Machismo hurts men too | Alejandro Jimenez | TEDxMileHigh
Summary
TLDRThe speaker, an undocumented immigrant from Mexico, shares his journey of navigating two worlds and challenging stereotypes. From struggling with language barriers and seeking acceptance through aggressive behavior in school to confronting racial assumptions in college, he reflects on the burden of being a 'brown boy.' The narrative emphasizes the importance of breaking free from machismo and embracing vulnerability, culminating in a poem, 'For Brown Boys,' that encourages self-love and the rejection of harmful norms.
Takeaways
- đ The speaker discusses the dual identity of living in the 'borderlands' between the American and Mexican worlds as an immigrant.
- đ The transition from Spanish to English at a young age in the U.S. education system was a significant challenge for the speaker.
- đ„ Middle school experiences included a desire for acceptance through participating in aggressive behaviors, influenced by societal expectations of masculinity.
- đ High school achievements were overshadowed by the fear of not being able to attend college due to undocumented status.
- đ The speaker's journey to higher education was made possible by obtaining a green card, highlighting the importance of legal status for opportunities.
- đ€·ââïž Feelings of isolation and a sense of re-immigrating were experienced at a predominantly white university.
- đ The speaker grappled with stereotypes about Latino men being 'feisty' and 'hot-tempered,' which were internalized during college.
- đšâđ§âđŠ Personal relationships with family members contradicted these stereotypes, showing men as capable of strength, delicacy, and vulnerability.
- đ The speaker challenges the label of 'machista' and 'patriarchal' culture, advocating for the dismantling of harmful stereotypes.
- đ The poem 'For Brown Boys' serves as a call to action for self-love and breaking free from societal expectations and stereotypes.
- đȘ The final message encourages brown boys to embrace their worth, to love themselves, and to reject the idea that they are defined by their culture or appearance.
Q & A
What is the main theme of the speaker's narrative?
-The main theme of the speaker's narrative is the struggle of living as an undocumented immigrant, navigating between two cultures, and breaking free from stereotypes associated with being a 'brown boy'.
How did the speaker's language barrier affect their early school experience?
-The speaker's language barrier led to feelings of anger and frustration, as they were unable to communicate basic needs such as asking to use the bathroom, which resulted in embarrassing situations.
What activity did the speaker participate in during middle school to gain acceptance among peers?
-The speaker participated in bare-knuckle boxing with their peers in middle school as a way to be accepted and liked despite their lack of English proficiency and small stature.
How did the speaker's perception of masculinity and strength change during their high school years?
-In high school, the speaker began to recognize that being a varsity athlete and taking AP classes did not exempt them from the challenges of being an undocumented immigrant, and they started to question the stereotypes associated with their identity.
What was the speaker's experience like when they first arrived at the university in Oregon?
-The speaker felt like they had immigrated all over again, being one of only about 30 Latinos in a school of 1,800 students, which made them feel isolated and yearn for home.
How did the speaker's friend's comment at a party affect their perception of themselves?
-The friend's comment, stereotyping the speaker as 'feisty and hot-tempered' due to their Latino heritage, shocked the speaker and led them to internalize this stereotype throughout their college career.
What stereotypes does the speaker challenge in their narrative?
-The speaker challenges stereotypes about 'brown boys' being inherently aggressive and macho, as well as the broader stereotype of their culture being inherently patriarchal and sexist.
How does the speaker describe the men in their family as a counterpoint to stereotypes?
-The speaker describes the men in their family as strong, delicate, and vulnerable, highlighting their capacity for love, care, and emotional depth, which contradicts the stereotypes they face.
What is the title of the poem the speaker shares at the end of the narrative?
-The title of the poem is 'For Brown Boys,' which serves as an affirmation and encouragement for brown boys to break stereotypes and recognize their own beauty.
What message does the speaker convey through the poem 'For Brown Boys'?
-The message conveyed through the poem is one of self-love, self-acceptance, and the importance of breaking free from the constraints of stereotypes, urging brown boys to embrace their full humanity.
What role does the speaker's stepfather play in challenging stereotypes about men in their culture?
-The speaker's stepfather challenges stereotypes by engaging in nurturing activities such as cooking, caring for sick pets, and gardening, demonstrating that men can be tender and expressive without compromising their masculinity.
