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Constance Dykhuizen
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Oh, the places you'll go!

While I was traveling in Africa last month, I was more acutely aware of how differently individuals can experience the same physical terrain.  I found an Ernest Hemingway quote I thought about retweeting, because it summed up my time well: "I never knew of a morning in Africa when I woke up that I was not happy." On second thought, it seemed like a ridiculous, reductive thing to say about a diverse, complex continent. Perhaps I'm overthinking it, but I've too often not thought, or simply not known, how privileged my experiences of places have been and run my mouth about it. 

I was once showing a friend my photos of time at a monastery in the desert outside Santa Fe. You should go! I raved. You'd love it! I insisted. She got quiet. It was clear she wasn't super into it. I kept pushing, trying to convince her. She slowly started telling me about how she had first walked into America, through the beginning of that same desert, and how it was a journey that almost killed her. I didn't know. She left her home country in Central America where she toiled every day in rice fields and still didn't have enough food for her family. She left a child and parents behind. She made it to Mexico only to be almost trafficked, but was mercifully able to get away. She recalled days of walking in the desert, thirsty and scared. I was showing her pictures of the same terrain that brings back trauma, I thought, aghast. Trigger terrain. I go to the desert to disconnect, to feel small under the sky and to hear from God. This dissonance is difficult to even comprehend -- what offers me safety offers my friend hostility and fear. She will never be safe in that desert. She isn't even yet safe in the city she lives in -- vulnerable to those who would manipulate her or a country that would expel her. I can't take for granted that everyone will experience what I experience. What I've seen and where I've been is only that -- a one-time thing, not available to everyone because of their nationality, the color of their skin, their very identity.

Here's another display of my empathetic cultural sensitivity. I spend a lot of time with the refugee community in Austin. One time I was trying to identify, trying to connect, with a teenaged friend who was a refugee in Kuala Lumpur after leaving Burma. I was going on and on about the food and the city, trying to find some common ground, and she quietly said, "Malaysia was like a hell, and I'm never going back there." Oh, so we aren't going to have a bonding moment over the noodles, then? I thought lamely. She told me that her family of six children lived crammed in an apartment and rarely left for fear of being harassed by the Malaysian police. She mentioned something about having to be afraid of getting attacked in elevators that I neither understood nor cared to. She had never eaten at a Malaysian restaurant or gone to the bird park; she lived those years in fear for her life and her family's lives. I have vacationed there multiple times, the only real difference being my passport and my money. 

There is deep injustice in this. I can't explain or defend why I can seek spirituality in the desert, hunt down grilled stingray in Kuala Lumpur or travel just about anywhere in the world with my American passport. And I can no longer assume that my experience of the world is transferrable. I can't invite friends to come along, can't connect with them on similar experiences. Some things will never be available to them. In my younger days, I think this prevented me from accepting who I was or where I came from. I rejected my privilege, acted like I could pretend to not have it. I'm just like you! I wanted to claim so badly. But that was an exercise in the ridiculous as well. I'm still white. Still able to travel anywhere. To me, there's no point acting like surface solidarity has a transformative effect on the world around us. 

My friends are happy for me, too. That's the heartbreaking thing. They're excited and inquisitive when I go to Burma even if they can't. Their acceptance and celebration of me -- even though I am more privileged than they are, even though I unfairly have access to things that they might never experience -- is the most humbling grace I have been offered. They have taught me how truly undeserving I am, but that they will love me anyway.

Truly, I never knew of a morning I woke up in Africa that I was not happy. But I fear that puts me in the same naive and imperialist company as Hemingway, Theodore Roosevelt and Cecil the lion's killer. My African trip included a lot of "Oh, isn't that quaint! Charming! Adorable!" and then you realize a one room schoolhouse isn't so Little House on the Prairie and more none of these children will ever go to college. It's the danger of a single story. The danger of movies that romanticized colonialism. I will still go to places my friends cannot go. But this time, instead, I try to start with their experiences instead of leading with mine. More questions, less declarations. I am grateful for what I get to experience, but I cannot defend the system that perpetuates my privilege. I'm anxious about trying to remain separate from it, but even that won't help. I think that anxiety leads to me trying to be understood rather than trying to understand. And that's the opposite of why we travel. 

