you. And all of my attempts to change this or talk about this with you, while being full of goodwill and good intentions have not been enough.

You have inherited from me and from the world a system of racism, one in which if you do nothing will simply and likely continue. And again this is not your fault. I see in you so much hope and possibility for the world.

Yet you are a racist. As am I.

As are your grandparents and great grandparents and great-great-grandparents and further back almost as far as our history can see.

My hope is that you will feel the grief of this, that you will feel the weight of being a racist that I was able to avoid for so much of my life and that you will begin to work to resolve racism in your own life and in the world around you.

My hope is that you will see racism as a personal responsibility and something you can work to change rather than throwing up your hands in cynicism and resignation like so many people you and I both know.

Perhaps ending racism won’t be the major project of your life. It certainly hasn’t been the major project of my life, but even if it’s something we only keep in mind (a fact that is in and of itself a shining example of our privilege) I hope you take it seriously and work to change things.

It is not your fault that you are a racist. As J. Kēhaulani Kauanui, professor of American studies and anthropology at Wesleyan University, explained, “Racism is a structure, not an event.”

You are not a racist because of something you did or said or because of something that made you a bad person.

You are a racist because you have been born into a racist society and have both consciously and unconsciously participated in that system. I offer you this letter not to shame you, but so you can see what I for so many years did not. What I will likely forget about at some point after writing this letter to you and have to remember again.

In some ways, it’s so easy to forget that I’m white or that I have privilege or that I’m a racist. Our whole society is built around keeping this context a secret. (Not that this gives me or you a pass, I assure it does not, and if you were born a person of color you would be unable to ignore the racism that surrounds you every day. ) I simply admit that I will forget. I will benefit from privilege I do not see and I will pass this on to you.

My hope is that you will learn a bit more than I did, work a little bit harder than I did, and deconstruct a little bit more of this structure than I did in my life. Because racism is not the responsibility of people of color.

It is my responsibility and yours.

We are hurting people.

We have hurt them and will continue to hurt them.

And all we have to do is nothing.

All we have to do is forget and ignore and pretend, which are the easiest things to do.

So I implore you to remember, to notice, to work, not from fear of being a racist, but from the deeply felt, embodied understanding that you simply are one. And my hope is that from that understanding you can move forward from love to slowly change the world that you and I both love.

With Love,

Your Future Father