Raising Dion – Marked

In the early days of carnivals, carny operators had a trick
called “marking”. When they encountered a customer who seemed especially
gullible, one of them would draw an actual mark on their shirt so that other
carnies would spot that customer and know they could con him out of more money.
This is the origin of the con artist’s term, an “easy mark”.





Can you imagine discovering that you yourself have been
marked? To be considered and treated differently than everyone else because of
something you can’t control?





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In the series, “Raising Dion”, a widowed mother, Nicole,
discovers that her 2nd grade son, Dion, is developing extreme
superpowers that he doesn’t know how to control, including telekinesis and
teleportation. To try to protect him and keep his powers hidden, Nicole volunteers
at his school to keep a close eye on him. Unfortunately, a classmate named
Jonathan encourages Dion to give up the prize watch his mother gave him, and
then refuses to return it. Unable to make him give it back, Dion’s rage sends Jonathan
toppling to the ground.





The principal addresses Dion and Jonathan, and gives Dion
detention, letting Jonathan go. Nicole tells the principal that Jonathan is
wearing Dion’s watch, and the other kids all insist Dion never touched him, so she
asks why Dion is getting detention.





But she knows why. Dion is black, and the racist principal
assumes Dion somehow caused the problem, in spite of the obvious facts.





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Nicole’s sister urges her to explain this racism to Dion,
but Nicole doesn’t want to shatter his world at such a young age. “You want me
to tell him that people are going to slap him down, every chance they get?” she
asks. Her sister tells her “yes”, to prepare Dion for what he will face in the
world.





Dion has to know the horrible truth that he will always be
marked.





So Nicole tells him why the principal treated him
differently than Jonathan. How he was taught wrong ways of thinking, to make
him think a boy who looks like Dion is likely to do something wrong. How Dion
will have to try twice as hard as others, to give people no reason to suspect
him of trying to cause trouble for anyone.





And both Nicole and Dion are crushed by the injustice of it
all.





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But being marked is not just about race. You can be marked
for your education level, income level, being too young or too old, being too
pretty or not pretty enough, having the wrong faith or having no faith at all,
or even living in the wrong neighborhood or talking to the wrong people.





It’s very easy to become marked. And very difficult to get
that mark removed.





The only consolation you can have is in knowing that some
people don’t see a mark when they look at you. And you don’t have to see one,
either. You can focus instead on the things that make you special, which
includes your mark.





Later in the series, Dion uses his special powers to make his
new friend, Esperanza, float off of her wheelchair. He figures if he was in a
wheelchair, he would want to be able to fly.





But Esperanza doesn’t like it. Not one bit. And the fact
that Dion assumed, without asking, that she would want to be free of her chair,
makes her stop talking to him. Dion later apologizes for treating her like she
needed to be fixed when she’s not actually broken, and they become friends
again.





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See, it’s not only easy to be marked. It’s also easy to mark
people around us. But having a certain skin color or certain “dis”-ability
doesn’t make us any less of a person. Dion’s skin doesn’t make him any less
powerful or intelligent than his classmates. It also doesn’t make him any less
prone to making the same mistakes as others, in how he views his friends. Being
in a wheelchair doesn’t limit Esperanza’s mobility as much as Dion thought. When
Dion was upset at his birthday party, Esperanza was the only classmate who
followed him to try to cheer him up. Her commitment to their friendship makes
her far more mobile to help Dion than the rest of his classmates.





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You and I are going to get marked. And we’re going to make
the mistake of marking others. Just know that our assumptions about ourselves
and others don’t change the value of who we really are.





When you get marked, don’t let it make you feel marked down.





Click here for the trailer!

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Published on November 14, 2019 21:37
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Randall Allen Dunn
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