Carly A. Kocurek, PhD - Games, Scholarship, Media

Casual Thinking. Serious Gaming.




I’m always angry

Category : Gender, Research Jun 20th, 2019

I have said before that the longer I work, the more simple and the less theoretical my personal politics become. I sit in meetings often and think, “Could you please just treat me like a person?” My colleague Jennifer deWinter is a master of humanization. “Sometimes,” she told me once, “I just say ‘I don’t understand why you’re being mean to me.'” I’ve used it. It works. But, I wish I didn’t need to ask to be treated like a person.

Four panel screen capture. First panel: Captain America in his mask, close up saying "Now might be a really good time for you to get angry." In the next panel, Bruce Banner says "That's my secret Cap" in a medium shot. In the third panel, in close up, Banner says, "I'm always angry." In the fourth, the Hulk is shown with no text.
I grew up watching Lou Ferrigno as the Hulk, but I’m pretty partial to Mark Ruffalo’s version of the green guy.

But, too many of us know the exhausting truth of it: Humanity isn’t a given for all of us, so perhaps I am asking a lot. I am asking a lot, but it is so very little: Could you please just treat me like a person? Could you please just treat everyone like a person?

Surfing through bureaucracy

I spent part of yesterday helping a friend outmaneuver the bureaucracy at a university halfway across the country. If there is a loophole, I can find it. If there isn’t one, I can revert to pathos. But, usually, I can get there. My friend was convinced she wouldn’t be able to go back to school in the fall, I promised her she could.

Bureaucracy can be dehumanizing, but I’ve gotten so used to it, both the bureaucracy and the dehumanization. I am a finder of loopholes, an exploiter of systems, an expert in asking forgiveness rather than permission.

A picture of the Hulk in a square, meme format with "You won't like me when I'm mad ... Because I always back up my rage with facts and documented sources. The Credible Hulk" in white text.
As a scientist, the Hulk probably is pretty credible on average.

I am also, like most women, nonbinary people, LGBTQ people, and people of color working as academics, lowkey angry all the time. It’s anger that keeps me on task to make sure a friend doesn’t have to leave school. It’s anger that gets me thanked by my dean for my “perseverance,” which I’m sure is a polite way of saying, “Wow, you really do not drop anything, do you?” I keep lists of things that need fixing; when something is too upsetting, it drops down the list until I can deal with it again. Change is tedious. It is also a moral obligation.

Anger is powerful

In this piece on the power of anger, Leon F Seltzer warns against seeing anger as a super power, since it often results from efforts to mask insecurities. This makes sense for the examples he gives, but the anger that fuels so many of us isn’t a kind of knee-jerk defense to criticism but a real awareness of existential threat. This isn’t individual, personal anger, but a smoldering fire in response to chronic, systemic brutality. This anger is the coals kept hot, awaiting more fuel.

I love a good self-improvement task as much as anyone else. A couple years ago, I dutifully wrote down what I felt went well, what I thought I could have improved, and three things I was grateful for every night for a year. It helped. But, gratitude is a survival strategy, not a solution. The growing discussion of toxic positivity culture has been a relief. Everything won’t work out. This isn’t all for the best. And, mostly I am a happy person, but I am also an angry one.

I think about being thanked for perseverance, and I think about my childhood love of the Incredible Hulk. I have the same secret: I’m always angry.

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