Sweet Boy Kitty Seeks Loving Home

*guest blog by Little Clarence*

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My person is moving overseas, so I am looking for a new cuddle partner and feeder in the San Francisco Bay Area, starting in early September 2010.

About me: Grey short-haired mestizo, healthy, approximately 6 years old, formerly wild, cleans up well, cross-eyed, pleasantly plump, a little shy at first, very affectionate once I get to know you.

A typical day in my life: Sleeping (93%), cuddling/purring (11%), eating (8%), chasing things (2.5%).  That is catrithmetic by the way, so don’t worry if your puny human brain can’t handle the math.

Special skills: Excellent at hunting (I will defeat any evil string armies or rodents attempting to invade your house).  Type 80 wpm (can’t guarantee you’ll know the words in my vast vocabulary, though). Experienced companion to writers, artists, and meditators.  Accessory consultant (see photo shoots below).

Comes with: Favorite teddy bear and blankie, kitty condo/scratching post, litter boxes, supply of food & litter, toys, current shots.

Inquiries/interest: contact (at) minalhajratwala.com

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**Note from Minal: Little Clarence has FIV (feline version of HIV). He has not yet developed symptoms, is expected to stay healthy for several years, and currently has no special medical needs or care. However, to prevent transmission to other cats, he will ideally be an indoor cat and be in a home with no other cats (or cats who are also FIV+).


Immigration and its fictions

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Mary Ellen Hannibal, an interviewer for The Readers Review, asked me an intriguing question.

MEH: I have heard you draw parallels between the language around immigration issues today and those of eras we consider far more recidivist. What would be a healthy immigration policy, in your view?

MH: I’m a poet, not a policy wonk, and as Audre Lorde said, “Poetry is not only dream and vision… It lays the foundations for a future of change, a bridge across our fears.” When the Arizona bill passed in May, there was an outpouring of poetry and so I made an offering as well.

I’m intrigued by your word “healthy,” which is an interesting way to approach immigration policy. To extend the metaphor, we can create a state of health only by first arriving an accurate diagnosis of the illness. And we don’t have that diagnosis.

It’s difficult for me to take seriously the assumptions from which every current discussion of U.S. immigration policy proceeds. The very existence of nation-states, of borders that can or should be enforced—all these seem to me fictions. Powerful ones, for sure, but I don’t know why we must take them so very seriously and behave as if we must defend them at all odds.

And the contradictions in every position also puzzle me. If you really do believe in the free market, free trade, and all that, why not let people go where they will, where there is need and demand for their skills? Instead we now have fake free trade, where capital is allowed to move across borders, but people aren’t. People in poor countries from which capital is being sucked out by Western multinational companies have to risk their lives to get to the Western nations where their money has already gone, so that they can work terrible unhealthy jobs that the citizens of those countries don’t want to do, to try to get a little of that money back and send it home to their children and elders via remittances.

Does this system really make any sense to anyone?

Almost every suburb in the United States is filled with domestic workers, gardeners, and construction day workers who come from somewhere else “illegally.” Almost every strawberry or leaf of lettuce relies on this economy that is not supposed to exist, that we claim we don’t want yet somehow just can’t seem to get rid of.

And at the same time we’re exporting a Hollywood vision of America, a steady stream of propaganda that advertises a life of luxury that isn’t even accessible to many people who work 40 hours a week in this country.

America is like that stereotypically beautiful cruel blonde who wants everybody to want her, just so that she can reject them.

I suppose a healthy immigration policy would begin by acknowledging how many fictions are involved in our current perceptions, and acknowledging that our so-called immigration problem is not really the disease. It’s one symptom of the much larger disease of corporate globalization.

A healthy policy might also begin by acknowledging that this is a nation of illegal immigrants, that all of the land we call the United States of America has been stolen or claimed by violence or trickery from other peoples, and that as the most prosperous nation in the world, we might consider being a little more generous with our borders, and a little less generous in exporting our soldiers and our weapons.

And a healthy immigration policy would have as its end goal an open-door, welcoming policy. We’d look at what steps we need to take toward that, and come up with a phased plan that is consistent with a responsible (not “free”) international trade policy, and that is aimed at inviting people in, transitioning them into healthy work as part of healthy communities, rather than keeping them out with weapons and barbed wire.

