The Fire This Time: Tracee Ellis Ross Speaks on the Power of Female Fury

Death by a thousand cuts. A thousand micro (and macro) aggressions, a thousand dismissals, a thousand violations, both overt and oblivious. A thousand subtleโ€”and not-so-subtleโ€”ways in which women all over the world are told they donโ€™t matter, that our bodies, autonomy and feelings donโ€™t matter. Suggested Reading The Root 100 – 2020 Black History Month…

Death by a thousand cuts. A thousand micro (and macro) aggressions, a thousand dismissals, a thousand violations, both overt and oblivious. A thousand subtleโ€”and not-so-subtleโ€”ways in which women all over the world are told they donโ€™t matter, that our bodies, autonomy and feelings donโ€™t matter.

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

And not only do we not matter or have the right to protest; we donโ€™t even have the right to be angry. Our anger doesnโ€™t matter.

This is the message thatโ€™s been given to women for centuries, passed down from generation to generation and reinforced by our current administration. And itโ€™s the message Tracee Ellis Ross took to task in her recent talk for the TED2018: The Age of Amazement conference in Vancouver, British Columbia, earlier this month.

Building upon the momentum of the #TimesUp movement, which she co-founded, Ross used her 10 minutes at TED to call men out on their entitlementโ€”and women out of the conventional shadows of politeness.

โ€œMen are so used to helping themselves that itโ€™s like, they canโ€™t help themselves,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd not because men are fundamentally less moral but because this is a very big blind spot for most men.โ€

Ross also called attention to the legacy of trauma that feeds the justifiable anger of womenโ€”anger that has been festering for centuries and has only grown since our last election:

When someone helps themselves to a woman, it not only triggers discomfort and distress, but the unspoken experiences of our mothersโ€™ lives, sistersโ€™ lives and generations of women before us. Thatโ€™s lifetimes of women dealing with men who assume they know better for us than we know for ourselves. ...

And if you add in the history of raceโ€”which is a whole other talkโ€”it gets exponentially more complicated.

โ€œComplicatedโ€ is one way of putting it. Ross asks us to give ourselves permission to own our angerโ€”to sit in it, speak on it and create safe spaces in which to share it, if only because itโ€™s ours.

โ€œI encourage you to acknowledge your fury,โ€ Ross says. โ€œYour fury is not something to be afraid of; it holds lifetimes of wisdom. Let it breathe, and listen.โ€

Straight From The Root

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