Outlines
đ Cultural Struggle and Identity
The speaker, an undocumented immigrant from Colima, Mexico, describes the duality of living in both the American and Mexican worlds, symbolized by the concept of 'borderlands.' They recount their childhood struggles with language barriers and cultural assimilation, including the embarrassment of not being able to speak English and the physical and emotional challenges of fitting into a new social environment. The speaker also discusses the pressure to conform to aggressive stereotypes as a means of gaining respect and acceptance among peers, highlighting the internal conflict of wanting to be recognized as strong while dealing with physical limitations.
đ Challenging Stereotypes and Self-Perception
The speaker reflects on the internalization of stereotypes about Latino men being 'feisty and hot-tempered,' which they initially accepted as an explanation for their own aggressive behavior. They explore the broader implications of these stereotypes, considering how societal perceptions can shape identity and behavior. Through personal anecdotes about male figures in their life, such as their brother and uncles, the speaker challenges the stereotype of 'machismo' and patriarchy, showing a range of emotional depth and vulnerability that contradicts the one-dimensional portrayal often assigned to men of color.
đ The Power of Poetry and Self-Affirmation
The speaker transitions into a poem titled 'For Brown Boys,' which serves as a message of empowerment and self-love for young men of color who struggle with societal expectations and stereotypes. The poem acknowledges the hardships and contradictions faced by brown boys, from the physical labor to the emotional burdens of growing up too fast. It encourages them to embrace their full range of emotions and to reject the notion that they must always be in a state of aggression or self-defense. The speaker emphasizes the importance of self-love and the need to break free from the cycle of harmful stereotypes.
đ Embracing Love and Rejecting Self-Destruction
In the final paragraph, the speaker concludes with a call to action for brown boys to let themselves be loved and to embrace their inherent worth. They encourage men to be present in their children's lives, to teach and nurture them, and to reject the idea that they are destined for violence or self-destruction. The speaker advocates for self-love as a form of rebellion against societal pressures and stereotypes, urging brown boys to believe in their own beauty and to live their lives fully, without succumbing to the negative expectations placed upon them.
Mindmap
Keywords
đĄImmigrant
đĄUndocumented
đĄCultural Identity
đĄStereotype
đĄPatriarchy
đĄAggression
đĄMachismo
đĄSelf-Love
đĄStereotype Dismantling
đĄPoetry
đĄRebellion
Highlights
The speaker describes the duality of living in the 'American world' and 'Mexican world' as an immigrant.
Arriving in the US at age 8, the speaker had to navigate a new language and culture, leading to feelings of anger and frustration.
Middle school experiences included a harsh initiation into masculinity through physical challenges and peer acceptance.
The speaker's desire to be recognized and respected led to a struggle with the 'bad boy' stereotype.
Physical limitations and the reality of being an immigrant child challenged the speaker's aspirations to fit in with peer expectations.
Despite academic and athletic achievements in high school, the lack of legal documentation created barriers to higher education.
Receiving a green card after a decade of waiting allowed the speaker to attend university as a US resident.
Feeling like an outsider again in a predominantly non-Latino university environment.
An incident at a party where the speaker was stereotyped as 'feisty and hot-tempered' due to his Latino heritage.
The internalization of stereotypes and the belief that aggression was 'in the blood' influenced the speaker's behavior in college.
Reflections on the burden of being a 'brown boy' and not receiving the benefit of the doubt due to racial stereotypes.
The speaker's realization that stereotypes are not inherent but learned, and therefore can be unlearned and dismantled.
Personal stories of male family members who defy stereotypes of masculinity, showing strength, vulnerability, and care.
The speaker's stepfather's actions as a form of resistance against stereotypes about men from his culture.
A poem titled 'For Brown Boys,' expressing the struggle and the call for self-love and breaking free from stereotypes.
The poem emphasizes the beauty in being alive, the importance of self-care, and the power of love and forgiveness.
The speaker encourages brown boys to embrace their worth and to commit the 'most rebellious act' of self-love.
Transcripts
Transcriber: Flavia Guina Reviewer: Leonardo Silva
So there's a feeling within the Mexican immigrant community
that we are living in two worlds:
the American world
and the Mexican world.
It's some sort of borderlands.
You see, I never understood that a human could be illegal
until I came to the US
as an undocumented immigrant from Colima, Mexico, at 8 years old.
