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Blog archive

November 2024

October 2024

ARBORIST WALK: NOT FOR TREE HUGGERS ONLY!
10/29/2024

Bill Wishner: Visual Hunter
10/29/2024

Can a Village Group Fix Our Healthcare System?
10/29/2024

Community Board Directors Strengthen Village Board
10/29/2024

Connecting with Village Connections: The A, B, C, & D’s of Medicare @ 65+
10/29/2024

Grief is a Journey: Two Paths Taken
10/29/2024

Message from the President
10/29/2024

Promoting Informed & Involved Voters
10/29/2024

What Will Be Your Legacy?
10/29/2024

1619, Approaching the Election...
10/27/2024

Beyond and Within the Village - A Star is Born
10/17/2024

Happiness by Priscilla Leonard
10/11/2024

Those Winter Sundays by Robert Hayden
10/11/2024

Unpainted Door by Louise Gluck
10/11/2024

In the Evening by Billy Collins
10/10/2024

Wild Geese by Mary Oliver
10/10/2024

Betty Kilby, A Family History
10/01/2024

Betty Kilby, A Family History
10/01/2024

Betty Kilby, A Family History
10/01/2024

September 2024

August 2024

1619 Wide Ranging Interests
08/19/2024

1619 Wide Ranging Interests
08/19/2024

First Anniversary
08/19/2024

Alexandra Leaving by Leonard Cohen
08/16/2024

Muse des Beaux Arts by W. H. Auden
08/16/2024

The God Abandons Antony by Constantinos P. Cavafy
08/16/2024

Ch – Ch – Ch –Changes
08/15/2024

Cultural Activities Team offers an ‘embarrassment of riches’
08/15/2024

Engaging in Pasadena Village
08/15/2024

Future Housing Options
08/15/2024

Message from the President
08/15/2024

There Are Authors Among Us
08/15/2024

Villagers Welcome New Members at the Tournament Park Picnic
08/15/2024

Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night by Dylan Thomas
08/14/2024

A narrow Fellow in the Grass by Emily Dickinson
08/13/2024

Haikus
08/13/2024

One Art by Elizabeth Bishop
08/13/2024

Poem 20 by Pablo Neruda
08/13/2024

Still I Rise by Maya Angelou
08/13/2024

Trees by Joyce Kilmer
08/13/2024

July 2024

June 2024

May 2024

Emergency Preparedness: Are You Ready?
05/28/2024

Farewell from the 2023/24 Social Work Interns
05/28/2024

Gina on the Horizon
05/28/2024

Mark Your Calendars for the Healthy Aging Research California Virtual Summit
05/28/2024

Meet Our New Development Associate
05/28/2024

Putting the Strategic Plan into Practice
05/28/2024

Washington Park: Pasadena’s Rediscovered Gem
05/28/2024

Introducing Civil Rights Discussions
05/22/2024

Rumor of Humor #2416
05/14/2024

Rumor of Humor #2417
05/14/2024

Rumor of Humor #2417
05/14/2024

Rumor of Humor #2418
05/14/2024

Springtime Visitors
05/07/2024

Freezing for a Good Cause – Credit, That Is
05/02/2024

No Discussion Meeting on May 3rd
05/02/2024

An Apparently Normal Person Author Presentation and Book-signing
05/01/2024

Flintridge Center: Pasadena Village’s Neighbor That Changes Lives
05/01/2024

Pasadena Celebrates Older Americans Month 2024
05/01/2024

The 2024 Pasadena Village Volunteer Appreciation Lunch
05/01/2024

Woman of the Year: Katy Townsend
05/01/2024

April 2024

March 2024

February 2024

January 2024

Me? A Racist?

By Richard Myers
Posted: 10/31/2020
Tags:

 - Karen -

When did I become aware of this?  There were many times I was confronted with racism but I’m not sure I ever saw myself as a racist.

