mishmash

Musings for Asians of Mixed Race

Forgetting Race June 29, 2010

Filed under: Uncategorized — tanookie23 @ 7:13 pm

I’ve been back on O’ahu for a little over a month now.  The island is a wonderful as ever, maybe even better!  I just noticed that with the exception of a few conversations with friends, I have been going about life without thinking about my racial background.  This is something that I was never able to do in any of the other places I have lived.  With other Asian Americas, I was always conscious of being “only half” and thus somehow inauthentic.  With non-Asians, I sometimes felt out of place.  But here, I don’t think about being mixed or half or part anything.  Here, I live a life of relative privilege due to my phenotype and skin color.  Here, I don’t feel guilty of uncomfortable in my skin.

My so-called racial privilege allows me a certain amount of invisibility and the luxury of not having to defend or even discuss my race.  This is how I imagine dominant society lives on the continental United States.  O’ahu is one of the few places where I am continually around other mixed individuals.  It is a form of comfort.

One thing that currently stands out to me is that most other mixed people have the same experience of having parents of different ethnic and racial background and thus the parents do not form some kind of cultural/ethnic alliance.  Parents and kids have different experiences in the world.  Some have racial privilege, some do not, some pass, some cover, some are vocal, some silent.

If anything, I feel like I am passing for local or even raceless.

Note: because the mixed race population in the islands is high compared to most other places in the country, there are many people who have parents who are also both mixed race and thus may have commonalities that those of us with parents of different races do not.

 

To my lovely mishmash ladies. . . April 30, 2010

Filed under: Uncategorized — melissalou @ 10:56 am

Forgot to share this little gem I found in an antique shop in Ohio. . .

Dumb!

 

Migraine leaves woman speaking with Chinese accent? April 20, 2010

Filed under: Uncategorized — melissalou @ 10:40 am

um.. .

Migraine leaves woman speaking with Chinese accent?

In other news, you can actually suffer brain damage from a migraine!? Wow – that’s scary!

 

What did you mark? April 19, 2010

Filed under: Asian American,Mixies — melissalou @ 11:02 pm

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=10411659

I choose “multiracial.”

 

Pride and Power in Ambiguity April 2, 2010

Filed under: Uncategorized — tanookie23 @ 9:49 pm
Tags: , , ,

I’ve recently become a daily reader of Yes Magazine.  Their articles focus on peace, social justice, race, politics, environmentalism, and other fascinating and important topics.  Recently, Yes Magazine released their spring issue entitled America: The Remix.  The personal histories are fantastic.  One of my favorite quotes from the essay, Generation Mixed: Breaking the Race Barrier is, “I…began to see my identity as something I could choose to define as liberating.  It takes a monumental effort to make that choice within a culture that defines ambiguity as loss, where you are neither Chinese nor white.  Multiracial existence is a struggle for empowered ambiguity” – Jenny Lee, Allied Media Conference/Detroit Summer

I’m glad that ambiguity is becoming something that we can openly embrace.  Yet, lately, I find myself tired of all the mixed race talk.  I am not saying we are beyond race or anything like that, but I’m changing.  I find myself surrounded primarily by Asian Americans and Mixies and honestly, I don’t feel anything but Asian American.  Here, in San Francisco, I don’t use the word Hapa, I don’t care what kinds of questions people ask me.  I’m bored with the whole thing.  Recently, I spent a few days in LA with an all Asian American group of friends (save for my friend Alvaro) and it was just (I hate to use the word normal) simple, easy.  My race was irrelevant.  I ate Chinese food.  I used Mandarin when I could.  It was a kind of belonging that felt right.

Perhaps with time my racial ennui will subside, perhaps not.  I’ll let you know.

 

 
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