So, I love blogging? So, why haven't I been blogging? UGH - I'm not getting started on all the excuses, but I hope to start back up . . . I have so many things I want to blog about . . . who knows why I'm starting with Chocolate Rain??? MLK Day, maybe??
What Is Chocolate Rain?
My husband has been going around for months singing in a
deep bellow, âChocolate Rain.â It has
been somewhat annoying, but just as annoying has been the begging, âYouâve just
got to see the video of Chocolate Rain.â
Well, I guess I have been living in the dark the last several months
because supposedly this âChocolate Rainâ is âIT.â âITâ to me was just some crazy, facile video
with some deep voiced guy just saying crazy random lyrics, and Iâm not into the
type of humor that just doesnât make sense.
Even though âChocolate Rainâ might just be that simplistic song to many
people, I had a grave misunderstanding of Chocolate Rain. So, what is Chocolate Rain? Simply, it is a song/video on YouTube of a
young man with an extremely deep hypnotizing voice. But, what struck me is the depth of the words
behind the voice. Here are the lyrics:
Chocolate Rain - Some stay dry and others feel the pain
Chocolate Rain - A baby born will die before the sin
Chocolate Rain - The school books say it can't be here again
Chocolate Rain - The prisons make you wonder where it went
Chocolate Rain - Build a tent and say the world is dry
Chocolate Rain - Zoom the camera out and see the lie
Chocolate Rain - Forecast to be falling yesterday
Chocolate Rain - Only in the past is what they say
Chocolate Rain - Raised your neighborhood insurance rates
Chocolate Rain - Makes us happy 'livin in a gate
Chocolate Rain - Made me cross the street the other day
Chocolate Rain - Made you turn your head the other way
Chocolate Rain - History quickly crashing through your veins
Chocolate Rain - Using you to fall back down again
Chocolate Rain - History quickly crashing through your veins
Chocolate Rain - Using you to fall back down again
Chocolate Rain - Seldom mentioned on the radio
Chocolate Rain - Its the fear your leaders call control
Chocolate Rain - Worse than swearing worse than calling names
Chocolate Rain - Say it publicly and you're insane
Chocolate Rain - No one wants to hear about it now
Chocolate Rain - Wish real hard it goes away somehow
Chocolate Rain - Makes the best of friends begin to fight
Chocolate Rain - But did they know each other in the light?
Chocolate Rain - Every February washed away
Chocolate Rain - Stays behind as colors celebrate
Chocolate Rain - The same crime has a higher price to pay
Chocolate Rain - The judge and jury swear it's not the face
Chocolate Rain - History quickly crashing through your veins
Chocolate Rain - Using you to fall back down again
Chocolate Rain - History quickly crashing through your veins
Chocolate Rain - Using you to fall back down again
Chocolate Rain - Dirty secrets of economy
Chocolate Rain - Turns that body into GDP
Chocolate Rain - The bell curve blames the baby's DNA
Chocolate Rain - But test scores are how much the parents make
Chocolate Rain - 'Flippin cars in France the other night
Chocolate Rain - Cleans the sewers out beneath Mumbai
Chocolate Rain - 'Cross the world and back its all the same
Chocolate Rain - Angels cry and shake their heads in shame
Chocolate Rain - Lifts the ark of paradise in sin
Chocolate Rain - Which part do you think you're 'livin in?
Chocolate Rain - More than 'marchin more than passing law
Chocolate Rain - Remake how we got to where we are.
So, by digging a little deeper, I found out that there was
so much more to this âcrazyâ video. But,
I like to dig even deeper, so I did.
Also on YouTube I found an interview of Tay Zonday, the writer and
singer of âChocolate Rain.â In the midst
of the predictable questions, there were two statements he made that caused me
to give this song even more profound meaning.
The song started taking on many different layers for me. Of course the song obviously takes on a claim
that racism that is still prevalent in the world today even though we claim it
is only in the past and we do not see it in todayâs society. However, Tay Zonday talked about the meaning
of âChocolate Rainâ in the aforementioned interview. He stated that chocolate rain isnât something
that is so dogmatic that you can put your finger on it and explain . . . âthis
is what chocolate rain is.â He said that
in our society, everything has to have a conclusion; that our history is a
history of conclusions. He liked to
compare chocolate rain to the 1980âs thought of âThe Never Ending Storyâ where
chocolate rain is nothing. Itâs a
question. Itâs a force. Itâs a force or question that not only affects
your actions but also your thoughts, and that force can be different for each
and every person. He explained that
everyone should let chocolate rain come to its own conclusion to what it is for
themselves.
That is when it hit me.
If I digress for a moment, I think of the word
chauvinist. When hearing that word,
everyone immediately thinks about how men view they are better than women. That is a very direct use of the word, even
though the word is much broader than that.
A chauvinist can be used to describe anyone that has a judgment or an
opinion about a person. I have read that the word does not require the judgment to be right or wrong in the
chauvinistâs opinion, only that the chauvinist is blind and unreasoning in
coming to the opinion. The chauvinist
also ignores any facts which might counter his feelings. Taking this definition in correlation with
the song, when someone has a chauvinistic view we see many events that are
described in the song â it doesnât just have to be about the color.
Having children
has really opened my eyes to see that so many people have a prejudice or a bias
about something or some type of person. It
doesnât have to be JUST about color. We
judge so many people for so many different things. We really do put up a tent and say the world
is dry when there is so much judgment raining all around us just lurking right
beneath our noses. We do it because we
feel that we can have a little more control of our own lives when we pass
judgment on others. And, that right
there is our sub-conscious excuse of the chocolate rain that we cause to rain
down on the world, and we often allow that excuse to âuse us to fall again,â
and again and again. We create the
weather pattern. And, we sub-consciously
allow it to continue believing that we are not judging. How often do we say,
âOh, that is so typical of that type
of person.â
âUgh, look what kind of person we
got to serve us.â
This nation is so much more judgmental than any other time in our
history, but we deny it. No, I donât
think itâs as out in the open as say when Puritans judged others or when whites
judged blacks, but itâs every race . . . every color . . . every religion . . .
every social class sit back in their comfort zone and pass judgment on anyone
else that is not just like them. The
world is not dry. Just look outside your
window to see Chocolate Rain. It is
there.
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