I suppose that makes me, in the words of Fox News, an “open-borders extremist.” I think it’s actually inevitable. Our borders are and have always been open, permeable, because they are fictions. Grasses, oil spills, coyotes, environmental changes have no respect for little white lines on a piece of paper. All empires rise and fall, so why do we believe the American empire is immune to history? One way or another, sooner or later, borders will collapse.

We can choose to acknowledge and plan for that and create graceful transitions, in a phased way that does not create radical suffering on either side of the so-called borders.

Or we can continue to cling to our fictions.

Click here to read the entire interview.

Fan Girl Meets Famous Writers

I met so many amazing writers this spring and am finally getting around to blogging about it!

sapphire1 At the AWP convention in Denver, I spotted Sapphire
wrapping up what had been a long book signing session for her, with hundreds of
people in line. The movie “Precious” based on her novel Push had just come
out. She seemed exhausted but was very gracious.
I ran up to Sherman Alexie as we were both waiting for Leslie Marmon Silko to start her reading. I think I made him feel like a rock star and
he liked it. I gave him a postcard for my book and joked that I’d planned to
call it The Toughest Indian in the World but he’d already used the title. He has a great, joyful laugh.
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lesliemarmonsilko Leslie Marmon Silko read from her forthcoming memoir about the Star People who have been visiting her and demanding that she paint giant portraits of them. She said all of her work is basically true from life but in the past she’s had to publish it as fiction. Some of her Star People paintings appear in the Winter 2010 issue of the Kenyon Review. I loved how she sounded so happy and satisfied to be published as a visual artist for the first time.
This is the poet Elizabeth Alexander, whose work is amazing. She wrote President Obama’s inaugural poem. I’m still blown away by her earliest work on the Venus Hottentot. I don’t think poets get approached by fangirls/fanboys for photo ops very often. She was pretty tickled by it. elizabethalexander
michaelchabon I’d met Michael Chabon a few weeks earlier at the Berkeley Library Authors Dinner benefit, and he kind of remembered me. In Berkeley we had talked about writing speculative fiction and my fear that working in a genre I loved so much would take away the fun of reading fantasy and sci fi.  When we met again in Denver, it was just before his keynote speech. He agreed to a photo as long as I promised to laugh at all his jokes and say aah at the poignant moments. I said, What if I mess up and laugh at the poignant moments and ooh at the jokes? He said that would be ok too. I’m pretty sure I did it right.
David Henry Hwang came to Stanford recently for a 30th anniversary student production of his play “FOB.”He wrote it in 1980 as a sophomore and produced it in his dorm. It was picked up by Joe Papp at the Public Theatre in New York, launching David’s career as the country’s most prominent Asian American playwright. I was fascinated to hear him and the other original cast members reflect on the politics of Asian American theatre/ acting/ casting, then and now. davidhenryhwang
molliekatzen I told Mollie Katzen that I’d learned to cook from her (except for my mom’s food). Her Enchanted Broccoli Forest was the first and main cookbook I ever used. I was feeling shy to be one of the special guests at the Berkeley Library Foundation Authors Dinner. She “adopted” me and showed me the back route through the library to the bathroom, so we could get there without being accosted by (her) fans. She said she likes talking to fans but not when she’s trying to go to the bathroom. It’s good to have boundaries.
I was excited to have a chance to thank Abraham Verghese in person for his review of my book for the S.F. Chronicle and to tell him how much his work had meant to me. His memoir My Own Country, about being an immigrant doctor treating AIDS patients in middle America in the 1980s, was the first book I’d ever read that bridged both the Indo-American and the queer experience.
(Berkeley Authors Dinner)
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“One heart / One world / One Pride”

Here’s the transcript of a webchat I just did, organized by the U.S. Consulate in Chennai (Madras).  It was 9:30pm here in San Francisco, 10am in India. A live audience of about 25 people gathered at the office of the HIV/AIDS group Sahodaran.

I did a few teensy edits for clarity, but I’ve left all my typos… much as it pains me!…  for that authentic webchat feeling. 🙂

Moderator (Brindha): Welcomechennaipride2010logo_blk to the webchat “Coming out in a Culturally Diverse Society” with Indian-American author, poet, performer, journalist and 2010-11 Fulbrighter Minal Hajratwala who will join us from California.  You will need headphones or speakers to view a short video and to hear Minal’s presentation.  Please submit your questions to Minal anytime before or during the program.  Your questions will be added to the queue and will be answered after the audio presentation.

