How I Shed My Skin (4 page)

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Authors: Jim Grimsley

BOOK: How I Shed My Skin
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Included in that machinery was my own secret, that I had something inside me that drew me to handsome boys rather than to pretty girls. Still I saw no connection between that and the other layers of difference that crumbled inside me as I watched the three new girls in our class. I had no words for these ideas, not yet.

Black and Proud

One morning the three girls rose from their desks to dance to the tune of the James Brown song, “Black and Proud.” Violet sang the chorus, “Say it loud, I'm black and I'm proud,” and they moved their bodies to the rhythm she set. I stared and felt the movement in my bones.

Their performance was impromptu, rising out of some moment of taunting and baiting across the classroom, our teacher out of the room, the classroom dividing as it often did between the mouthiest of the white boys and the black girls. Whatever instigated the dancing is lost to my memory, but it had to be some remark related to Black Power, to the coming revolution, or to the idea that slavery times were over and done. Someone made a remark that implied the girls were ashamed of their skin color, and they rose from their desks to perform the chorus of the song.

They danced in unison, the same moves, the same grace, without so much as a signal to show that they were coordinating with one another. Had they rehearsed the moment they could not have carried it off more completely. I, who had never danced any step more complicated than the Twist, was captivated and frightened in the same moment. These girls shared this dance, these lyrics, this feeling of pride. They shared this movement with each other. Such a moment had no parallel in my world, in which Baptists like me were supposed to avoid dancing at all costs. Excessive hip movements were known to be the work of the devil.

I can still see them standing beside their battered old desks, framed against those tall windows, their fluid bodies silhouetted against the pines outside.

There was a difference between the races, all right, or at least the trio told us so. White people had no soul and could not move. Black people had soul. The evidence was the way their bodies flowed when they danced, the way James Brown's body gyrated and shook, feeling every emotion of the motion, when he sang this anthem. He was black, he was proud, he could dance. We were white, we were uncertain, and we hardly dared to move.

The idea of soul would punctuate the next decade, and its importance was clear from the first time I heard the term. It was meant to provoke envy, to advertise the fact that black people possessed a spirit of life that white people did not, and to connect those who possessed it in an extended family of soul brothers and soul sisters. Anyone could share in its benefits—anyone could listen to soul music or visit a soul food restaurant—but not everyone could possess any amount of soul. The gatekeepers of soul were black people. They decided who had it and who did not.

The soul movement crossed the borders of race far more effectively than the Black Power movement in that many white teenagers found soul music and soul singers irresistible, and many of them coveted the idea of soul from afar. My white friends, when they learned of Black Power, had no idea what it meant and were largely frightened by the idea. The idea of soul, however, as embodied in crossover music from Motown, entered white culture from many directions, even in my closely proscribed world.

In that first moment in which I witnessed the Black Power dance of the three girls in my classroom, I could feel the impact in myself. Black Power was what these girls possessed and used. They knew us so much better than we knew them. They understood that standing and dancing was not part of us, that their pride in their black skin would mock us, that their ability to move and speak in these rhythms, unified without effort, would cow us into confusion. They understood the weakness of whiteness in these terms.

Furthermore, this strength of soul gave them the courage to confront us, here in our school room, a small pond of whiteness into which they had dropped themselves, uninvited, to make the point that our days of keeping them in their place were over. This was the message of those first weeks of Freedom of Choice, of tepid and partial desegregation. Even admitting three black girls into our midst had changed our world altogether.

The notion of white unity was mocked, though none of us could have said this in words. We had no unity. We were not, in fact, one white people united for any purpose. We were listless and silent in the face of the dance, in the joy these girls felt in expressing themselves. They were free. We were left to wonder what we were.

No one had taught me to be proud of my skin color. Perhaps that feeling was supposed to be inherent in the message of white superiority, or perhaps there never was any such creature as white pride. In that moment when the black girls danced, I felt only wonder and a touch of envy, and had absolutely no sense of solidarity with the white children around me, the ones with whom I had sat in these same classrooms for the previous five years. I had no desire to remain a sullen, motionless body in a desk. What I wanted was to learn to dance and to find out that I, too, had soul.