 

 

Monday 08.10.15
Posted by constance dykhuizen
Comments: 2
 

Out of Africa

Right now I'm in Kenya for the first time since my third grade heart got set on coming since my teacher, a former missionary here, described buffalo gorings and snakes being cut open to reveal live babies. Obviously, I had to go. Kenya is my 30th country. I'm super excited to be here working on photo stories for The Adventure Project and Africa New Life as well as touring schools with The Nobelity Project. Ostensibly, this trip is for work, but really, I was eager to come and explore on my own.

Last week I traveled briefly with a person who, I can only imagine, carries a lot of white guilt or self delusion or something, because he just didn't get it. When we passed by schools, he lobbed soccer balls into hordes of children and videotaped it. Kind of like throwing feed to koi, it caused thrashing and fights. Hopefully the balls didn't end up deflated and none of the kids were injured. Hopefully the kids don't grow up expecting this Santa aberration whenever they see cars of white people pass by. Later that evening, the guy walked up to a perfectly normal looking person in the parking lot outside a grocery store and handed them 500 Kenyan shillings and wished them the best. Because, well, I don't know why -- they were Kenyan? they were black? Somehow, he had decided that they deserved his charity. I was gobsmacked. 

The most stomach churning part came when we passed an accident and there was a dead guy face down in the road (which I've seen more times than I would like while traveling abroad) and the guy in our van shutter-clicked the whole way through like the medical examiner. What the hell is he going to do with those photos? How is he going to explain it when those come up on his screen saver? Not everything is a photo opportunity. Around this point, I began to wonder if maybe he's just a bad person all-around and not simply a bad tourist. 

The kicker (oh yeah, this was all within about 36 hours) came when our team was working on a photo shoot, taking beautiful pictures of a family in their garden that had become more green and productive with the purchase of a water pump we are promoting. The guy took one of the producers aside and asked if the photo subject should change clothes because she didn't look poor enough. Forcryingout... I didn't ask him to change out of his fully ventilated REI safari outfit because he didn't look cool enough. Since when is it appropriate to tell people how they should dress in their own homes? And poor doesn't mean undignified, for goodness' sake. 

I say all of this not really to dump on the guy (but while we're at it!), but to explain why I didn't come to Africa. I didn't come to save anyone, offer anyone money, to take pictures of terrible things or to convince myself that I am different from anyone. I didn't come with the expectation of poor people looking poor or commanding my sympathy. I came because Kenya is freaking awesome. So often I tell people that I'm headed to (some developing country), and they say "Oh that's so nice of you," automatically assuming that I'm making myself miserable or doing someone a solid by visiting their shitty country. I truly just love places that some people assume are only mission-trip worthy. There's beautiful hiking in Haiti. Rwandan bird watching is top-notch. Some of the best, most luxurious (and, okay, the worst) experiences of my life have been in India. I go to Cuba for the beaches, Nepal for the scenery and Malaysia has the best street food you could hope for.

If anything, while traveling I rely on the mercies of others -- endless cups of tea, directions, translations, borrowed phone minutes.  All of this from people who might have less money than I do, but they share of their country and themselves with me. I didn't come here for them, I came here for me. And that's okay, I think. There's a glorification of selfless travel, of the typical three days of "building" a school or "digging" a well with a day of beach and shopping at the end, that is truly misguided. Travel is enough. Travel responsibly, sustainably, lightly, respectfully, humbly, generously. That is what other countries want from us as Americans, I think. They don't want our charity; they want our tourism and our respect as equals. Leave the soccer balls and the vented safari hats at home and just be yourself. Unless you truly can't help yourself. Then you should go to Europe and a French person can look down on you for being tasteless. What goes around comes around. 

 

 

 

Monday 07.06.15
Posted by constance dykhuizen
Comments: 1
 

Everything is Broken

One day I noticed kids torturing a small kitten at the school in rural Thailand where I taught English and safe sex and pretty much anything they would let me get away with. The boys were throwing things at it, handling it roughly, and the poor, malnourished thing already looked close to death without their help. I scooped the kitten up in a box, drawing lots of stares and comments from the students, who were used to the tall white woman behaving strangely. Teachers hold a position of high honor in Thai society. When children approach their teachers' desks, some teachers require that they do so on their knees, as if the kids weren't already short enough to delineate the difference in worth. I never asked my kids to get on their knees, and, in fact, I would sometimes sit on the floor with them, which really just made everyone uncomfortable. The kids more so than anyone, I think. I did other undignified things like play with the kids at recess instead of eating in the teacher's lounge and said hello to them before they said hi to me (another sign of respect, kids have to wai adults before adults say hi to them). This completely upset the social order, and teachers were completely nonplussed that I would give away my power, possibly even their power, with my American egalitarianism. Anyway. No one respected me. That's the point.