Minal Hajratwala: Hello

Amy, U.S. Consulate (Moderator):  Everyone. We will begin the chat in a few minutes. Please feel free to submit your questions at any time. Welcome, Minal!

Minal Hajratwala: Thanks Amy, it’s a pleasure to be here.

(Moderator): Good evening, Minal!  This is Bryan Dalton, Acting U.S. Consul General in Chennai. Thank you for participating in this unique June Pride webchat. Our theme is “One heart. One world. One Pride.”  How appropriate, to share this with you in San Francisco, across oceans and continents, to talk about your book, Leaving India, in which you share the stories of your family over five continents.Thanks to our hosts at Sahodaran for allowing us to conduct this webchat at their office. Good morning to Sunil Menon and his staff. Vanakkam! Special thanks to the Consulate Public Affairs staff for their hard work connecting us through cyberspace to provide a ‘safe space’ for us to discuss “Coming Out in a Culturally Diverse Society.”

Minal Hajratwala: That is a lovely theme. So, what are the questions? 🙂

Anandaroopa: I am the gay partner of the Acting CG. Thank you Minal, for participating in Chennai’s second Pride celebration. As part of the celebration, there was a discussion/support group for parents and friends of LGBT yesterday. One couple came because their daughter had just came out to them about 4 months ago and they wanted to understand and receive support. That discussion reminded me that ‘coming out’ is always about us – our need to be loud and proud in spite (or despite) of homophobia and bigotry. But often, we don’t calculate how our parents will feel: how they might be ashamed to tell the relatives or afraid to hear negative whispers from neighbors. In Leaving India, you came out to the world — even writing about your first lesbian experience. Did you warn your parents or relatives about the content?

Minal Hajratwala: Thanks, Anandaroopa, for your question. I came out to my parents 20 years ago, so they have had a long time to enjoy having a lesbian daughter. 🙂  As far as the book, yes, I did give them a manuscript copy to read before it went to press. They also helped with many phases of the book research and writing.

sahodharan: Hii MiNAL…this is SUNIL MENON from SAHODARAN Chennai,,,AND ON BEHALF OF ALL GATHERED HERE…A big NAMASTE or VANAKKAM( as in Tamil)

Minal Hajratwala: Namaste Sunil. Tell me about Shoadaran and what your group is doing these days?

Minal Hajratwala: (PS sorry everyone for the typos — I have a very tiny screen to work with here, and I can’t really see what I’m typing.)

Minal Hajratwala: It seems Chennai has quite an active LGBT community. I met a couple of people from the  the Shakti Center here in San Francisco recently as well.

Amy, U.S. Consulate (Moderator): Minal, while Sunil responds, I have a question from Rose.

9626ac59423ebfb9ac95fc38d9db-1Rose: hi my name is Rose, I am India’s first transgender celebrity. I have a question for you, you have come out as a lesbian in the book, but you have been given a award for your book in the bisexual category , can you explain?

Minal Hajratwala: Hello Rose, it’s an honor to meet you! Yes, it is a bit confusing 🙂 You know, when I first came out I was saying very ardently that I was a lesbian. However, I was still sleeping with men … for at least 6 more years after that … So eventually I made peace with the bisexual identity for myself. I’ve been exclusively with women and transgender men for the last decade at least, but I do not disavow my past with [cisgender] men. So I accept both labels for myself. My preferred term in the US is actually ”queer.”

Amy, U.S. Consulate (Moderator): Sunil has described a little more about Sahodaran. I’ll share it with you now.

