I
recently submitted an SA Speaks for our
regional student affairs conference. What’s that? Well it’s a like a 10 minute
speech/conversation/talk that offers presenters and participants an innovative look at important
topics and a means to spread ideas about how we can change the student
affairs profession and transform learning in higher education…because
professional development. I’m still waiting to hear back about it.
What’s
the topic? Glad you wondered. It’s about my last day as a student affairs
professional. I know what you’re thinking, you quit? Nah,
I haven’t. But I have thought it over, and over, and over…but
there is no other way I could imagine my professional life – at this point
at least.
When
I first decided, intentionally, that I would become a Student Affairs
Professional, I had all the hope in the world. All of it. I mean, before Barack
Obama was like a thing we all terribly miss now, I
believed it would be me who would inspire a man/woman like him. That
something I did, via all this housing and residence life work, would help some
young person (of color)
achieve something so great that it would be a first…like the first black president.
I told myself that I would be a difference maker in the ways that people
like Pops made a difference for me. Crazy, right?
My
first words were words of hope. They were dreams for the generation to come. My
words these days? I
hope you do come into this office talkin’ crazy, I *hand
clap*
Hope
*hand
clap*
You
*hand
clap*
Do...
Because all hope is gone. Why have you forsaken us Lord? After 10+ years, I
have almost perfected the what
I’m gonna say on my last day, so much so,
I’ve submitted an SA Speaks.
My
last words are hopeful. But not in the ways my first words were.
A
few months ago my Daddie called me. Out of the blue. Well, out of love, but you
know what I mean. Probably one of the most random calls I have gotten
accustomed to getting because my Daddie was awesome about calling just because.
He had a mission though. He wanted to tell me about my life.
He
said one day, he was leaving the house. I, just figuring out how to run in my
little legs chased after him to the door. He told me that I couldn’t go with
him, because my hair wasn’t combed and I wasn’t dressed. Because, clearly as a
child I didn’t understand stay ready so you
don’t have to get ready…Lord bless me in my
ignorance. At that point, I eagerly went over to my mother so she could do my
hair and dress me up. She hooked a playa up. New fit. New hair. I was outchea in these streets shining.
Yeah.
Only,
this was their clever plot to distract me while he left to the store. How could
you leave me Daddie? And your accomplice? I should have known that I couldn’t
trust her. Because, birth! I was fine in her uterus, but she persisted and pushed.
Anyway,
payback is a BIH because I cried the entire time. At the door. Looking for him.
He said I wailed something awful because, well, he heard it when he returned.
It
broke his heart. So he made me a promise, before God, the Angels, and that
turncoat I call a mother… I’ll never be
the reason you cry again. I will never make you cry again.
Daddie
pretty much kept his word. The next time he left me somewhere was UCLA in 1990
and 8. I thought the world ended when he told me he wasn’t staying in the
triple room with me and my roommates in Hedrick Hall. HOW CAN YOU
LEAVE ME LIKE THIS?! DON’T YOU LOVE ME?!
I’m so dramatic. I have lived my life in his footsteps. In 1990 and 3 he was moving back to Texas for
reasons I never care to know or understand. It was shortly after a major
surgery. He told me that he was leaving. I replied, I’m
coming with you. I left every earthly thing I
kid could leave. I never thought twice about it. Daddie had to purchase my
plane ticket at the airport counter in San Francisco. Remember when that was a
thing? The summer before the 8th grade, I moved to CST.
I
started to tear up on the other side of the phone, PST. I almost lost all
composure. He knew it was more than I could handle – because he knows my
silence, so he quickly got off the phone, as he would expertly do. I love you, I’m out. I
called my
best friend. My best friend told me to go see my father.
While
those weren’t his first words to me, they carried the sentiment of his very
first words to me. He attempted to explain just how much he loved me, the
second he saw me, he says. We were in a hospital. Those were also his first
words to the township of Hooks, Texas at the time of my birth. Yall, the man
drove around the town announcing it. Aside from the fact it’s a small
country town, we are literally related to like half the people – everybody pretty
much already knew…but announcement. I’m not exaggerating. This actually
happened. In real life.
Daddie’s
first words to me were his very last words. The man is so detailed he even had
the nerve to speak them from a hospital. He was always particular and specific
that way. Daddie told me that I would never
understand just how much he loved me. And because
the man is like waaaayyy smarter than me and knows soooo much more than me, he
is absolutely right. It was a Friday night. I had a plane ticket to CST that
Sunday evening *red eye*…
We had daddie/daughter shenanigans planned for that Tuesday.
I’ll see you in Fort Worth! You
darn right! Is Mommie coming with you? Nah, I
told her I was babysitting the granddaughter. She ain’t gonna wanna come for
that. I’ll see the baby on Monday, and come on Tuesday. Wait, so you just gonna leave Mommie? You seriously told
her that? *laughing hysterically* You darn right…if I can get away with it!
I
can’t fathom how, in almost 4 decades, he feels the exact same way he felt on
that first day. I can’t figure it out. I’ve been in a profession I love for
more than 10 years and I got some feelings I don’t think they would understand.
They’re hopeful feelings too…but not exactly in the same way they first were.
And I actually do love the work I do. But, feelings yo…the feels.
I
wonder what it must have been like… To live a life, where the happiest you thought
you could be, the loveliest ways you thought you could feel, would be the exact
happy and lovely you would feel at the end of it. This is what I am talking
about! I honestly believed it was improbable and impossible to be loved this
way. After all, I’ve been told I was loved, but that changed. Every.
Single. Time.
Save,
one. Daddie was genius, yall.
If
you will allow me to pray for you, I will pray exactly this
thing. That a person will love you something like the one perfect way I was loved.
Because it was complete. The beginning and ending of it was perfect, though the
man was not.
He
seemed it though. #perfect
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