So I scoop up this disgusting kitten from the kids that were tormenting it to prove yet another point. Not only will I not conform to your hierarchy, but I also want to prove that animals have value and we should not pick them up by their tails, etc. I will take this kitten to the vet and show everyone that, with a little bit of care, things can flourish. This was going to be a great object lesson, and I would get a pet cat to eat all the lizards in my house. Win win. Someone found me a cardboard box and I placed the cat inside. It slid around the slick surface and meowed pitifully. I drove towards town with a new sense of purpose and the box in the seat next to me. Save cat. Prove to everyone that I can save things, that animals have value. I took the cat to the vet in town. They almost didn't even accept the cat. From what I could tell, they were mainly a boarding service for small toy breed dogs wearing clothes. There is a hierarchy in the animal world as well in Thailand. The most useless but most adorable animals like bunnies and Pomeranians are venerated and dressed in shoes and frilly dresses. Potentially useful animals like oxen and strong guard dogs are worked hard or ignored. I set my scrawny cat on the counter and managed to get across that I wanted the cat to be taken care of, no expense spared. Don't worry -- I paid cash for human operations in Thailand so this, at worst, would have cost about $20. They took the cat begrudgingly, I think, but I was still convinced that with a little bit of medicine, the cat would be fine. 

Wouldn't you know it, they called me the next morning and told me to come pay and collect my dead cat. They handed me back the same box that was somewhat lighter (I wonder how much a cat's soul weighs), but still very much full of dead cat. I paid what I owed and said thanks, though I'm not sure for what. I wonder if they even tried to save it. I made Phillip participate in a somber ceremony and burial underneath the palm trees where we hung our laundry. I never mentioned it to my students and they never asked, because I'm sure they knew the outcome all along. Also, as an aside, trying to prove a point in someone else's cultural context just makes you look foolish. I'm still not comfortable having kids kneel or bow before me, but I do know that it's up to me to conform and not the other way around. 

The dead cat situation is analogous to my career of being helpful. Truly, all I want to do is help, but sometimes it just feels like everything dies anyway, you know? Right now, I don't even want to believe that taking a cat to the vet will make a difference because it creates false expectations. When it comes to the earthquakes in Nepal, my first response is to go, to help, but then I realize there's nothing for me to do. My friends bear such heavy burdens, and I can feel the weight, but can't alleviate their suffering. It is a privilege to be an idealist, to have come from a world that, for the most part, if you go with the flow, you will be successful and safe. If someone reminds me of that one starfish that Jesus or whoever rescued from the beach, I will punch them in the neck. Today I am feeling burdens, thinking of that poor cat and wishing for a victory. 

Tuesday 05.12.15
Posted by constance dykhuizen
Comments: 2
 

0 to 100/The Catch Up

The best part of SXSW for me was the taxi rides home. I have been trying to come up with a summary of SXSW -- the content, the brands, the takeaways -- but really, it was a lot of noise I'm still sorting through. People from all over the world descend on Austin to teach and learn, and I go to see what rings true and how I can respond to the ideas and technologies. I mainly seek out the global impact content. The best parts, like most conferences, were the human moments. My typical SXSW mood swings mirror those of a school year -- first day, there early with paper and a pen, eager to learn. On the last day, I don't think I believe in school anymore and I need to get out in the REAL world.

One night, I flagged a taxi downtown on the way home from a show. Being nosy, I asked the driver where he was from, and he told me Pakistan.  Somehow, in four miles, we ended up talking about how the Taliban killed his younger brother and he had to uproot and bring his family to Austin. This guy should have a panel. He has started businesses, has opinions on his country's politics and is working to support his family. The Amnesty International panel I went to just talked at me and asked for dollars and Tweets so they could continue their work. I do believe that Amnesty is a great org doing essential work, but I so tire of third and fourth and hundredth person accounts of change that's needed in the world. 

