This week I tried to observe the actions and verbal
interactions of my self and others to see if I could detect examples of
microagressions. Over the course of this
last week, I traveled by plane, visited two different towns, ate at
restaurants, shopped in stores, went to a movie theatre and hiked in a public
park. I am amazed at how many different
cultures I encountered over the last 6 days:
Caucasian, Alaska Native, Indian, Vietnamese, Mexican, German, Russian,
African American, a child with a severe disability, Russian Orthodox, multiple
people from various social economic statuses, plus more that I may not have
noticed or recognized.
I did not notice other people commenting or interacting with
others in a microagression manner nor did I experience microagression, but I was
surprised by how much I found myself stereotyping
people in my thoughts. I realized this
week that I am probably always doing this.
Even though I do this, I do not act in a negative manner on these
thoughts. I know that if I were to
encounter these people (rather than be an observer or by-passer in public), I
would be open-minded and more that willing to get to know them. My thoughts are based on my past experiences
and the facts that I know about different cultures. I have concluded that this in itself is not a
bad thing; how I act on these thoughts is what really matters.
The following paragraph from the Teaching Tolerance Website we visited as a resource this week
helped me put my thoughts into perspective:
The ability to distinguish
friend from foe helped early humans survive, and the ability to quickly and
automatically categorize people is a fundamental quality of the human mind.
Categories give order to life, and every day, we group other people into
categories based on social and other characteristics.
Understanding facts about a culture helps me know how to
interact with others. I think I have
been successful with respecting people of cultures different than my own. I know that I have most likely committed
microagressions toward others in the past but now I have a greater awareness of
how I may offend others unconsciously so will proceed with my thoughts, words
and actions toward others, more cautiously.
Reference
Teaching Tolerance.
(n.d.). Test yourself for hidden bias. Retrieved May 25, 2011,
Deb,
ReplyDeleteWhat and outstanding week you had!What you've said is very important and a step forward to eradicate racism. You've accepted your own biases and you are willing to make a change. This week I also checked for my own biases and prejudices, it wasn't easy to put them on paper, nor taking the test, but I honestly, like you, promised to change my perspective towards cultures different than my own.
Thank you for your thoughtful comment.
DeleteDeb