I spent about two years living in upstate New York. I would wake up early most mornings and drive the winding back roads, catching glimpses of the rising sun between the tops of the evergreen trees on my way to work. Work was at a place called Farm Sanctuary, a refuge for animals used for food where they live out their lives under the care and protection of Sanctuary staff. The journey to Sanctuary was something I always valued and appreciated. There was something meaningful about heading somewhere that existed with such deep intention and then arriving there. There was something about the felt experience of traversing the spatial landscape of the area and arriving at this place that took up space in a defined and intentional way in service of care and safety for a community.
Not far from the Sanctuary where I worked is a Tops grocery store. I would go there regularly on errands, taking the interns grocery shopping or stopping by during lunch or on my way home from work. Farm Sanctuary and this particular Tops grocery store are situated in the predominantly white town of Watkins Glen, New York. Weeks could go by before I would see another person with darker skin, months before I would see someone else who was Black.
On days off, I would sometimes head to New York City or another larger town or city nearby for a change of scenery, where I could feel a little less like the odd one out. It was not that I needed to see myself reflected in others exactly, but instead, I wanted to feel that greater sense of ease and relief that came in spaces where I could see and experience that there are other ways to “be” — even as we share the same space. That it is possible to share space as the dynamic and diverse expressions of who we are. It seemed that I could breathe more easily, more fully when I would travel to those places like there was something I could finally cast off and lay down.
When I first learned about the shooting at the Tops grocery store in Buffalo, New York — hearing and seeing the names and faces of the people who had been killed — I could so clearly recall the aisles of the Tops grocery store in Watkins Glen that I had walked through many times before. Buffalo is about two and a half hours away from where I had lived. I traveled there several times on my days off to visit one of my favorite restaurants, Allentown Pizza, just five minutes from the Tops grocery store on Jefferson Avenue where the shooting took place, where ten Black people had been killed — targeted explicitly because they were Black. Black like me.