Minal Hajratwala: Great

sahodharanSAHODARAN is a male sexual health program that works on HIV/AIDS prevention amongst Transgender and Gay?bisexual males in the cty of Chennai and Pondicherry

magdalene jeyarathnam: Multi-sited ethnography has become an important part of social sciences research these days.  Have you or someone else done an academic (anthropology, sociology, etc) research project about your multi-sited family?  (from Eric at Sahodaran Office)

Minal Hajratwala: Thanks Eric. My book is not strictly academic but it does contain a fair amount of historical research, because I was interested in the social, economic, and political contexts in which my family migrated out of India.But no, there has been no academic study of my family. And I suspect they have no desire to be studied…
one thing that was important to me was that the people who are in the book would feel connected to the book, rather than feeling like little insects under a microscope 🙂  as one sometimes feels when subjected to an academic project.

sahodharan: how easy or difficult is it for indian women in the US, to come out in the US

Minal Hajratwala: I think coming out in the US has become a fairly commonplace occurence in general because of the radical cultural shifts over the past 20 years, pop culture and activist movements and all that. For Indian woman in particular, I think it really depends on the specific family / community. When someone’s family is very conservative or has strong religious views that are intolerant, of course it is difficult. But there is a very strong network of support groups for South Asian LGBTs across North American now. Conferences, a magazine, etc.  So in that since, once someone does come out, it is much better than it used to be.

Minal Hajratwala: Sorry meant to say ”in that sense’.  And I think one cultural difference may be that over here, the transgender presence is just emerging. Whereas in India it has such a long history and tradition.

magdalene jeyarathnam: Might you be able to say anything about possible (or even poetic) connections between exploration of new spaces/places geographically, and in terms of sexual orientation?  Definition of place and sexual orientation both seem to involve the questions – Who am I? Where am I?  With whom am I communicating? How can/should I behave? (from Eric at the Sahodaran Office)

Minal Hajratwala: Yes Eric, I think those questions are very meaninful and important. It’s my sense that LGBT people and migrants have something in common which is that by virtue of our circumstances, we have to ask these questions, ”Who am I”, at an earlier age and in a more focused way than many other people. and so I think of a ”queer diaspora” which is also something that my friend Gayatri Gopinath has written about from a theoretical perspective.

Anandaroopa: From Laksmi @ Sahodaran: Have your sexuality influenced your past and future works?

Minal Hajratwala: Thanks Laksmi, yes I think all of the aspects of myself have influenced my writing. I think being and feeling ”different” from a young age certain ly affects my way of observing the world very carefully, which affects how I write about it.   And this sense of difference comes both from sexuality and from growing up as an Indian child in a very white part of America, feeling quite alienated and differetn for that reason as well.

sahodharan: hi this is Angel Glady, a transgender woman in Chennai. It must have been an arduous task to break down your family tree. How did you manage to achieve this?

Minal Hajratwala: Hi Angel, I was quite lucky because I had two good sources for the family research. First my parents who have kept in touch with everyone very well despite being so far from home. It is actually a very close family. And second, I was able to visit the Bhatt who keeps records for our community in Gujarat — basically a scribe whose family has the records of all of the families of our caste & clan going back 13 generations.

ck: Hi! What advice for parents who observe a LGBT trend in their child, but he/she is hiding it. This is in the Indian context.

Minal Hajratwala: I think one mustn’t make assumptions about someone’s sexuality based on external and secondary characteristics, first of all. For instance there are plenty of tomboys who grow up to be heterosexual, yet some lesbians also grow up being tomboys, yet some lesbians (like me!) have absolutely no inclination toward sports. So for parents, it is good to observe and encourage the child to express himself or herself but not to rush to label it. And at the same time, to make it clear that other sexualities are absolutely ok; to develop a diverse circle of friends; to expose the child to films, books, individuals so that if or when the child is ready to declare an identity, they will have a range of options and models and people to talk to.

magdalene jeyarathnam: Hi, from heTimes of India illustrationre in Chennai, I provide counselling for the LGBT community in the US through skype, especially people from TN. Do you think counselling services that cater to Indians should be different?

Minal Hajratwala: I think one thing is to understand the intense importance of the family for Indians.  In the US, counseling sometimes is all about individuating, that is getting the person to operate totally as an individual, to break away from the family.  In India I think that is sometimes necessary but it is quite difficult.  It is more about learning to assert onself within the family, to be happy and fulfilled while still maintaining strong bonds  with family.  And to distinguish between those family duties which are healthy and loving, vs those that are repressive or guilt-induced and so on.

sahodharan: This is from Divya, You have won an award for being a bisexual writer. How do you think you are contributing towards the lesbian and bisexual movements for Indian women across the world?