The Sign on the Wheelchair

By seventh grade, Marianne and I had developed our fantasy about telepathy with our favorite pop stars into a whole world system, including reincarnation, a communal mind, demons of the flame, and the beginnings of a fantasy history, parts of which I would change and employ in my own writings many years later. She had developed mind-to-mind contact with John Lennon, along with her original link to members of Herman's Hermits. I remained faithful to Davy Jones, though I would be heartbroken, near the end of the school term, to learn that
Th
e Monkees
television show would end at Season Two. I had also elaborated a long fantasy about being orphaned and adopted by William Shatner, or more precisely by the character he played on
Star Trek,
Captain James T. Kirk.

Marianne's mental link with John Lennon was a matter of some controversy between us, since, a few years earlier, he had made his infamous statement that the Beatles were more popular than Christ. As a young Baptist I was obliged to be shocked and appalled by the statement, and had dutifully frowned on the Beatles ever since. Marianne, being an Episcopalian, took a more lofty view. I had only a vague idea what was involved in her church, and wondered whether she was actually a Catholic, a religion that was akin to devil worship, according to my mother.

Our seventh-grade classroom was the same room we had used for sixth grade, due to the fact that Judah Carl Johnson was still one of our classmates and there was no wheelchair access for the second floor. Judah Carl was one of those Southern sons who was always known by both his given names, and he had been confined to a wheelchair all his life. He wore heavy black glasses on his small, white face, and sat with his elbows sprawled on the chair and his knees looking sharp and useless. He spoke as if he could not quite draw breath. Each morning he was rolled into the back of the room by his mother, and joined in the class by his sister Pat, who had been part of our cohort all along. The Johnsons were a large family living in a tiny house, their front yard cluttered with old cars and appliances, sitting close to the road called 10 Mile Fork. There were a lot of Johnson children, Judah Carl being the oldest. He had been in my sister's class, one year ahead of me, but failed that grade. Because of him we had a ramp leading up the steps on one side of the building, and the principal had shifted our classrooms so that the seventh grade now met on the first floor of the building. We had all looked forward to being upstairs, the domain of the older kids.

Judah Carl was an angry, unmotivated student, and most of us in class were afraid of him, partly because of his handicap, and partly because he was older and a stranger to our group. He kept to himself, rarely spoke in class, adjusted his glasses from time to time, and doodled in his notebook. Teachers rarely called on him for much in the way of class participation. When he talked, his voice was reedy, bespeaking the effort with which he produced it, his lungs weak. Exactly what was wrong with him I never knew. I would be ashamed today to feel so little empathy for one so embattled, but I was a merciless twelve-year-old, caught up in my own head, and I did not like him for the simple reason that I considered him to be an intruder. It was wrong for him to be in the same class with his sister. He was one of the older kids and he should not have failed a grade. There was no logic to my dislike.

During that year, Freedom of Choice was still in force and Jones County still operated two school systems, one for black students and one for white. Violet had returned to the black school, J. W. Willie Elementary, for her seventh-grade term, but Rhonda and Ursula remained in the white school, in my class.

That our school was white, intended for white children and white teachers, remained fixed in my mind even after a year in the classroom with the black girls, and I suspect the same was true in the minds of my classmates. I had made friends with two children, but this did not change me in terms of my interior, or in terms of my training, after only one year. If I had been asked to describe what was going on in my school, I would have said that the black girls had decided to come to the white school because it was better than their old school, or something similar. I would have fallen back on the old assumption that black people really wanted to be white and that this desire was the driver of Freedom of Choice and integration. My state of enlightenment was not advanced.

But by seventh grade the world had started to impinge on my consciousness, as slowly I learned of the riots that were sweeping the country, one black ghetto after another going up in smoke. I had an inkling of poverty as a national problem now, thanks to the Great Society of President Johnson, and I heard about something called discrimination when I listened to the news. Discrimination was something that white people did to black people to keep them in a subordinate place. An example of discrimination was using a word like
nigger.

Furthermore, the country was fighting a war in Vietnam, and had been doing so for some time, and this event became more and more vivid as the next year passed. This was a war that had suddenly surrounded us all like a fog, coming from all sides, without a beginning or an end. I heard that we were in the war before I ever heard about Vietnam or what it had to do with my friends or me. One of my cousins died in the war that year. He was much older than I, and I never knew him, but I could see the impact of his death on my father and mother.

