This was a very interesting week for me. I learned a new
term, called microaggression. I felt this term, but did not know it had a
specific name until listing and watching Dr. Sue. An example of a
microaggression I experienced in the past happened when I was working as a
teacher in a school in a part of town where there were mostly Caucasian people.
I worked as a teacher, and I was in school for my undergraduate degree. Other teachers
who were Caucasian were in school as well, but when in a conversation with
parents, and they would say or reference school, parents automatically asked
them what’s their major, and expected graduation date, and tell them how great
it was for them to be going to school, and how brave they were for going to
school and working. I knew a particular parent in my classroom had a child in
another classroom, and I witnessed a conversation as I described where the
parent took a great interest in the teacher’s attempt to better themselves. One
day, I received a racial microagression two different ways within the same
conversation. The parent and I were conversing, and I mentioned school, the
parent looked shocked, and said, “you’re in school?!” as if I was not supposed
to be in school. I said “yes, I am”. The parent proceeded to say “I didn’t know
you were in school; it never crossed my mind”. I replied, that most of the
ladies there were in college, and she replied, “yes, but I would have never
guessed you were in school”. It made me feel invisible, and made me feel like
since I am black, that I shouldn’t even think or want to go to college; I am
not good enough to attend college. It hurt my feelings. To top it off, the
parent went on talking, not asking me about school as I witnessed her as other
teachers, she said “you do speak well; you are a very articulate girl!” she
said it in a way that was complimentary, but also shocking to her that I was
able to speak well, and not as like the stereotypes that are portrayed for
black people. I was younger, and felt like the parent was being
racist/prejudice. She was a nice woman, very sweet, but did not see how bad she
made me feel. I had to brush it off, and not make it seem as if I was being too
sensitive, or over thinking the situation, but I know what I felt and what the
under tone of the conversation was.
The effects of discrimination, prejudice and stereotypes on
people is very damaging. Dr. Sue talks about the long term affects these
behaviors have on the targeted individuals. People are made to feel inferior,
and try not to succeed due to this intended/non-intended microagressions. This
is something that will continue, unless everyone takes responsibility on how
they interact with other groups, and try not to portray and feed into the
stereotypes given by society. This also made me aware of my own biases that I have,
and to really take a look at how I understand stereotypes, and how not to allow
those misrepresentations to keep me and others feeling oppressed.
Ketrice,
ReplyDeleteWords are powerful and have a way of wounding others even when that may not be our intention. Even though the parent was nice by all accounts the way she spoke to you wounded you none the less. I think we often rely on the adage it is not what we say but what we do that makes the difference in the lives of others. However I believe that what we say can have just as much of a profound affect on those around us as our actions can have.