Lifestyle

Our Power of Language

“The problem isn’t the word, it’s the way we treat people who we use that word to describe.”

After watching this great segment from the Daily Show the other day, I started thinking more about how some of our everyday language has changed. Homeless people are now referred to as unhoused and the word “retarded” is no longer socially acceptable language when referring to people with intellectual disabilities. Of course, there is also the evolving language used for LGBT folks and people of color.

I had a conversation recently with a friend who works in tenant’s rights advocacy about why saying “the projects” is no longer acceptable when referring to subsidized housing. Instead, she prefers to say “affordable housing” because that is really what it is – affordable housing for low-income folks. “The Projects” unfortunately comes with a lot of historically racist and classist baggage. According to her, saying affordable housing helps to destigmatize and reclarify this type of housing for both residents and non-residents.

I’m still not sure if changing the language around every few years will change how people think or treat people living under those circumstances, but that is just me.

Seeing America Slowly

A couple of weeks ago I hosted a Zoom event with my neighbor Alan Wright who just fulfilled his lifelong dream of cycling cross-country. He started his solo trip on May 22 in Boston and completed the journey on August 5 in Seaside, Oregon. He used his trip to bring awareness to climate change and raise funds for the Boston cycling nonprofit Bikes Not Bombs. Alan rode more than 4,200 miles over 73 days. That was only half the trip. After riding across the country, Alan saw America from another vantage point: he rode Amtrak from Oregon home to Boston. Alan talks about his trip in his presentation “Seeing America Slowly.”

Cycling the Underground Railroad

One of my new year’s resolutions is to cycle more.  I happened upon this great interview recently with Eric Cedeno aka Bicycle Nomad.  He is a cyclist from Phoenix who does cross-country cycling tours around the country.  He just completed a tour of the Underground Railroad from New Orleans to Niagara Falls.  This is the type of trip I would love to do in the near future!

2020: My Year in Review

I posted the top ten blog posts my readers seem to like reading based on my website metrics.  A few of them are articles I wrote before 2020.

Happy Holidays and without further ado:

  1. Pose: Race and Ball Culture
  2. Things To Do Before Hiring A Ghostwriter
  3. (Really) Support Black-Owned Bookstores
  4. Cycling Isn’t Freedom For Everyone
  5. ACT-UP, Gran Fury & The Legacy of HIV/AIDS Activist Branding
  6. Pride Is About Authentic Accountability
  7. Why I Love Being a Census-Taker
  8. Why The Media Shouldn’t Do Revisionist History
  9. On Slave Plantations and Revisionist History
  10. What Mass Incarceration in America Looks Like