Minal Hajratwala: Hi Divya, I hope I am contributing in two ways. One is by having been actively involved in my community where I live; I was a board member of Trikone, which is the LGBT group for South Asians in the San Francisco Bay Area. Some of you may have seen Trikone magazine which is also  distributed in India sometimes. The second way is simply by being visible, which is still a dificulty for queer Indian women. I was in North India last year for a book tour, and one of the last interviews I did was for a Times of India article about coming out to  parents. They quoted several people and among the women, I was the only one quoted with my real name. So I hope just by being willing to be out and publicly identified, I am doing some seva.

sahodharan: What do you think of the progres India has made and the amendment of Indian law on homosexuality?

Minal Hajratwala: I am incredibly inspired by the amazing activism happening in India, of which the Section 377 repeal is maybe the most visible victory.  I just am so awed by what it must have taken to pull together the coalitions that make such changes possible. I am also really delighted that communities like Sahodaran exist and I think much of the LGBT progress is built on the really dedicated work of HIV activists over many decades.

Amy, U.S. Consulate (Moderator): Minal, I’m told you just got an applause from the audience at Sahodaran!

Minal Hajratwala: And the fact that there are now things like pride parades, lesbian parties, a queer store in Mumbai, a queer online bookstore — it’s quite amazing. …
Thanks Amy –  I applaud the audience as well! 🙂

sahodharan: This is from Kavya. Do you have a steady partner? What do you think of permanent relationships? How easy or difficult is it to make permanent partners?

Minal Hajratwala: Hi Kavya, I’m currently single.  I have been lucky to have wonderfull, loving long-term partnerships in the past and I’m sure I will do so again, although when it comes to ”permanent” I suppose I’m something of a buddhist — what is really permanent in this world, after all? 🙂  I do think there is a challenge for LGBT partners to maintain relationships in a hostile envoronment without support. In an extended family if a young couple is having trouble, a family member may offer adfice or try to help them reconcile. For gay couples they may not receive that kind of support, and in fact the family may be working to undermine the relationship, so it can be difficult.

Anandaroopa: From Divya @ Sahodaran: I am a documentary filmmaker. Did you have any bad experiences with male partners which have encouraged you to become a lesbian?

Minal Hajratwala: Thanks Divya, no, I have never had any bad experiences with male partners.  I don’t think I ”became” a lesbian so much as I realized I have always had a strong attraction to and emotional affinity for women.

sahodharan: Do you consider yourself a good speaker as well or just a writer? You have a curious audience for your speech here. This is from JAYA, THE SAHODARAN BEAUTY QUEEN.  [Note from Minal: I’m told Jaya is in fact a beauty queen, having won a title recently.]

Minal Hajratwala: Hello Jaya, congrats on your beauty queen title!  Yes, I do speak and perform as well as write.  Unfortunately I don’t think my internet connection today is strong enough to support audio  🙂

LRamakrishnan: Your recent Lambda award was in the category of bisexual non-fiction. In your acceptance speech you appreciated the committee’s recognition of both bisexual and nonfiction as valid identity categories. Could you speak about bisexuality in particular, and the tendency of people to erase their bisexual histories and identites when they settle down with a partner. As you know there is a lot of pressure from gay/lesbian and straight communities to assimilate into those categories, depending on partner gender. What are the consequences of bisexual erasure for the individual, beyond the resulting invisibility of the community?

Minal Hajratwala: Thanks LR.  You know, according to the Kinsey study, and I’m in agreement about this, probably most people in the world, if they were totally free to pursue their desires, would be somewhere in between strict heterosexuality and strict homosexuality. That is, they would probably be bisexual to some extent, whether small or large. And I think anytime we are required to suppress our innermost desires, not even being able to admit them to ourselves, that has consequences for the psyche.  It is ok to say, Yes I have this desire and I choose to act or not act on it. But to not even be able to admit one’s own desire — it seems rather sad.

ck: Coming back to your unbelievable research in tracing your family roots… do you have an idea if any of your 36 first cousins are LGBT and are contributing in some way to the cause. kudos to your fantastic work!

Minal Hajratwala: Thank you, ck.  Let me say it this way — so far, no one in my family has yet come out to me.  🙂  But I do have cousins, as well as my brother and sister-in-law, who have been fantastic [heterosexual] allies.

sahodharan: Have you come across any discrimination because of your sexuality?