A few nights later, after a Ludacris concert (lots of conflicted self loathing and simultaneous dancing going on), I caught another taxi home. Again, I asked the driver where he was from originally. Somalia. I told him I had a Somali friend in Austin named Ayan. Immediately, he stopped the fare and said, "Ayan is my sister. You are my family. I will not take your money." Now, they are not really related, but he meant that he knew my friend and this made us irreversibly connected. He kept repeating that we are family now, that he should have me over for dinner and that if he could, he would invite me to Somalia. I was truly touched.  This was a rare glimpse of being loved and accepted in a week of anonymity and FOMO. 

SXSW makes me wonder if it's just me that's irrelevant or everyone. I am so easily seduced by the honor and glory I recognize. How do I get noticed? But really, what is the point of all this technology and marketing dollars and panels -- is it essential? Is it fruitful? Do you have to talk about the work that you're doing and make some noise, as the Neiman's panel I went to was called. Now, clearly there is a point and I wasn't forced to buy a badge. I heard really amazing women (yes, I mainly went to hear women) talk about work they are doing. The connectedness of the Internet matters and aggregated Tweets can aid a revolution, but can't you just do your work quietly? Can you serve and love people without telling anyone about it? It was so wonderful to be reminded that here in Austin, in my city, there are men and women full of knowledge and their own stories of ways they have changed the world for themselves, their families and their communities. People who have lived through war, who have uprooted successful careers and lives to bravely come and live in a new place. These connections to these taxi drivers having their own global impact was, I guess, worth the price of admission to me. These are the teachers, the inspirations and the authentic lives I should try to emulate. They inspire me to be relevant, to do good work and to be okay with not talking about it. I will not forget their resiliency or kindness. I will also never forget meeting Cookie Monster. If all of SXSW convened and the stars aligned just so I could meet the OG of Sesame Street, that's okay by me. 

Wednesday 03.25.15
Posted by constance dykhuizen
Comments: 1
 

R+L Malaysia Blog (on batik)

"Aziz Awang, or "pink house guy" as he is affectionately referred to, is a true artist. Just arriving at his (you guessed it) pink house, painted coconuts hang from the trees and cages of birds chirp their greetings. Everything is a display: antlers used to display swords, birds made out of coconut husks a mannequin in full regalia..." Read the rest on the Raven + Lily blog. 

Monday 03.23.15
Posted by constance dykhuizen
Comments: 1
 

A Tale of Two Cities

My life is weird. My day job is philanthropy -- private planes. private chefs, PRIVACY. I consider my real calling to be building relationships and seeking justice for the poor. Seemingly related, but in entirely different zip codes. I drive directly from work in Westlake where I'm drinking Chateau Lafite to the home of a refugee on the east side where I'm served scalding black tea. I love both. I love that I am welcomed in both. I love serving in both. I love the room service in one but the community in the other. 

My friend Tarik told me when we were in Trenchtown, Jamaica, "Girl, whenever you land, you head straight for the ghetto." Guilty. It's where the best food usually is. But I also am from Dallas and have a Neiman Marcus credit card that I can't seem to part with. People say that my life is glamorous #thanksInstagram, but it also includes a heavy dose of sitting in clinic waiting rooms with refugees with no insurance, which prompts me to do horribly undignified things like scream at healthcare providers for canceling appointments. I sit on the floor and read with kids. I cry with women who have lost their husbands or who are survivors of sexual violence. I try to advocate for people and just find myself stuck between my position of privilege, my friends and the system that seems designed to keep them out. I travel to places which are beautiful, yes, but I also get diseases more often than not. Whether I'm in East or West Austin or traveling somewhere wonderful and tragic, I need help processing it. I realized that 2014 was a year of ridiculous, unconnected experiences that I struggle to make sense of. How can I fly first class and remain authentically broken for friends who can't feed their children? I don't know. SOMEONE TELL ME PLEASE. I've tried to remain squarely in one camp or the other, but that gets me nowhere because there's not a lot of overlap socially or geographically. And there is truly nothing worse than a sanctimonious rich person, unless it's a sanctimonious poor person. All I can say for sure is that God is sovereign and He is everywhere. So I wander within and between both worlds, feeling lucky as hell to be wherever I am. I just hope the food is good.

 

Tuesday 02.17.15
Posted by constance dykhuizen
Comments: 18
 
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