White
Lady Worries
by
Mary Wescott Riser
In
the shopping center parking lot
I
see two women having a conversation.
One
of them is wearing bold, gold shoes.
I
can’t stop looking.
I
walk past, then turn my head to look back once more.
Now
I feel embarrassed. They know I’m looking.
Maybe
they think I am condemning, judging, condescending.
So I
go back and excuse myself.
I
tell them I was admiring the gold shoes.
They
relax, and she tells me she found them on sale at Macy’s in Las Vegas.
With
their brown skin and her purple hair and piercings,
I
wanted them to know I admired the shoes.
I
want them to like me.
* *
* * *
Mary Wescott Riser worked in Virginia independent schools
for 30 years, most recently as Head of School at James River Day School, a K-8
day co-ed day school in Lynchburg, Virginia, where she served as Head for ten
years. Mary received her B.A. in English and Philosophy from Georgetown
University and her M.F.A. in Poetry from the University of Oregon. She
writes the education blog “What’s Best For the Children?” www.maryriser.org.
Mary and her husband, George, live in Covesville, Virginia and have two adult
children.
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