I loved the day that we spoke about privilege. I'm going to be honest and say that I had no
idea what "privilege" was and had only heard it in articles titled
with the word "white" before it.
I think I, subconsciously, did not want to be a part of the argument
that was constantly seeming to surround it, so I just kept myself
ignorant. Dr. Fletcher explained privilege
as the things we don’t even have to think about. I’m privilege to be American. I was just born here. I didn’t have to fight to be here. There are some people who have to constantly
think about what they say. In their
countries, they don’t have freedom of speech.
I was born with the right to free speech. I don’t even have to think about it. I just have it.
After the Ferguson verdict, my Facebook was going
insane. People were outraged. Some people were replying to the outrage with
apologistic posts. It was crazy. I deleted a lot of people from my Facebook
because of their ignorant comments. The
next day, I had to teach my 1025 class.
I’m not a psychology, sociology, or history professor; but, I am my
students’ teacher and, sometimes, it’s appropriate to deviate from the plan for
the sake of a discussion.
I asked them if anyone had ever talk to them about what “privilege”
meant. Much to my surprise, none of
their teachers had and, like me, the only one they had heard of was “white
privilege.” We had a discussion and they
had such wonderful things to say after I explained what privilege was. By the time we got to the end of the conversation,
we all concluded that, yes. Everyone has
the opportunity to succeed. BUT, does
everyone have equal opportunity to succeed?
No. It’s something that will
continue to be with me. They were so
open and willing to hear about it. Instead of arguing about privilege, we should
attempt to educate people on it. I think
we have a lot of people who think they know what privilege is or means and they
are mistaken on the definition. They
take it as an attack. It’s hard to hear
someone say anyone is privileged when we’re in a recession and no one can get a
job and everyone is in a tremendous amount of debt. But, anyone who says it doesn’t exist is
proving the point that it does! They don’t
think it exists because they don’t have to think about it.
The other night, after rehearsal, I walked into my boyfriend’s
apartment and had my stun gun in my hand.
He looked at me, laughed, and said, “Do you really need that?” At first, I got a little irritated; but, then
I remembered. He’s a man. He has the privilege of not have to worry
about someone over-powering him or trying to hurt him. I just replied, “Yeah. I do” and left it at that.
Cool post, Ashley. Here's a link to the standard 101 reading for privilege of many sorts. It's a little dated, but it rings truer than not even today: http://amptoons.com/blog/files/mcintosh.html
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