Minal Hajratwala:  no, on the contrary, I feel that being open about who I am has allowed me to be part of an amazing community and has opened doors and friendships that I would not otherwise have.  Small incidents of ignorance, yes, but far overshadowed by the beauty and rewards.

Amy, U.S. Consulate (Moderator): A note to our audience: We are coming to the end of our time with Minal.

Minal Hajratwala: It has been such a pleasure to chat with you all!  Is there one last question Amy?

sahodharan: Do you think you would have come out if you were born raised and lived in India?

Minal Hajratwala: Yes, without a doubt. I might have come out even sooner, since I would have probabl gone to a girls’ school — I hear that all kinds of interesting things happen there. 😉

Amy, U.S. Consulate (Moderator): To borrow your phrase, Minal, I believe that you have opened up many doors and friendships today. I’d like to share some of the messages that the audience is sending to thank you:

sahodharan: We at SAHODARAN, have thoroughly enjoyed this session, and am truly honored to b given this opportunity
sahodharan
: Ms. Ramba wants to host you at Sahodoran in Chennai. She would very happy to welcome you here in the community.
Anandaroopa
: From Kavya @ Sahodaran: My mobile is +[deleted]. Call me.
ck
: 🙂 THANKS!
sahodharan: ths has been a truly rewarding and exciting experience foe all of us at SAHODARAN, and v wud like to take ths opportuinity to thank th e YOU and US consul and
Amy, U.S. Consulate (Moderator): And they’re clapping. 🙂

Minal Hajratwala: Thank you so much, everyone, and especially the Consulate and Sahodaran for hosting us. I hope we will meet in person some day.  As we say in Gujarati, awjo!

Amy, U.S. Consulate (Moderator): Minal, we hope that we can find a time to continue this discussion when you are in India on your Fulbright.

Minal Hajratwala: Yes, definitely. And then we will be on the same time zone. 🙂  Good night all, it’s bedtime for me!

Amy, U.S. Consulate (Moderator): For our audience, we have a special prize for joining us today. Please SMS Talk2US and your name to [deleted] for a chance to win a copy of ”Leaving India.”  Thank you again, Minal. On behalf of the US Consulate in Chennai and our friends at Sahodaran, thank you so much!

I won a Lammy!

Here’s the acceptance speech that Cecilia Tan kindly read for me at the Lambda Literary Awards ceremony in New York on Thursday night.

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Thank you so much to the judges and to Lambda. It’s a real honor to be the first winner in this brand new category of bisexual nonfiction. And it’s a testament to many many people’s courageous efforts to tell their truths, over many years, that both of these words – bisexual, nonfiction – can now be taken seriously, one as a sexual identity and one as a creative literary identity. Thank you.

I’m grateful above all to my family, both the family I was born into and the queer family I came into, without whom this book could not have been written.

Leaving India is a book about migration and migrants, and so the thing that seems most important to express in this moment is my fervent wish that we as an American LGBTIQ community can find the IQ, the intelligent queerness, to take a stance on this increasingly critical national issue of immigration.

This is our issue. Because we, maybe better than any other Americans, know what it means to cross borders without permission. We know why it is sometimes necessary to transgress lines that other people, in their over-righteous morality, have arbitrarily drawn to divide our our families and our communities. We know the needs and desires that direct us to challenge the law or even break the law, if it is the wrong law for our bodies, for our hearts. In the heartlands of this country, for many generations now, every queer person has been an illegal intruder. And only through our brave work is this alien status beginning to change.

So I hope we can build alliances and continue to strengthen our incredible community, which includes and has always included immigrants, and the children of immigrants — with or without books to their names; with or without the right papers.

Thank you very much.

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(Ron Hogan, who was my marketing manager at Houghton Mifflin Harcourt until recently, created this nifty little ad that ran on the Lambda Lit website during the time between when the finalists were announced and the awards ceremony.)

Writing from the Chakras

chakra-meditation-spiral“Whatever just happened, it was perfect.”

I love my yoga teacher Skeeter Barker because she’s always coming up with this kind of amazing statement. She usually says it just after we’ve done something extra-difficult or extra-weird, involving the left foot up in the air while the right arm is tucked under the something-something, and I’m sure I’ve done it terribly wrong…

until Skeeter, with her sweet British accent, says something like, “Now lift up the corners of your thighs, and the outer ribs, oh, and don’t forget to lift up the corners of your mouth, too.”  Then I find I’m actually smiling as I challenge my body to do something that it has never, in its 38 years, attempted to do before.

