The Old American Can Factory, where CUP's office is housed; a dialysis facility on 4th Ave at the edge of the Gowanus section of Brooklyn;
I spend most of my week doing research and administrative tasks in a one-room office with CUP's two full-time employees. My duties range from updating the website to investigating potential public program topics to running errands and picking up supplies. My interaction with CUP's ever-changing constituents is minimal. As my peers talk about the children they've encountered who have completely changed their outlook on pop culture and gender or the parents they see in courts and jails fighting to maintain relationships with their families, I feel that my work is inadequate. CUP's projects don't involve instant gratification or instant defeat. I can't see immediate results, and my experiences have been far less emotionally charged than those of my peers. As a result, this summer I have often worried about the legitimacy of my current efforts and the validity of my goals for the future within the context of the struggle for social justice.
However, during the CUSP placement process I did specify that I wanted to be involved in identifying and analyzing the structural causes of poverty and injustice rather than addressing the needs of individuals affected by inequality. This structural perspective most definitely drives CUP, and all of their programs and projects unwaveringly support that approach to social change. When I examine the work I am doing in terms of my beliefs and desires rather than those of other people, the role that CUP plays within the global conversation about urbanity and inequality becomes clear to me.
Although I feel strongly that structural causes of social problems must be addressed if lasting change is to occur, and I want to do work that supports this belief, I have not yet developed the patience and discipline required to push for long-term, systemic change. I find myself clinging to a young, headstrong heroine mentality despite all of the evidence that this approach is useless in the face of centuries of the subtle perpetuation of oppression and injustice. I hope that time and a project in which I have the opportunity to be more invested will help me to cultivate the patience and foresight necessary to make significant, sustainable changes.