One of the PostSecrets this week was from a multiracial person who is embarrassed when she(?) passes as white. This of course resonated with me greatly due to that being my own life story (well, I wouldn't say "embarrassed", but there definitely are non-positive emotions associated with it when I stop to reflect
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I did, however, find the discussion extremely interesting. Yeah, I never considered the embarrassment of being identified as white before. I'm also sorry that you've had to struggle to be accepted into the two races of which you are part. There's still a long road to racial acceptance, but I hope that the more that these kinds of stories are shared, the more we'll progress.
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The only particular incident I've experienced that was actually embarrassing, was when at a meeting of my CC's Diversity Caucus, the college present (a white woman a generation older than me) replied to something I said by referring to me as a successful young white woman. I didn't know how to react to this at the moment, so I let it slide, and later sent her an email "correcting" her. Though looking back on it now, in many ways she's right: since I look like I'm white, people react to me like I'm white, so I have (nearly) all the privileges that go along with being white in the US.
Edit: See also
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I think the thing that bugs me about that person's responses is no one who identifies with that image is denying that they are getting privileges for looking white (at least not that I could see), but ze is so stuck on that, ze can't even begin discussing anything else about it.
You acknowledged how ze had good points multiple times in the comments, but each time ze either had another hostile-sounding response or just ignored it. It could just be me being defensive at seeing someone reply in a hostile manner to you, and the responses were definitely interesting and offered some food for thought, but... :(
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