Spanish is my native language,
and suddenly, I was thrust into a world of English.
In elementary school, I spent a lot of time being angry
for not being able and not knowing how to ask for certain simple things,
like,
'May I go to the bathroom?'
I would pee my pants often.
Imagine how I explained hat to my parents.
In middle school,
my friends, all young boys, would form a circle in the early mornings,
before the sun had warmed our bodies,
before the morning dew had evaporated into mist.
Two at a time, we would take turns catching the bodies,
bare-knuckle boxing,
hitting each other in the torso until someone gave up.
Those of us that didn't want to participate
were kicked out of the circle.
As a middle schooler, I wanted to be part of this group.
Now, I was already the immigrant kid that didn't know enough English,
I wanted to be accepted and liked.
I also noticed that the bad boy demeanour was rewarded,
and that's what we are taught as boys:
to be aggressive in the face of adversity,
to be this mountain of strength,
rugged and unclimbable,
to be this rolling thunderstorm,
striking the ground to prove our validity as men.
I wanted to be recognised,
respected,
admired,
revered.
I wanted so much,
so much,
to be feared.
But I was only 70 pounds, skinny, and I bruised easily.
It didn't matter how hard or how fast I swung my toothpick arms.
I always gave up first,
and therefore, teased by my friends,
my dreams and aspirations
to become this Aztec warrior with flames for fists crumbled,
very quickly, y'all.
In high school,
I was a varsity athlete taking AP classes,
but I hesitated to look at colleges
because I didn't have a piece of plastic with numbers on it
that would allow me the same rights as my American-born peers.
You see,
I pledged allegiance to the flag every single day in grade school,
but now this country didn't want to support me?
Luckily,
after 10 years of waiting,
I received my green card just in time
to attend a small, private university in Oregon
as a resident of the US
and not a foreign student.
There, I was one of about 30 Latinos,
in a school of 1,800 students.
I felt like I had immigrated all over again.
(Laughter)
I felt like wind with no resting place,
like ashes with no fire,
roots with no earth,
water with no shoreline.
I kept yearning for home, y'all.
My first year there, I was at a party,
and I remember being upset,
and visibly frustrated and vocal about a situation -
I think I was trying to reenact my failed attempts
to be this Aztec warrior from middle school -
when one of my friends,
one of my white friends turned to me and said,
'It's OK.
It's the Latino blood in you.
Latino men are feisty and hot-tempered.
You are spicy!'
(Laughter)
In my case, everybody stood in silence.
And I was shocked,
for two reasons.
One, I didn't expect a friend to put me into this box,
and two, I had never heard that stereotype,
at least not that clearly.
But I believed them.
I went through my college career believing what was said that day.
Any sign of aggression, it was just 'in my blood.'
You see, if water can trickle down from the mountains into the ocean
without anything to stop it,
how could I change?
I figured that if my peers believed this stereotype to be true,
they would understand
that I couldn't do anything about my aggressive behaviour.
At the same time,
I also wondered if their opinion would be any different if I were white.
And that's the burden for us brown boys:
we do not get the benefit of the doubt.
You see we are pushed into this box that defines us,
that hurts us.
And yes, patriarchy, sexism has always hurt women.
It has always been used as a tool
to keep women in their place, subservient to men.
And here I am,
a recipient of privilege for being male,
an unknown enforcer of patriarchy,
and also stuck in a stereotype for being brown.
But growing up alongside the men in my family,
and in my community,
I began to realise that we are more than the stereotypes.
My brother, y'all, he's tall,
he's loud,
has tattoos all over his body,
but he was never in the gang, though.
Most of the tattoos are to commemorate significant events in his life,
like the birth of his children
and the passing of our grandparents.
He goes to work every single day at 4 in the morning,
comes back
and is not afraid to sing lullabies to his children.
He asks me questions about love.
Sometimes I answer them.
Other times, I feel awkward talking about love to another man.
He is the epitome of what it means to be strong,
delicate
and vulnerable.
My uncle,
he's reserved,
but he's a lighthouse to many of us.
He's a teacher and a professor, a mover and a shaker.
He gets made fun of, every single day,
for being feminine.
He was warned by my family to be careful after our gay cousin was murdered.
