Saturday, October 9, 2010

Do you wear the mask!

One of my favorite poems is by Paul Laurence Dunbar and it is called We Wear the Mask.  It goes like this:

WE wear the mask that grins and lies,
    It hides our cheeks and shades our eyes,—
    This debt we pay to human guile;
    With torn and bleeding hearts we smile,
    And mouth with myriad subtleties.
    Why should the world be over-wise,
    In counting all our tears and sighs?
    Nay, let them only see us, while
            We wear the mask.
    We smile, but, O great Christ, our cries
    To thee from tortured souls arise.
    We sing, but oh the clay is vile
    Beneath our feet, and long the mile;
    But let the world dream otherwise,
            We wear the mask!

I am a true believer in the power of words and oh how these words continue to stand the test of time.  Too many of us "wear the mask".  We mask ourselves and live in a state of denial about who we truly are.  Others may see it, especially those closest to us, but it is often too difficult to accept the criticism.  It is also hard to accept the fact that the people we are drawn to and who we draw unto us...are merely a reflection of who we are!  Whoa...that's deep!

Audrey Chapman (WHUR) did a fantastic show today on just this topic.  She and Rev. Dr. Leonard Smith of Arlington, VA talked about the importance of doing "the work" to truly unmask yourself.  It was mentioned on the show that it is "hard work hiding from yourself'"!  Boy...you can say that again!  How can you criticize what someone else is doing when you are engaging in the same behavior?  How can you be nice to folks at church and treat your family like dirt?  How can you speak to people in an ugly manner and call yourself a professional?  How can you have a strong mother-daughter (father-son) relationship with a woman (man) who is not your own and never even speak with your own daughter (son)?  How can you claim to care about children and continually under educate them so that they will not have a fighting chance in life?  Here is a biggie...how can you claim you love someone, yet hurt them physically, emotionally, and or spiritually?  Here is the answer....YOU CAN'T! 

Take that mask off and like the kids say...stop frontin'!  There are many things in life that hurt us or bring us pain, but it does not have to define who we are.  The more you hide from it...the bigger the toll it will take on you and those around you.  It's okay to take a look at who you truly are and be THAT person!  It does not make you bad or good...it makes you who you are!  Celebrate that person and whatever comes with it!  If you have a tendency to be short tempered...that's okay, but you must learn that just because that's who you are..it DOES NOT give you the right to allow your short temper to hurt or hinder others.  Adopt strategies for what you will do when your temper becomes short.  Give yourself permission to take a "time out", but more importantly embrace the practices that will help you identify where that temper stems from.  Eventually, you may be able to eliminate that trait all together, but it does take work! 

I wear a mask often.  Of course, there are situations where it is not appropriate to reveal all the facets of you (i.e. work), but it is important to know how all the parts of you impact all the parts of your life whether at work, home, church; within civic groups, sororities, fraternities, etc.  However, I know over the years, really since I was a little girl, I learned how to darn that mask early on to cover up so many things that I thought I would be judged for if they were to get out.  What I failed to realize was that many of those things were NOT a reflection of me and they did not determine who I was then nor who I am now.  It is HARD shedding that mask, but I plan on doing it because I am a really cool person and I want to get to know myself better!  How about you...do you want to shed your mask? Feel free to leave your comments!

2 comments:

  1. First you know I love that poem!

    I went natural 4 years ago. That was when I finally felt the wrath of taking off a mask. WHOA! did people hate it. That's one thing about taking of a mask, it makes others around you uncomfortable. Those closest to you have no idea how to react. It help me to really start to think critically and deeply about who I was. Amazing how one hair change can spark so much. My eyes were opened to how much emphasis was placed on something so trivial. Once, that lye"Ing" mask was removed I finally got to embrace and be comfortable in my own skin. This was something I had often struggled with before.

    All my life hair had been so important to my family, (ie., how long, how straight ect...) Can I say it was a burden lifted, WEIGHT REMOVED when I went natural. I had to come face to face with me "Bald headed with no perm. I had to learn to walk with my head up high.

    Now, I have a feeling like no other. For me, I don't have to pretend to fit in. I am free to be. Like it or not:) I choose to embrace the natural me.

    Of course that was only one layer! There are others waiting in the wind.

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  2. I love it Shantha! You and Indie Arie remind us...We Are Not Our Hair! That is a big issue and like you said...it really is a mask for so many other deep things for "us" as a people. Bravo to you!

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