This is how I feel about writing, too.

I struggled a lot with writers’ block in the process of writing my book Leaving India; so many critical voices and doubts crowded in that it took me literally years to find my way.  That struggle taught me how to loosen up, allow mistakes, allow everything.  Now I know that a good writing session is just another kind of yoga:  I feel myself open up, I let the energies flow through me, and I try not to get attached to any specific posture or product.

So I’m super excited to be co-teaching a workshop, called Writing from the Chakras, with Skeeter. She’ll guide the asanas, I’ll guide the writing games, and you’ll be there with us, right? (1:30pm-4pm Saturday May 15, San Francisco; register here.)

And whatever happens, between you and your chakras and your notebook and the rest of us and our chakras and our notebooks … don’t worry.  It’ll be just perfect.

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WRITING FROM THE CHAKRAS
A Spiral Community Workshop
Saturday, May 15
1:30 – 4pm
with Minal Hajratwala & Skeeter Barker

This fun, relaxed 2.5 hour workshop is designed to open up the chakras through yoga asana and breath, leading to an unleashing of your creativity onto paper. No previous yoga or writing experience necessary. We will be exploring yoga asana as a method for developing a body-based approach to writing, and using writing exercises as another kind of expression. Creative writing doesn’t have to be any more complicated than breathing, so if you can breathe from your core, then you can also write from your core, revealing your truth and creativity. We will be exploring and looking into the specific energies of each chakra through asana, and discover what kind of writing comes from each one.

n589476453_1027565_1757Skeeter has been teaching for five lovely years. She has studied with Katchie Ananda, Noah Maze and has done trainings with John Friend, Desiree Rumbaugh and Jim Bernaert. Skeeter very much enjoys the emotional evolution that comes from the practice of Anusara yoga. She honors the peaceful warrior nature that is uniquely revealed in each of us, through this journey called yoga. Skeeter’s purpose is to create a safe space for all students to arrive on their mat, practice the beautiful art of unfoldment and connect to true authentic self. She welcomes you to your mat, however you find yourself there.

4857_1176080125291_1326727716_463235_2202076_sMinal is the author of Leaving India: My Family’s Journey From Five Villages to Five Continents (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2009), which has been called “incomparable” by Alice Walker and “searingly honest” by the Washington Post. The book won a California Book Award (Silver, Nonfiction) and is currently shortlisted for the Saroyan International Writing Prize and a Lambda Literary Award. A former journalist, she spent seven years researching and writing the book, traveling the world to interview more than seventy-five members of her extended family. She is also a poet and performer whose own creative processes have benefited greatly from yoga, meditation, and somatic practices. In 2010 she will be moving to India for nine months as a Fulbright Senior Scholar.

Fee: $20
Location: Yoga Kula, 3030A 16th St, San Francisco, CA 94103
Register online at
www.yogakula.com or by calling (415) 934-0000

Poem: Into the Dark Future

Dashed off a quick poem, below, for those out protesting today on behalf of workers’ and immigrants’ rights, especially for everyone doing great organizing and protest work in/about what’s going on in Arizona.

For more poetry on the topic, Facebook users can see the amazing virtual mobilization going on at Poets Responding to SB 1070.

Images in this post are by Xicana artist Melanie Cervantes.

Into the Dark Future

In the twelfth generation
when we are no longer Indian
or Japanese, not Mexican
or Hmong,
who will police
the borders in our blood?

As the rivers burn
with oil & loss,
as the mountains
erupt
with hollow rage,
what papers shall we carry

except those inscribed
with love?
Will we remember
the names of the dogs
who chased us like furies,
rabid white

mouths foaming
because they have lost
their homes, their meat,
their mother’s love,
and even their gods,
who left them

barking, barking
against the tide?
Look: We are the future.
And isn’t it rich,
dark, sweet, dazzling,
unrelentingly brave?

Science Friday: Political Science

This week’s science news really had me worried. You know, it’s so hard to sort through all those statistics and stuff. I really appreciate it when politicians cut out the smartypants-talk and tell it to us straight.

Food science is a super important field, since we all, you know, eat. So in Bolivia, the president revealed that consuming hormone-enhanced chicken causes men to become homosexual … and bald! How messed up is that? What ARE they putting in our food, anyway?