My other uncle is also reserved,
rarely shares his emotions,
but he has built houses from the ground up,
houses he will never be able to afford,
no matter how quickly he works or how early he arrives at a job site.
Both of these uncles,
I can trust that their hands
will nurture me,
not hurt me.
My stepfather,
he gives really, really awkward side hugs.
(Laughter)
But he cooks, though.
(Laughter)
He's a pretty good cook.
He also takes care of his two tiny chihuahuas
when they are sick.
He mashes up their food,
massages their muscles if they are sore.
He plants flowers, tulips and rosebushes, around the house.
He may not be the most communicative of men,
but I know exactly what he is saying when I look at his flowers.
He is what is means to hold on to your beauty,
despite what society tells you.
You see, I like to believe
that he is having the same internal struggle as I am.
The planting flowers around the house and giving them to my mother
is his way of standing up to all the stereotypes about us.
You see,
people have been quick
to point to my culture and label it as 'machista,'
patriarchal, sexist.
Because of where I come from and how I look,
people have deemed me an outsider that denounces the humanity of others.
But machismo does not have to define who I am,
who my people are.
These stereotypes,
they're not in our blood.
We have learned them.
We can also dismantle them.
The following poem is for all the men
and for all the women in my life
who encourage me
to break the stereotypes,
every single day.
It's also for my students,
for all the brown boys who, like me,
struggle to believe that we are beautiful.
We are beautiful.
The poem is titled 'For Brown Boys.'
For brown boys who come and go.
For brown boys who walked out,
like my father.
For those who stayed to pick up the pieces,
like my stepfather.
For us, brown boys.
For us, fatherless children,
trying to fit the shoes of men we have never known.
I know.
So many battles go unrecognised.
No purple hearts pinned to our chest.
Just tattooed life stories engraved in arms,
callous hands from all the work put in,
bruised knees from getting back up when we get knocked down,
stretch marks on backs from being forced to grow up way too fast.
I know
that the balance of providing and loving
can be such a dubious task for us, brown boys.
For us, brown boys,
trying to hide behind beards and moustaches,
trying way too hard to be as hard as possible,
caught between body bags and survival,
caught between macho ideals and proletarian revolutions.
Look at how
we confuse passion for violence.
Look at how we romanticize guns over a love affair.
We, brown boys, are so full of contradictions.
For us, brown boys,
who have been taught to be cautious of a tender touch,
like when she caresses my back.
I cannot help feeling uneasy.
Even in bed,
let your guard down, brown boy.
We don't always have to be in fight-or-flight mode.
We deserve to be loved.
We deserve to show love.
We don't have to look for affection in the bottom of shot glasses.
We cannot drown our pain.
Trust me,
it will learn how to swim.
Sorrow does not have to be a burden.
We make mistakes,
but we are not the mistakes, brown boy.
Who told you self-love was a battlefield?
Who turned your throat into a shotgun?
Who taught you how to fight, brown boy?
I once heard someone say that for us, dark ones,
the act of ...
(Inhales and exhales deeply)
breathing is rebellious.
Remember,
they were the ones that called us savages.
They were the ones that desecrated our family tree.
They turned us into thugs.
They told us women were inferior,
and some days,
some days I want to shatter the image in the mirror,
I want to break every last piece of my mother out of my smile.
I know you too get tired of choosing between your hopes and your demons,
of trying to hold the ends of the world keeping them from falling.
I know that you don't want to crumble into pieces, brown boy.
We do not need street corners
stained with candle wax,
decorated with flowers and pictures of you.
We need you alive, brown boy.
Remember that trees let go of themselves in the fall,
endure the winter so that they can bloom beautiful in the spring
and provide shade in the summer.
Brown boy, we need you alive.
So let every embrace you give set off a revolution.
Let every kiss you give become the trigger to your throat
to heal with words.
Let forgiveness become the pin to the grenade of your heart.
Explode delicately,
smash the shot glasses on the floor,
fireworks announcing the new you.
Let yourself be loved.
Watch how much we can grow.
Let every man that has walked out of your house
become a reason for you to stay.
Use these hands to help your children count,
to help them learn their ABCs, brown boys.
We are not explosions waiting to happen.
We are enough just as we are,
so let us believe that we are beautiful, brown boys.
Let us commit the most rebellious act of them all.
Let us
love
ourselves.
Thank you.
(Applause) (Cheers)
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