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But what about your blue eyes?

Dilyn Grasp,
Boring, OR.

I am a white woman from a small town in Oregon (look it up, it’s a real place). My boyfriend is a first generation American. His parents are from China and Taiwan. When we started dating two years ago (when I was 20 and old enough to make my own decisions), plenty of people in my hometown gave their concern: “Your children will be mixed.” “Your blue eyes will not be passed on!” “Your children won’t get that strawberry blonde hair, you know.” “You’re lucky he is so tall!” “You know, he is kind of attractive… for an Asian.”

Is it so concerning that my future children will look like my boyfriend simply because he is another race? I, for one, am looking forward to the day my little one looks up at me with her daddy’s brown eyes and dark hair. Because it isn’t about the color of her or her daddy’s skin/hair/eyes but about the deep love I know we will all have for each other. I am thankful for his brown eyes so full of love, despite the micro-aggressions and subtle discrimination he has faced.

White woman got six ‘second chances.’

Robin Dalton,
Spokane, WA.

I am not using my real name, and will obviously not post a photo. This is because even my family does not know how often I was picked up for shoplifting. I’m not a kid, I’m a 40-something white (Scandinavian pale) woman. The (white) security guards, defense/prosecution attorneys and judges continued to grant me ‘second chances,’ after four times in the courts and two more times with no charges pressed. Because I’ve been able to pay the fines and pass the various probation periods, I still don’t have an actual public record. I finally realized this year that I’ve only gotten these chances because of my skin color. A darker woman in my situation would have been to jail. White privilege is absolutely real. And it’s sick and wrong.

Dating Bi-Racially Has Changed My Life

Erika,
USA.

I am a white woman that is dating a black man. I tried to think racism didn’t exist anymore until I started dating my boyfriend. The stares we’ve gotten from white people while in public, the comments we’ve gotten from older white folks, and even the responses of friends have made me realize that racism still exists. I’m embarrassed that I didn’t know this fact until I was on the other side of racism. When I was the one getting stared at and receiving the heat from dating somebody of a different race. Friends have told me as if they were making me feel better, “Well that’s okay that the two of you are dating because at least he doesn’t act black!” I don’t know why people think it’s okay to say that. I take these comments and responses personally.

Obama was black 148 years ago.

Kendra Jones,
Selma, AL.

As a white woman who voted for Obama twice, I found myself wanting to claim him as my own. “He’s half white, I’d insist to myself.” But then I began to think about our past anti-miscegenation laws in the 19th century. An individual with as little as 1/32nd percent African ancestry would have been labeled as Black–and denied.the status of a full human being. Obama deserves all his beautiful blackness. America wouldn’t have had it any other way.

Read Kingsblood Royal by Sinclair Lewis

Marsha Surkin,
White Bear Lake, MN.

I am a white woman, 72 yrs old. When I was 11 I disobeyed my mom and read Kingsblood Royal. This was the first time I was aware of racial diveristy. In the book a man finds out he has a black grandfather and is run out of town. I have never forgotten how upset I was! Fast forward, 30 years ago, after attending an integrated college in WVA and working with many racial goups at Honeywell, I met and married a black man. We have lived in several states, have had few issues based on racial diffeences, and our families love us both. (His mom was the last to come around.) OK, I admit I am only aware of my skin color when I am in church in south Alabama. We do get some peculiar looks down there in Walmart.
Thank you for your participation in the program Monday night at the Guthrie.”

But where do you come from?

Caitlin Wong,
USA.

I am a White American woman who relatively recently started seeing a Chinese man. He was born and raised in American, but he is not biracial. It’s a fairytale romance – I am in love and I couldn’t be happier. At first it surprised me that we got stares, especially in New York City. I don’t really notice it anymore. I know it might be vain, but I worry about the children we’re going to have. I worry that people will look at them, and look at me, and ask where I adopted them from. I do not have anything against adoption – but I just know that I am living in a world where I will have to defend being their mommy – and they will have to do the same on their side. It breaks my heart.

I shouldn’t care more than you.

Chrissy Iemma,
San Diego, CA.

I am a white woman. I have an interracial young adult son. The injustices that the African Amercican community face troubles me to the core. I talk about it and talk about it – to my son, his father, my black friends and it bothers me that I seem to be the only one outraged. Where are you? Why aren’t YOU as outraged? What is more important? I think I am perceived as “obsessed” when I relay the injustices I see happening in Ferguson and other cities around the country. It disappoints me.

Witnessing people confusing anecdote with fact

family (1)Deborah Robinson,
Los Angeles, CA.

I grew up in profoundly white Eugene, Oregon, where I’d laugh at banners emblazoned, CELEBRATE DIVERSITY.

“What, as long as it’s not here?” I’d wonder.

Yet the whiteness of my hometown did not mean it was a racially hostile one. I nurtured no ill will for folks from different walks of life, and trusted those nearest and dearest me felt roughly the same.

It was against this backdrop that I was able to genuinely believe that the fact I’d witnessed no overt acts of racism meant racism was dead.

