I’ve been asked this question for as long as I can remember: What are you? Before I understood its implications, I learned to answer it: My father is from Egypt; my mother of French-Canadian and Irish descent was raised in Indiana. It wasn’t until I was a teenager that I realized most people aren’t asked that particular question when they first meet someone. The fact that I don’t fit into any of the neat racial and cultural categories is apparently written all over my face.
As an adult I’ve been asked how I identify racially, and after years of thought I’ve settled on replying off white, which usually gets a chuckle. It is funny. And it also feels like the truest answer. I’m grateful to have found it. Off white contains the reality that my mother was white and my father wasn’t; my mother had white privilege and my father did not.
I’m still not sure what all the implications are for my mixed heritage, but I believe it gave me a worldview that seems to be shared by other people who live between cultures in some way or another. I’m grateful for the ways it forced me, starting from a young age, to see things from different viewpoints. Perspective taking continues to be welcome challenge and joy in my life.
Published on January 13, 2016 12:07
I remember the first time this ever happened to me. I was 8 and at a skating party. A little black girl approached me and said, " Are you mixed?" I said, "Yes, why?" She replied, "Because my mama told me that mixed kids are crazy!"
Ok..so looking back, I can laugh at that, but at the time it hurt my feelings so bad! As an adult, I completely embrace it! My father is black...therefore I am black. My mother is white...therefore I am white. Im not one or the other, I am both. I wouldn't change it for the world:)