#28DaysOfBlackCosplay: Too Black for the White Geeks

I was 6 years old when my mama educated me in the ways of saving princesses by touching flowers and shooting fireballs at turtles. Four years later, a kid in my class revealed a juicy bit of gossip: There were adult cartoons that aired way past our bedtimes. Suggested Reading Three Friends Were Headed To…

I was 6 years old when my mama educated me in the ways of saving princesses by touching flowers and shooting fireballs at turtles. Four years later, a kid in my class revealed a juicy bit of gossip: There were adult cartoons that aired way past our bedtimes.

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Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

I stayed up and discovered โ€œJapan-imationโ€ (or โ€œJapanimation,โ€ or simply โ€œanime,โ€ because โ€™90s kids never did settle on a name). My parents deemed it a violent smut-fest because of an animated movie in which a woman, after having sex, turned into a giant spider with a sharp-toothed vagina. Thanks, Wicked City.

Eventually, tamer programs hit the airwaves, and in high school, I was able to blow my retail-job money on Dragon Ball Z VHS tapes. It was chalked up as a weird but generally harmless hobby, and I became that quirky black girl who wrote fan fiction in Gundam Wing notebooks and schooled dudes in the ways of โ€œMarvel vs. Capcom 2โ€โ€”donโ€™t @ me about my super fighting robot, Mega Man.

Youโ€™ve heard this story before: the tale of the lone black geek who gets ostracized by the black community for being too much Steve Urkel and not enough Stefan Urquelle. It ends with the black kid being labeled โ€œwhiteโ€ and finding camaraderie among the white nerds who โ€œdonโ€™t see color,โ€ just Pokรฉmon cards. And itโ€™s not that this story isnโ€™t true; my geek cred increased exponentially, thanks to a white girl who introduced me to conventions and cosplay. Sixteen years later, Iโ€™m still with that girl.

But even with this common narrative, thereโ€™s something we rarely, if ever, talk about, generally to avoid making our white nerd friends uncomfortable: that awkward moment you realize youโ€™re too black for them.

Now that Iโ€™m in my 30s, Iโ€™ve become pretty vocal about the various issues that encompass my life. Iโ€™ve made some solid friendships through my body positivity and โ€œIt Gets Betterโ€ talksโ€”then I started becoming more vocal about racial issues. Silly olโ€™ me thought that my white geek friends would be A-OK with it, since theyโ€™d supported everything else. Iโ€™m not talking about the ones who like your posts sometimes or say you should hang out (but you never do); I mean the other members of your Losers Club, the ones you donโ€™t clean your house for, because yโ€™all are that comfortable with one another.

The ones who supposedly embrace you because youโ€™re โ€œtoo white for the black kids.โ€

For me, it started simply enough: a question about why something was being perceived as racist.

โ€œIsnโ€™t painting your skin brown the same as slathering green on your face to be Piccolo?โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s so wrong with the n-word if you use the โ€˜-gaโ€™ version?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t see the big deal, itโ€™s just hair.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t all lives matter?โ€

I would give them the benefit of the doubt, even if several others before me had thoroughly answered these questions (or Iโ€™d answered a couple of them myself via think pieces). Thatโ€™s what you do as a friend, right? And they werenโ€™t being malicious, they just wanted to learn.

But then they wouldnโ€™t have my back when their white friends decided to call me out my name on social media, knowing damn well that if a stranger attacked, theyโ€™d be in the comments ready to go to war. They were suddenly defending practices they didnโ€™t even participate inโ€”youโ€™re not out here painting your skin brown, friendoโ€”and you donโ€™t say the n-word, right?

After exhausting arguments, Iโ€™d be reminded that I was the one making the studio audience sad for causing friction in the friendship, so Iโ€™d coddle them with #NotAllWhiteNerds, while they swore that theyโ€™d become better peopleโ€”only to lather, rinse and repeat their problematic statements six months later as if theyโ€™d been zapped by the MIB pen.

But like a desperate-for-friendship fool, I stuck around, because I thought these were my nerd people. But over the years, with movements like #28DaysOfBlackCosplay, I had an epiphany: I was never the lone black kid. The first year of the movement was a chorus of, โ€œWhere have yโ€™all been all my life?!โ€ Weโ€™d embrace each other and say, โ€œRight here.โ€

As I write this, Iโ€™m thinking about the black-girl-nerd story Iโ€™ve regurgitated ad nauseam. There are a couple of facts Iโ€™ve let get buried in the โ€œIโ€™m not like those other black girlsโ€ diatribe I subscribed to while growing up. I wasnโ€™t swimming in popularity, but I have memories of playing hours of โ€œFinal Fantasy VIIโ€ with a few geeky, melanated brethren.

Beyond that, I had a handful of nongeeky black friends. Nerd-dom was just one aspect of my lifeโ€”a large one, but still, just one. Weโ€™d laugh over Moesha and indulge in our crushes on the members of Immatureโ€”or IMx, if you got on the hype train late. Just because we didnโ€™t have the likes of Toonami in common didnโ€™t mean we werenโ€™t friends, and it certainly didnโ€™t mean I was alone.

Itโ€™s so nice when you click with people who share your strongest passions, right? But hereโ€™s the honest-to-goodness truth: It was never worth sacrificing my blackness. I canโ€™t divide my identity to share only the parts of me that donโ€™t make my Losers Club uncomfortableโ€”and thatโ€™s exactly what I had done.

I spent a lot of 2017 cutting the worst offenders out of my life, because in the end, I realized youโ€™re always gonna be too something for somebody. But what matters is being enough for yourself.

Straight From The Root

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