I do not think my sophomore+ students will be totally satisfied until there is a public leak in my tear ducts. Really! “I know it would’ve shown my humanity, but I refuse [to cry]!” That was my response moments ago after a student’s Beautiful Black Faces collage presentation.
The assignment
was simple. Turn the classroom into a museum of beautiful Black faces. Create
a collage. On the board, affix cut-outs from newspapers/magazines or print-outs from
the internet. Be intentional in your
approach, whatever and however that might look for you. Be prepared to either
write about or discuss your collage.
One student, Sahmir (pseudonym) portrayed Black people who, in recent memory, lost or took their own lives. He explained that many of the people on his collage chose to end their lives as the result of cyber
bulling, bullying in general, or just decided that life was no longer worth
living. He then chose to share with the class that upon the death of his own
mother some years ago, he, too, contemplated suicide. He admitted that he was
too scared to actually cut himself or make any other attempts but that he
struggled with the thoughts. “I thought, well since she’s not here anymore, why
should I?”
He credits his overcoming these thoughts to the support and love of his grandmother who conveyed that he would be a coward; that after surviving many other adversities since birth he’d take the easy way out and kill himself. This, he says, woke him up, and caused him to realize that he did have people for whom and reasons to live.
He credits his overcoming these thoughts to the support and love of his grandmother who conveyed that he would be a coward; that after surviving many other adversities since birth he’d take the easy way out and kill himself. This, he says, woke him up, and caused him to realize that he did have people for whom and reasons to live.
Sahmir's collage |
After several spell-bounding seconds…
“Wow! That. Was.
Powerful!” was all I could muster. As we all sat and took in the moment, one of
my other students raised his hand to comment on Sahmir's presentation. He remarked
that he also lost a parent some years ago, his father. He admitted to
struggling to come to grips with this new reality, that his rock,
his dad was no longer here. Like Sahmir, he also had his grandmother, along
with his mother and brother to live for and concluded that suicide was not an
option. With that, he shared some words of advice and encouragement from the
perspective of one who experienced similar thoughts and feelings.
At this point,
the class sat in silent, reflective contemplation. Something was happening in
the room. Something organic. Healing? Release? A renewed desire to hold loved
ones closer? The raised hand of another classmate temporarily interrupted our thoughts.
At this point I was really struggling to keep it together.
This third
student shared with the presenter and with the rest of us how she lost her mom
five years ago. Cancer. She didn’t know if she’d be with her father, in foster
care, or wherever. She expressed how she struggled with what and how to feel; what
it would now mean to live in a world where her mom was no longer present. She
could relate with her peers in their quest to try and make sense of loss and the
uncertainty of what would come next.
As they each
shared their experiences, their courage was on full display for all of us to observe
and it was a sight to behold. I wrote down as much of this as fast as I could
once class was over so that I wouldn’t forget some of the exact words and feelings
of the moment. Revisiting this more than a week later, the memory and feelings
of that class period are just as palpable and raw now as they were then.
“I just want to
say that your strength, each of you, is AMAZING! I admire your courage and your
willingness to share some of the most intimate details of your life with us,
because you definitely did not have to!” Those were my exact words to them. Later I would reflect on how much I got to know some of them, their lives and their loss, through this art assignment. I would also reflect on how comfortable they felt sharing such very personal, unobservable details of their lives with me, with us. After
several more silent seconds, we continued with the rest of class. How? I don’t
remember.
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