Strangely, “Morales’s theories do not appear to have been immediately accepted by the scientific community,” reports the UK-based Guardian newspaper.

Actually I don’t eat chicken, though, so I’m not *too* creeped out by that. What really had me stressed out were the new developments in seismology.

In Iran,  a hard-line religious leader says women and girls who dress immodestly spread promiscuity, and “When promiscuity spreads, earthquakes increase.”

So I guess France is just asking for it by trying to make women wear revealing clothes.  The French want to ban the full Islamic face & body covering to protect “the dignity of all persons and equality between men and women.” I do get where they’re coming from, though, because people who choose weird clothing for their weird religions really don’t deserve dignity, equality, fraternite, and whatever those other things in the French motto are. I just hope the French are getting their kits de séisme ready.

Anyway the promiscuity-earthquake hypothesis totally made sense to me,  until I read that a hard-line religious leader right here in the United States (Pat Robertson) has determined that earthquakes are caused by pacts with the Devil — or at least, the one in Haiti was.  So now I’m kind of confused.

Either way, it makes a lot of sense that San Francisco, with all the loose women AND pacts with the Devil going on, is prone to earthquakes.

Maybe I should move to Idaho. Potatoes don’t cause earthquakes, right?

Unless, I guess, they’re promiscuous, spawn-of-Satan type potatoes:

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It’s National Poetry Month!

This Thursday, I will be reading poems about beauty pageants, anger, fast food, and possibly unicorns…

…as part of two events in one day to help launch INDIVISIBLE, the first anthology of South Asian American poetry, which U.S. Poet Laureate Billy Collins has praised as “among the best anthologies of poetry.” More info: http://www.indivisibleanthology.com/anthology/

Would love to see you!  And don’t forget to celebrate National Poetry Month:  write a poem, get a poetry book (like Indivisible), read a poem aloud to someone, buy a poet dinner, you know, stuff like that. 🙂

**** Thursday, April 22 *****

indivisible

3:30pm:

Reading and Q&A, Poetry Center, San Francisco State University, Humanities Building Room 512 (fifth floor), 1600 Holloway Avenue, San Francisco. (415) 338-2227. Indivisible editors Neelanjana Banerjee, Summi Kaipa and Pireeni Sundaralingam, along with contributors Tanuja Mehrotra Wakefield and Minal Hajratwala, will be featured readers at The Poetry Center at San Francisco State University. Don’t miss this reading at this historic Poetry Center, originally founded in 1954, and get a chance to be a part of the American Poetry Archives: http://www.sfsu.edu/~poetry/aboutUs.html

7:30pm:
Reading and Release Party, The Green Arcade, 1680 Market Street @Gough, San Francisco. (415) 431-6800. Come to Part II of Indivisible at The Poetry Center, held at The Green Arcade — one of SF’s newer bookstores. If you can’t make it out to San Francisco State University, come see some of the women of Indivisible read here. Featuring Indivisible Editors Neelanjana Banerjee, Summi Kaipa and Pireeni Sundaralingam, along with Tanuja Mehrotra Wakefield and Minal Hajratwala.

SF: Tuesday, April 13, Lambda finalists reading

I’m excited to share a stage this week with 14 other fabulous writers who are finalists for the 2010 Lambda Literary Awards. The “Lammies” are kind of like the Oscars for LGBT writers in the United States. You’re welcome to wear your red carpet attire if you like. 🙂  And if you’re looking for great books to read, click here to see the whole list of finalists. Winners will be announced May 27.

I hear the food at the reception will be awesome, so come early if you can.

Tuesday, April 13

San Francisco Public Library
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)
San Francisco, CA 94102

Reception at 5:00 pm in the Hormel Center

Reading at 6:00 pm in the Latino-Hispanic Room

Featuring (not necessarily in this order):

Rhiannon Argo
Tommi Avicolli-Mecca
Lynnee Breedlove
Matt Dean
Elana Dykewomon
Z Egloff
Dexter Flowers
Jon Ginoli
Minal Hajratwala
Karin Kallmaker
Kevin Killian
Patrick Letellier
Malinda Lo
Randall Mann
Ron Palmer

Hosted by Tony Valenzuela, Katherine Forrest and Karen Sundheim.

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