I began dating a black man shortly after I moved to Los Angeles. I didn’t think of him as a “black man,” but rather as a silly, sweet, sexy and smart man I had fun hanging out with. Indeed, it was only after he became the father of my child that he spoke words that blew my mind: “Our baby is going to experience racism someday.”

I discounted these words initially, though he told me he’d been called “n*****” plenty of times. But though my instinct was to discount his warning because its basis was so outside my personal experience, I couldn’t ignore the possibility there was more to this world than that which I’d personally experienced.

I started reading, from blogs to essays to research, and was shocked to discover how useless my personal experiences as a white woman were for gauging the presence or absence of racism in the modern world.

Since my son was born four years ago, I’ve been asked countless times where I got him, regardless of how much he looks like me. I’ve been asked if he’s mixed, or if he has a black daddy. I’ve heard passersby make derogatory statements about his skin color, as if it reflects a single useful thing about who he actually is. And, heartbreakingly, I’ve heard his many comments reflecting the idea that “dark” is bad. He’s not getting this at home, where his father and I tell him the world is made more beautiful by the diversity of its citizens, but he’s getting this idea somewhere.

I’ve written about a handful of these experiences on my blog, and have been astonished how many people offer up anecdotes of a black person being mean to them as indication that “reverse racism” is alive and well, while “original” racism today is nothing more than a byproduct of overactive imaginations. I’ve tried to encourage reflection on the idea that personal experience ought not be confused with systemic violation, and that the fact that a white person hasn’t personally recognized an act of racism doesn’t mean individual signs of a deep rooted problem haven’t actually occurred in their presence. I’m not honestly sure how successful my questions are, but I have to keep asking them, because I believe that we perpetrate injustice by pretending it must already be past.

I try not to throw up my hands in frustration, or think less of people for their individual anecdotes presented as societal fact, because it took me a very particular set of experiences to make me reconsider my assumptions about race, history and society. Without those experiences, I’d probably still happily but erroneously believe that racism is an artifact of bygone times.

That’s the biggest thing I’d ask people: that they consider the idea there is only so much they can see from where they are sitting. The anecdotes of any one person’s life can only go so far toward explaining the entire human experience.

I smile at young black men.

Nena Clark
Rochester, MN

I am an old, white woman. I work in the govt center and I see all kinds of folks there who probably aren’t having their best day. I try to be pleasant to everyone, but I make a point of being friendly toward young black men. I know that in my not-very-diverse community, they have to feel judged, feared and scrutinized by a lot of people who look just like me. They are invariably friendly and pleasant in return. Bless their hearts – I think I’d be more skeptical of me if I were them, but they’re willing to take me at face value.

My March On Washington Freedom Kiss

Isabel “Scottie” Dalsimer
Alexandria, VA

It was a bright and sunny day in August 1963. I was 25 years old and just back from a two year assignment in West Africa. My household effects were arriving at my Washington apartment that afternoon, but I had time to go to the March on Washington beforehand. I made it downtown into the crowd and ran into an old acquaintance. His name was Bill Pope. Bill was a 6’4” African American man. I am 5’1” white woman. Bill asked me if I wanted to march with him and I said “Sure.”. We marched and it was wonderful. People were friendly and were all singing and happy together as we went along. Then we saw a TV camera suspended in the air just above us in the crowd. Bill looked up at the camera and stopped. He picked me up and said to the camera: “Hi all you folk in Mississippi & Alabama. This is how we all get along in Washington, D.C.!”, and he planted a big kiss on my face. We both looked in the camera and laughed. He put me down and we marched on. I couldn’t stay for the speeches because I had to meet my movers at my apartment. I haven’t seen Bill Pope since, but I heard he later became the Coca-Cola company representative in Nigeria. Washington, DC was so segregated at that time, so everyone getting along together so well and in an unsegregated way made the experience so wonderful – proof of how the races could truly get along. My memories of that time have been floating back in my mind lately and so I’m happy to share my experience at the March on Washington in 1963.

Privilege is not having to notice.

Jennifer DiBrienza
Palo Alto, CA

Growing up as a white woman, I never had to think very much about race. As an adult I have tried to better understand the experiences of others and I was shocked by how drastically different experiences of other Americans were. I have the luxury of not having to think about race every time I walk out the front door. I am an educator and I also work with Planned Parenthood to improve access to maternal health and Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America and I find the most difficult way to make any progress is when the folks with whom I engage deny that there is any racism to acknowledge. It seems like noticing and acknowledging is a necessary precursor to progress. Thank you for such a wonderful way to get people talking.

I’m a white woman in America

Arianna Mariotti
Seaside, CA

I am white. I am a woman. I am part of the upper middle class. I grew up in Orange County, California. I am a student in college. I am discriminated against because I “have it easy.” But the fact of the matter is, I don’t see color or class or gender or sexuality. I see people. I see good people and I see bad people. I help those that need helping, and I ignore those who knock others down.

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