You ever sit at the dinner table, trying to explain something you just learned about the world—like systemic racism, gender identity, or climate change—and watch your family nod politely but clearly just waiting for you to finish? Yeah, that’s my life. Being “woke” in a family that isn’t feels like shouting underwater. You know the words, the concepts, the nuances, but the room stays heavy and silent, like you’re speaking a language no one else remembers how to hear. I’ve gotten so used to dialing back my passion or twisting my words so they don’t sound like accusations but invitations—kind of like explaining a complicated joke. And sometimes, that’s exhausting. It’s lonely in a way that’s hard to explain. Because on one hand, I want to scream, Why can’t you see this? But on the other, I know that waking up is a slow, personal journey. Some days, I’m patient. Other days, I’m not. I’m learning that “woke” isn’t just about knowing the right terms or politics—it’s about choosing love ...
I dwell in the spaces where shadows meet light, where questions outnumber answers. A seeker of truths buried deep, I write to unearth what lies beneath the surface. In the chaos, I find my voice. In the silence, I find myself.