I left the office of my first adult job on the day that I was fired with a bottle of Titos vodka in my bag. The sun gleamed as a rarity on that Seattle day, puncturing the waves off of Colman Dock as more white yuppies transported themselves back and forth. Deep down, I knew it. I was screwed and maybe I had been from the start. I had unknowingly fallen into someone else’s idea of how my future would be.
From birth I had been an anomaly: born at 24 weeks, deemed mentally disabled for the first few years of my life from the stunt in development that all the blood transfusions and surgeries brought, and my father murdered a few months after I was born. A Jamaican family did not give much space for a book loving, eccentric young black boy. Books brought knowledge and my family brought me to programs meant to carve out black excellence.
I found writing at a pivotal time during my coming out process in high school. By college, I decided to enroll as an English major at Ohio University. Most of my classes talked of white writers who belonged to countries that colonized. I’d been taught so well in the realm of white reality that most of the characters in my stories were white.
James Baldwin came to me on a sleepy week day in Athens, Ohio. He awakened me to the notion that black men searching for a deep, nourishing love could still find ways to give love to the world around them. As a queer figure of his time, I was convinced that his story surely tethered to mine. He had been rejected and made soft by the violence around him; rejected by many black men, like Eldridge Cleaver because of his sexuality, tried to make sense of a racist world with religion, and eventually fled to Paris at the age of 24.
His book, Another Country, arrived to me just as my Seattle life fell apart only months after graduating college. Paris burned into my mind and so did the story of James Baldwin entering a restaurant and throwing a glass of water at a white woman after being refused service. This explosion of rage in him became the reason that he needed to leave. To him, it was easier to find himself in Europe than to face the brunt of White America’s barrel aimed at him.
For me, Paris was a continuation of the journey I’d embarked upon after the shooting death of Michael Brown just day before my senior year at Ohio University. His death marked me like many other people, forcing us into action not only for him, but for ourselves.
I booked a cheap flight to Paris for the month of April and arrived as the sun was gleaming with two James Baldwin books and the address a friend had given me written down in a notebook.