Allies and Cookie Badges
ETA: Before anyone responds, I want to be clear that this is not a request for reassurance or cookies or any of that. I’m an adult, fully capable of buying or making my own damn cookies. Thanks.
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A week or so back, a group working to end violence against women named me as one of sixteen male role models helping to fight violence against women. In an unrelated situation a few days later, someone on Facebook told me she would no longer support my work, and that I might claim to be an ally, but I’m not.
I can’t say with 100% certainty, but I don’t think I’ve ever claimed to be an Ally. I don’t think it’s my place to proclaim myself an ally to women, or to victims of sexual violence, or to the LGBTQ community, and so on.
It was a little odd having these two things occur so close together, and there was a bit of cognitive dissonance for a little while, like I was Schrödinger‘s Ally or something.
I’ll be honest, this whole Ally thing confuses me a little. As shorthand for “this is a person who seems to be trying to understand and support me,” it makes sense. But it feels like we’ve turned it into the ultimate cookie, or a badge to flash around to prove you’re one of the Good Guys. Or maybe a badge-shaped cookie, I don’t know.
So you end up with people trying to deflect criticism by flashing their cookie badge. “Don’t you realize I’m your Ally? It says so right here in white frosting!” Or they turn it into a flounce, throwing their cookie on the ground and declaring, “You have lost a Valuable Ally this day!”
What a waste of a cookie…
(As I’m writing this, I’m starting to like the idea of Schrödinger‘s Ally as shorthand for that person who seems to say the right things, but you’re not sure whether they genuinely support you or if they’re only in it for the cookies. That’s a bit of a tangent though, so I’ll save it for later.)
I can understand that when you’re in a marginalized group fighting for dignity and equality and survival, it’s vital to know who your allies are and who you can trust to have your back. And the term is useful shorthand for articles like “How to be a good male ally” and such.
The whole concept still feels weird to me. Maybe it’s the idea that “ally” is a noun. A concrete, black-and-white thing you either are or aren’t, which gets back to my point about people simultaneously calling me an ally and not an ally…
Dissonance resolved: they’re both right, of course.
Because, linguistics aside, ally isn’t a noun; it’s a verb. It’s action. A process. It’s listening and learning to do better. It’s learning to offer support in ways that are helpful. It’s learning that it’s not all about you.
That gets to the heart of a lot of my discomfort. The moment you stand up and wave your cookie-badge and declare yourself An Ally, it becomes about you. Which not only misses the point, it turns 180 degrees and jumps to hyperspeed to get as far from the point as possible.
And on that note, I’m gonna go see if we have any cookies…
Kate Kulig
December 6, 2017 @ 7:21 pm
I’ve felt similarly. I operate with the feeling that marginalized people can tell me when I’m being a good ally.
bluestgirl
December 7, 2017 @ 9:37 am
Another issue I have with the term is that it seems to be used as a binary state – one is or isn’t an ally, which is just not a structure that fits actual people.
Ellie B
December 7, 2017 @ 12:32 pm
Part of the issue too is that none of the communities to which one might be an ally are monolithic. We might be looking for very different things in allies.
For instance, as a trans person who grew up in a conservative Christian environment, I 100% understand LGBTQ folks who have been hurt by organized religion and want nothing to do with it or the people associated with it. However, as I still find meaning in my faith, I am actively looking for support within my faith community (and sometimes finding it where I didn’t expect). Simply being associated with religion or a particular religion/denomination could be enough to disqualify someone as an ally in certain folks’ estimation and I honestly can’t blame anyone for that (I mean, I’m just as likely to write off some people too).
Heck, as a relatively privileged individual, I know I’ve said or done things that were less than helpful to other less privileged members of my own community.
Stuff’s complicated, I guess.
Dr. Sheila Addison
December 7, 2017 @ 2:09 pm
This is exactly the premise of the Ally Skills Workshop: Ally is a verb, not a noun. It’s what we do. https://frameshiftconsulting.com/ally-skills-workshop/
(Disclosure: I present the ASW as a consultant for Frame Shift and also independently.)
Jenn H
December 7, 2017 @ 5:26 pm
Bluestgirl and Ellie B capture some of the thoughts I had reading this. There is no universal governing board of allyship, no certificate, nothing official. Not every member of a marginalized community will view exactly the same people as allies, and not every ally has the same degree of trust from the various members of the community.
I agree with you that allyship is recognized by others, rather than something we declare ourselves to be.
Sally
December 7, 2017 @ 8:48 pm
It’s a verb only you can do, and a noun only others can call you. *
You might be a great ally to one group and not at all to another.
The woman on FB is entitled to her opinion, even if I think it’s puzzling and dumb. But much of FB is dumb, so…
* (“It’s a floor wax!” “It’s a dessert topping!”)
Carpe Librarium
December 8, 2017 @ 4:26 pm
There’s a great TEDx talk by Jay Smooth called “How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Discussing Race” where he encourages everyone to adopt the Dental Hygiene approach to racism (though it can work for all kinds of societal biases).
Just because I cleaned my teeth yesterday, doesn’t mean I don’t need to clean them today, and it doesn’t prevent me getting something stuck in them at lunchtime.
http://www.illdoctrine.com/2011/11/my_tedx_talk_how_i_stopped_wor.html
Fraser
December 8, 2017 @ 7:20 pm
I get your point, but “ally” is a noun, as countless books on military history have taught me (the Allies in WW II, for example).
Jim C. Hines
December 8, 2017 @ 7:38 pm
I’ll keep that in mind the next time I decide to ally myself with a good cause 😉