The voice
in this blog is actually speaking for two. She embodies the split that many children
of immigrants, Asian or not, live. For some, it is not a choice. The parents
see to that. Some parents forbid a child from speaking anything but English.
Others refuse that tongue. And some, too many, are caught in-between. Neither
nor or both and. The double identity is heavy and requires skills most of us do
not have to worry about developing. This writer has made a choice. For now. In
this country we often say the apple does not fall far from the tree. But
sometimes the wisdom of clichés cannot cover the choices individuals make. I hope
she will take her Kerouac ride and find the other Ocean is not as far away as
she might think. I am grateful to her for the honesty and courage it took to
share this with us. We all can learn from her. I know I did and do.
When I
see my sister, I can conjure an image of a skinny girl wearing nondescript
jeans, a
basic V-neck, and the same pin-straight, shoulder-length haircut that
she has sported since kindergarten. Predominantly, I think of her diminutive,
slumped posture, her quiet voice that often assumes an apologetic tone, and her
defensive eye-roll that she should have outgrown a decade ago. She is
twenty-three, has an insurance job, lives at home with my parents, and is still
dating the only guy she has ever been close to. The guy is Asian. My sister is
Asian. And I, too, am, by genetics if not by choice, Asian.
I can
only vaguely mentally sketch my sister because I rarely see her or speak to
her, and we are so different that when I attempt conversation, it almost always
ends in uncomfortable silences punctuated only by our awkward head nods, the acknowledgement that yes, nothing has changed,
we still cannot speak. There exists a Pacific between us, bridged shakily by
childhood memories of playing Power Rangers and eating lemonade popsicles in
the grass together as our mom puttered around the garden. There exists a Pacific
between us because I decided years ago that I resented being labeled as “the
Asian” whereas she has made a home for herself in the curves and crevices of
the word, in the particulars of that identity.
My sister
emanates the kind of acute self-consciousness that I have seen in so many
Asian-Americans and that I myself have nestled in. It is the kind of
self-consciousness that emerges from being pigeon-holed as the smart, passive,
rule-following student and from being the butt of casual jokes involving
exaggerated “ching-chongs” and other crude parodies of the Asian tongue. I
dealt with this self-consciousness by struggling to transcend the stereotyping,
to be perceived as a person with an American name rather than as an Asian
template. She dealt with it by embracing the stereotypes.
While I was goofing off with the girls who owned American Girl dolls and ate pasta for dinner and Oreos for dessert, she hung around the kids who we had always been friends with-- the daughters and sons of the other Chinese immigrants that my parents picked. While I was arguing for permission to sleep over at a white friend’s house (sleepovers with the aforementioned Asian friends were no problem at all), my sister was in her room studying quietly. I tried on a medley of majors in college and finally decided upon English Literature. My sister entered college majoring in actuarial science and graduated with exactly that degree four years later. I am about to get in a car and drive across the country with plans to find a waitressing job once I hit the West Coast. My sister is living and working in the same 15-mile radius that she has occupied since elementary school and will soon marry the nice Asian boy she has been dating since high school.
I resent
my sister because I feel that being Asian in our American culture has made her
timid, that the Asian values of stability and conformity have handicapped her
experience here. I resent her because she has resigned herself to embodying a
stereotype that I have fought against, and because between our common genes and
a common childhood, I fear that her armored cover of the Asian identity affirms
the strength of certain cultural mentalities and values that I may never
eradicate from my psyche. In struggling to cast off familiar Asian stereotypes,
I have actively defined myself against “that which is Asian”. An Othering that
still swims within the sea of my own identity and that emerges with sharpest
clarity when I look at my sister and see her meekness and then fear it is also mine.
Does she
conceive of herself in this way-- as the timid Asian girl, never confronting
the foreign, complacent enough to exist cocooned beneath those tenuous silk
layers of safety that she has woven: her Asian friends, her job crunching
numbers, her residence at home with my parents? I can’t say for sure, because
we don’t talk. If she were anyone else, my resentment might merely be the
bemusement I feel when I hear snatches of conversation between Chinese students
in the library as they decide, between whispered giggles, which dining hall they
will pick to go to to eat dinner, or spend too much time seriously discussing
where their study group should meet afterward. But she is my sister, and I want
to shake her out of this apathy that keeps her running in laps around the same
prescribed path. I want her to struggle to define herself outside of a cultural
identity, if only to assuage my own fears that I cannot or have not succeeded
in doing so completely.
Of
course, the vast discrepancy in our lives cannot be wholly attributed to a
decision to be “Asian” or “not-Asian”. We have different dispositions, and hers
likely leaves her more inclined to pursue an insurance job than to read
Beckett. And I am not untroubled by my own decision to define myself against
Asianness.
Sometimes
when I overhear those fragments of Chinese conversation in the library, my
detached bemusement is followed by a surprising twinge of nostalgia as I
remember growing up with my parents’ chatter at the dinner table or the Sunday
afternoons I spent pronouncing new characters at Chinese School.
It is
about navigating the two poles that I have traversed as a first-generation
Asian growing up here: somewhere between the me that never dissented to doing
extra math problems for my parents and the me that carefully chose to hang out
only with white friends lies the identity that I might have formulated without
the fraught struggle to be not-Asian, to be not-my-sister. Similarly, I feel
that if my sister would step outside of the wholly Asian identity she has
sequestered herself in, she would break through some of that self-consciousness
that clings so parasitically to many Asian-Americans. Perhaps then, we could
collapse the space and silence between us.

Beautiful and courageous writing--I learned a great deal from her confession. And I am optimistic for her relationship with her sister.
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