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The Same
It’s not the same
To be walking alone to your car
To be using a public restroom
To be working for an income
To be turning away from your drink
To be showing a little more skin
To be rejecting strangers asking for phone numbers
When you’re not a man.
It’s not the same
To be behind the wheel on a Friday night
To be running on a paved sidewalk
To be reaching for your wallet
To be covering your ears with your hood when it’s cold
To be walking through a parking lot
When you’re not white.
It’s not the same
To be applying for a job
To be going on a road trip
To be electing a political candidate
To be seeking medical attention
To be receiving an education
When you’re not a natural citizen.
It’s not the same
To be holding hands
To be introducing them to the family
To be sitting in church pews
To be finding wedding venues
To be reciting vows
To be parenting a child
To be making small talk with the barista
When you’re not straight.
It’s not the same.
These statements,
Meant to be found
Abhorrent
And
Shocking,
Will be misconstrued
Will be vilified
Because it’s not the same
To be speaking
When you’re not quiet.
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This piece emerged as a product of the current political climate. Regardless of one’s ideological position, the nation is irrefutably divided by a numerous injustices occurring daily. These are mitigated not only by the media but the governing offices as well. With this poem, I aimed to ignite contemplation and discussion. I hoped to illustrate the scale of social controversies by delineating them as simple but broad lines that speak to the “bigger picture”. The groups that I mention in the composition (women, people of color, immigrants, and homosexuals) are examples of demographics that are systematically oppressed. Many majorities do not recognize their own privilege, and are therefore oblivious to the inequalities that linger in modern society.
I titled the poem “The Same” to emphasize the common misconception that discrepancies among social divisions have dissolved. “The Same” initially appears to be an ordinary phrase until it is placed within the poem. As the reader progresses through the poem, the title represents irony and ignorance.
I am incredibly passionate and unwavering in my convictions. As a child of faith, full of American pride, I advocate for the equal treatment of and opportunity for the nation’s people as a whole. I am also a person of color, as I am half Filipino. My father was an immigrant from the Philippines at age fifteen. I am a homosexual woman. These pains that the nation is plagued with are pains of my own. I was inspired to write this piece as an admonition- to captivate those who have yet to grasp an understanding of the mistreatment themselves which they have so fortunately not fallen victim to. I was inspired to depict the seemingly rudimentary freedoms that not all Americans enjoy. I was inspired to inspire the desire for education and for action.