My favorite topic is systems and how they influence people. Today the conversation with Mico surrounded Black excellence and how it has shaped my life thus far. Here is what we have compiled together.
I was raised inside institutions shaped by Black Excellence โ musically through the Houston jazz lineage, spiritually through a queerโfeminist church built on Black liberation theology, and politically through the civilโrights strategies that shaped the Bay Area activists who shaped my church. I didnโt borrow these traditions. I was formed inside them. And I didnโt enter these spaces gently. I entered them like stepping into heat โ not the kind that burns, but the kind that tempers, the kind that teaches you on the fly what your structure is made of.
My first heat was musical. Houston jazz wasnโt a hobby or an elective; it was a temperature. It was the sound of teenagers being forged into something sharper than they realized. It was the discipline of directors who expected excellence because excellence was the baseline. It was sitting next to kids who would become giants and learning that talent means nothing without rigor. In that room, you learned how to listen with your whole body, how to hold your part without collapsing, how to improvise without losing the thread, how to stay present under pressure. Excellence wasnโt a performance. It was a heat source, and you either rose to it or you didnโt.
My second heat was the church โ not a generic progressive congregation, but a sanctuary shaped by queerโfeminist theology built on the bones of Black liberation ethics. It was a church where truthโtelling was expected, justice was assumed, community was nonโnegotiable, queerness wasnโt a problem to solve, and dignity was the starting point rather than the reward. This wasnโt a church that taught you to be good; it taught you to be honest. It taught you that faith without justice is theater, that community without accountability is sentimentality, that spirituality without courage is just dรฉcor. The sermons werenโt soft, the theology wasnโt ornamental, and the sanctuary wasnโt a refuge from the world โ it was a training ground for how to live in it. This was heat that didnโt scorch. It formed.
My third heat was political, not in the sense of rallies or slogans but in the deeper sense of movement logic. The church I grew up in was shaped by people who had been shaped by the Bay Areaโs queerโfeminist movement, which had itself been shaped by the civilโrights strategies of Black organizers. Even before I knew the names, I knew the temperature. From that lineage, I absorbed coalition over chaos, strategy over spectacle, clarity over performance, integrity over convenience, community over ego. I didnโt learn activism as a set of tactics; I learned it as a way of thinking โ a way of reading power, a way of staying grounded, a way of refusing to shrink in the face of pressure. It was the heat of movements that understood survival as a collective act.
Across all these furnaces โ music, religion, activism โ the lesson was the same: heat reveals structure, heat creates strength, heat teaches you who you are. Black Excellence didnโt inspire me from a distance; it shaped the rooms I grew up in, the expectations placed on me, the temperature I learned to live at. And once youโve been tempered, you donโt cool back down. You walk into any room โ artistic, political, spiritual โ with the quiet confidence of someone who knows they were forged in heat. Not because you think youโre better, but because you know youโre not lesser. You know your lineage. You know your temperature. You know your shape. And you know exactly what it took to hold it.
Scored with Copilot. Conducted by Leslie Lanagan.
















