The Bloomington Young Single Adult Branch
Some people look through prisms of people and social structure primarily through race. That can be indicative of many things that are true and real. Racial composition can have its own culture and power dynamics. The YSA Branch that I became a member of had a minority of minorities. Most of us were white, Caucasian Americans, citizens of the United States.
For what I remember in the 1997 to 1999 time frame in our group of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, we had two African-Americans, two Latinos (three if we counted a young lady moving out), and a couple East Asians. The Black members were a young lady doing her masters at IU, from Chicago. Darxavia. I think I spelled it right. Another was Tsombe Masala, based out of Indianapolis, whose family from Congo had joined the Church around the time the second manifesto, when blacks were granted permission or access to the priesthood. We had a young lady from Czech Republic. Anyone else international? Not too much. Many from Utah, for sure. Caitlin Shirts, but many from Indiana, too. Tara Tripple. She married Chris Arick.
Real names. Have we protected the people enough by the amount of time passed? Kaaren from Washington State. Megan from Alabama. Kristin from Las Vegas, Nevada. The Hawkins from Oregon. The young lady violinist or violist from Colorado.
We had some local folks, like the Taysoms. And others. The Potits. Me, returning from the Inter-Mountain West. Nichols, and Snyder. Oh, I had forgotten about a couple. Like the dark haired girl. Likely from Indiana.
Other ways to divide or categorize us is by education, socioeconomic status, gender, orientation, level of faith of commitment, native to Indiana as students, intelligence native to us (genius, average, slow), and age. And cities or states or countries of origin. Experience, like serving missions.
Sal Mendez, and others. Sandy Padron. Rhea LeMaster and Liz Wood. Jared Asay and Trevor Irwin.
Oh, those times. David Hawkins. David?