My First Encounter


There was the time when I was very small, three or four.  I spoke no English.  My sister, just a year older than me, and I discovered there was a little girl living next door to us.  She was about our age and a dark brown.  We discovered each other through the fence in the backyard.  We asked if we could go over to play with her.  The answer was a definite “no.”  

I didn’t understand why we couldn’t play together but we found a way around it.  We played through the fence instead.  We had little rubber baby dolls.  Hers was brown.  I always wanted one like hers but never got one, even though many times I had asked Santa to bring me one.

Post-war Racism


Our family moved to a new home when I was four.  My sister and I became friends with two Japanese girls who also spoke no English.  Language didn’t matter.  We played beautifully.   We all started school together.  The Japanese girls were the same ages as my sister and I.  We went to school and learned to speak English.  Our parents were all bilingual.

I discovered that being Japanese was “bad.”  These girls could not play at the homes of the other children in the neighborhood.  I didn’t understand why.  They were always welcome at my house and our mothers were friendly with each other.  

Of course I later learned it had to do with hard feelings and prejudices from the war.  I learned much later that some families in the neighborhood mistakenly thought our family was German.  When they learned we were Danish, their attitudes improved.

White Flight


There were no black people in Altadena when I was growing up.  I remember some moving in during the late 50’s.  That’s when there was a flurry of “for sale” signs going up.  My parents had no intention of leaving.  This was their home and they were staying.  Many of the families in the neighborhood moved away but we stayed.

At that time I was in middle school at Eliot.  There was one black girl in the whole school, Deborah Sweeney.  She was little and smart and quiet.  We had classes together and I liked her but, somehow, I knew we shouldn’t be friends.  I only talked to her to say “hi” or discuss school work.  She was alone most of the time.  I look back and think of how brave she was.

Forbidden Crush

In high school at John Muir, there was a boy named Greg.  He was light brown with beautiful green eyes and a warm smile.  He and I had a trigonometry class together.  He was smart, funny and cute.  He played a trumpet in the Muir band and had a lot of band friends.  

I knew I wasn’t supposed to like Greg but I did.  I never told anyone.  He and I decided to take a summer school class together.  We decided to take a class in speed reading.  It would be easy and we could have a little time together.  That summer just made me like him all the more.

When our se nior year came, Greg had a girlfriend.  She was brown.  I eventually had a boyfriend.  He was white, like me.  I’ve never forgotten Greg.  I can still see him in my mind.  He’s an old man now but I see his young smiling face and green eyes and wonder what I missed.

Segregation

My black friends have been few but I did enjoy some lovely friendships with black and brown people throughout my life.  Mostly I have always had white friends.  

I remember the time a boyfriend, who was white, took me to a black club in LA called, “The Total Experience.”  It was so much fun but I felt out of place.  There was a great band and people were dressed to the hilt.  We danced but I didn’t feel like we danced nearly as well as everyone else.  I did indeed feel under-dressed and out of place.

Years later, when I was married and had my second daughter, an adorable little redhead named Chelsea, we went to the Rainbow Lagoon in Long Beach to enjoy a day of R&B which my husband loved.  There we were, the whitest family in the crowd.  

Our little red-haired daughter with her mass of orange curls, was about three and totally into the music.  She was dancing and laughing and charming everyone.  She felt like my “link” to a crowd I didn’t think I had much in common with.  It turned out to be a day of sheer joy and community and love of music.  

Racism Realized


I have lived through race riots, learned of police brutality in my community, tried to understand the systemic racism in our society and, at the same time, I’ve prided myself in overcoming any prejudice I have learned from my life experiences.  These were not necessarily prejudices taught as much as implied, but insidious, none the less.

In 2019 the 1619 Project was published by the New York Times.  It was the beginning of a whole new kind of understanding of a thing called, “White Privilege.”  For the first time, it seems, I am beginning to understand this term and how it applies to me and how I have “gone along with the program” all my life.  I want better for myself and for my community and for my country.  

To answer the question, when did I become aware I was a racist?  At 75 I became aware… unintentionally a racist, yet a racist, just the same.  I am on a mission to change that.  

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