Our seventh-grade teacher was Mrs. Ferguson, the same person who had taught us math the year before, a woman who was smart and fierce, sharp-tongued when crossed or when making a point, contemptuous of ignorance, demanding of discipline. She was the school's best teacher of mathematics, and liked precision in speech and thought. She was a world away from Mr. Vaughn's slack posture and liver spots, his inability to draw respect and lack of talent for keeping order. His classroom had been a muddled affair in which little really mattered other than that we show up and sit in our desks without wrestling or hurling one another through the windows. Under Mrs. Ferguson, we learned.

The fact that I now considered Rhonda and Ursula to be friends, that we talked, sat near each other, studied in class together, and discussed our favorite television shows and music, meant that I had learned to accept our day-to-day association. I had grown in some ways, but I had yet to examine my comfortable world. I never imagined what this classroom was like for them, sitting there among us, knowing, far better than I did, who was friendly to them and who was not. Knowing that many of us were thinking of them as unwelcome niggers, even if we were not allowed to say so. I had no inkling yet of the world in which Rhonda and Ursula really lived. What I knew of black people in Jones County was still limited to these two girls and the inside of this classroom. Behind them was the mystery of their parents, their families, the other people they knew, their church, their kitchens, their suppers, breakfasts, Sunday dinners.

Judah Carl personified hatred in some ways, and suffering in others. He drew the Confederate Stars and Bars on his notebook. This might have endeared him to many of the kids in school, since there was often a good deal of talk about the South rising again in our classroom. But Judah Carl was withdrawn into his own world, speaking little to anyone, making no attempt toward friendship. He appeared to have little relationship to his siblings, and Pam, his sister, who had been my classmate since first grade, hardly spoke to him.

One day he came to school with a piece of cardboard in the side of his wheelchair with the words
I HATE NIGGERS
scrawled in dark marker.

This is an incident that I remember far too dimly, a fact that speaks to the speed with which Mrs. Ferguson eliminated the problem. I do not know whether Rhonda or Ursula ever saw the sign or heard of it, thought I expect they did. Judah Carl was wheeled to the principal's office very quickly, almost directly after I read the sign myself. Few members of the class knew why Mrs. Ferguson took him out of class, and those who did barely had time to snicker.

His posture as Mrs. Ferguson wheeled him away was unchanged. Whatever birth defect he suffered from had caused his body to atrophy from disuse, so that he appeared sunken into himself, his hands moving almost of their own accord. He adjusted his black-framed glasses and settled deeper into the chair.

When he returned, his face was flushed red, his expression sullen, and the sign was nowhere to be seen.

The fact of Judah Carl's open hatred remained with us in the classroom through that day. He had expressed something that others felt, too, and the words echoed even when the sign was gone.

Mrs. Ferguson had a grim and unhappy face. She looked as if she did not exactly know what to do. This was a fearful revelation, that she could find herself without a clear direction, she who was always so certain and sure. She had acted to stifle this moment of ugly expression to preserve the order of the classroom and to maintain the important layer of courtesy with which Southern transactions were tinted. I am certain she had real concern for Rhonda and Ursula and their feelings in this moment. But even worse was the breach of good order that would have resulted from a confrontation between the girls and Judah Carl—and, by implication, with the rest of us. This was what she was at pains to prevent.

Polite Southerners did not use the word
nigger;
there was no one better mannered than Mrs. Ferguson, and she was shocked at the attempt, just as she would have been if Judah Carl had printed
I HATE BITCHES
on his sign.

Looking backward, what I see is that my classroom, placid on the surface, was in fact laced with hatred. Judah Carl attempted to express his feelings openly and so committed a breach of etiquette for which he was reprimanded. But the school made no effort beyond the maintenance of discipline and politeness to educate us about our need to accept one another. The world of white adults remained mostly mum on the issue of integration, leaving us, their children, to puzzle out the meaning of these changes on our own. We were too young for the task, and most of us simply tried to figure out what the adults wanted us to think, taking in their ideas, imitating their hatreds and prejudices.

After that day, Judah Carl sank back into his wheelchair, remote and unhappy, less inclined than ever to do his homework, to speak in class, to smile. Steps had been taken to change his behavior. No one had the power to change what he thought.

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