Mono-racial privilege
Sep. 2nd, 2010 09:02 amReading over a list of things that people with white privilege take for granted, I am reminded of how I feel every time I am told to "check only one box." This list is things that people of only one race take for granted.
- You can check only one box.
- You won't have complete strangers walk up to you and ask you what you are (as if maybe you're not human, after all).
- You can answer "where are you from" with the place where your house is located, or where the hospital in which you were born is located.
- You can answer "where are you from" in under ten minutes, without any follow-up questions.
- You don't have to worry if someone is hitting on you because you look "exotic".
- You don't have to wonder if the person you're talking to would treat you differently if they knew what you "really" were.
- You don't have to correct people when they describe you.
- You can talk about white privilege or racism without having people give you funny looks. ("How would she know?")
- You don't feel constantly torn in two directions about common cultural norms and values.
- You don't have to think about whether the clothing, jewelry, or make-up you're wearing makes you look too much like race X.
- You can wear hand-me-downs without worrying if they're too "ethnic".
- You don't have people turn to you as a representative of either/all of your particular races/cultures.
- You don't have to check only one box (multicultural) that lumps you in with people of entirely different backgrounds. (Tiger Woods and Obama would check that multicultural box, but their experiences are nothing like mine.)
- You can nod and agree when someone says to you "I'm multicultural: Italian and German!"
- People don't expect you to laugh at jokes that slander your own background.
- You don't have to feel simultaneously guilty about your advantages and angry about your disadvantages.
no subject
Date: 2011-03-11 01:12 am (UTC)As for why I do not want discussion, I am quite emotional/angry about this. When I received the comments on this post I was so upset that every time I received a new comment I could not work for the next two hours, and I knew that commenting myself would only extend things. Anger is a trigger for me (regardless of whether it is directed at myself or if it is myself who is angry), a result of growing up with a father who was a control freak and had anger management problems. Therefore I would like to politely request that you not reply to this new comment of mine with anything arguing against what I am saying, because that will be triggery for me. If you do not reply at all I will assume you continue to disagree, and that is fine with me, as long as I don't have to discuss the fact that you continue disagree (if such is the case). Honestly, I am taking a big emotional risk to reopen this topic now since I know there is a high chance I will receive replies that are not in agreement with me, and I am only doing so because of the combination of wanting to help others understand my situation, and because Spring Break starts tomorrow and I don't need to do any work for the next week and a half. I know this request of mine to not express your disagreement isn't fair, but it's what I need to have happen and this is my space.
no subject
Date: 2011-03-11 02:46 am (UTC)First, I never intended to belittle your experiences or say you did not experience discrimination, and I'm very sorry if I came across that way. I completely agree that all the things you listed in your post are discrimination of various forms, some fairly serious, and I fully believe--and have never disbelieved--that you suffered these various experiences.
Second, the way the post is set up/introduced reads to me as an "us versus them" of multi-racial people versus mono-racial people, and my personal reaction to that was to get into a very argumentative mode. It mostly wasn't really even the content of the list that I was reacting to even if that was how I phrased my argument--I was mostly reacting to the vibe I got from the intro/title. (I am in no way asking you to respond/explain/argue for why you phrased it that way. I am just stating my own, personal, subjective reaction to the wording.) I know that I can sometimes get very abrasive when I'm in argument-mode (and I certainly did in this case) and some people react worse to that than others; I will do my best to keep in mind in the future that our styles of interaction are very different and I should temper both how I react to what you say and what I say to you.
And third, and this is again just simply a statement of where I'm coming from here, but items #6 and #15 on your list were what made me mad enough to actually respond/argue in the first place rather than move on without commenting. Those things have happened to me over and over. In the case of #6, sometimes in ways and places that made me actually feel physically unsafe in my surroundings. And, well, actually in one extreme example #15 made me feel unsafe, too ("joke" might not be the appropriate word--I've certainly never thought so--but it's the word the guys "telling" it insisted on using). And, in the end, it was the idea that these situations--ones where I felt physically unsafe--couldn't have possibly happened to me because I was mono-racial... that was the idea that I read in your post, and that was why I got angry enough to write that whole argument.