More Than "That Family"In choosing this route, we knew we'd get looks on the street. But the experience of constantly being seen, and recognized, was a whole different story.
by Sharon K. Trumpy
 For once, the barista at Starbucks didn’t recognize me. He shouldn’t. I’m there only about once a month. The thing is, he remembers me. Well, not me so much as us. This is one of those things that come with being the white mother of a black child. Comments, questions, stares—those I expected. The strange experience of just being visible—not so much. I didn’t realize how invisible I was until I wasn’t anymore.
For our first outing as a family of four, we attended a local Harvest Festival. The park pathways were crowded with people, so Matthew and I took the lead, with my husband, David, and three-year-old Cameron trailing a few feet behind. I was filled with pride in my newborn, strapped snugly to my chest in a carrier, and noticed only the few nods and impersonal smiles I would get anywhere. When we got home, I remarked, “Wow, I think I was expecting more of a reaction. No one seemed fazed by us.” David laughed. “Sharon,” he said, “if only you could have seen it from where I was! People were tripping left and right from turning to get a look after you passed!” We had definitely been noticed.
Multiracial families don’t always blend in
I quickly realized that we were not just noticed, we were remembered. By my second trip to Kroger with Matthew, the cashier was greeting us like old friends. This cashier had, for years, rung up my purchases, while fair-skinned, blue-eyed Cameron sat in the cart, never once showing a glimmer of recognition. But after showing up twice with Matthew, suddenly, we were unforgettable.
Someone who recognizes us stops me nearly every day. Parents from Cameron’s school, kids from soccer class, neighbors, baggers, baristas, librarians. They all greet us with a familiar “hi!” that tells me I’m supposed to know them. (I usually don’t.) When I asked a Caucasian friend if she had ever experienced this while out with her African-American daughter, she looked startled. Ella is her only child. “I thought that’s just how people act when you have a baby!” she said. Sure, babies get attention, but brown-skinned babies with peachy-skinned mamas make heads turn. It’s a different kind of attention.
I don’t know how I feel about being so visible. It’s not good, it’s not bad. It’s not that people are staring, snickering, or whispering. It is simply a constant sense of being that I’ve never had before.
Looking at race, looking within
When I tell others about our daily experience as a multiracial family, many express surprise, disbelief, or even defensiveness. “I don’t even notice color,” they say. The idea that my family is conspicuous because of our racial differences makes them uncomfortable. They mistakenly believe that to not be racist means to not see race. But ignoring Matthew’s race doesn’t impress me.
The idea of “colorblindness” is unrealistic, but, worse than that, it is dismissive. It implies that his race is unmentionable, and his non-whiteness is a flaw to be overcome. Far from being admirable, colorblindness suggests that racism can be solved by pretending it doesn’t exist, instead of working to overcome our own prejudices and those entrenched in our society and institutions. And why should race alone, and not other parts of our identity, be ignored? Imagine that someone expressed surprise that you were a female. “Oh!” they’d exclaim. “I’m not sexist. I don’t even notice gender!” Women shouldn’t have to lack gender to gain respect. I don’t want my gender to be ignored; I want it to be seen as one of the things that make me who I am.
No, it isn’t seeing race that makes someone racist. What makes someone racist is drawing conclusions about a person based on his race. That’s why I was offended when a shoe salesman pointed to Matthew and said, “Oh, I can just tell, he’s gonna be a linebacker!” Maybe the comment wouldn’t have bothered me if Matthew were a hefty toddler, tossing sneakers across the shoe store and tackling his brother. Aside from skin color, what made the salesman think “football” when he saw my tiny, tenth-percentile infant in his stroller, quietly paging through The Very Hungry Caterpillar?
Maybe I seem hard to please, offended when race is ignored, as well as when it’s not. But it’s actually pretty simple. I want Matthew to be seen for who he is. I don’t want him to live in a society that diminishes him by not seeing his race, nor do I want him to be reduced to a stereotype. I want him to be proud that he is smart and funny and strong and good and black. I want him to live in a society that recognizes, appreciates, and respects all racial identities.
Visible as a starting point
Recently, a mother at the park admired Matthew. “His skin color is so beautiful!” she said. Tears sprang to my eyes as I realized that, although I have been told how cute Matthew’s dimples are and how darling his smile is, no one has ever complimented his skin. His gorgeous, rich, deep-brown skin. I felt oddly grateful to this mother for seeing Matthew’s skin and realizing that it is beautiful and OK—no, more than OK—to say so.
So even though being so noticeable, so unrelentingly remembered, feels strange, it’s normal. Of course, people see that we don’t match. How could they not? We notice differences and, hopefully, we learn to look deeper. I want Matthew’s first-grade teacher, his best friend’s dad, and his classmates to know him as more than the black kid with the white family. There is more to me, more to Matthew, and so much more to our family than what’s visible.
We're Family First
These days, I sometimes forget that people see us any differently until, inevitably, someone asks, “Is he adopted?” or “Where’s he from?” I don’t look at Matthew and think “adopted.” I think about how adorable his giggle is, how tough it is to keep him out of trouble—and a million things other than how he came to be our son. Paradoxically, I am thinking about adoption almost never, and all the time.
Here’s the stuff that is “all the time”: I think about Matthew’s birthmom every single day. Each day, I tell Matthew how much he is loved by Mommy, by Daddy, by Cameron, by Grandma and Grandpa, and by his birthmom. I tell Matthew his adoption story and I think of how that story will someday become a conversation, and how that conversation will grow over time. I think about how to be the best mom I can be, to both of my boys, ever conscious that, in our family, that includes how we talk about adoption and race. I think about how to teach others about adoption and multiracial families, how to answer their questions, how to kindly correct their missteps, how to advocate for Matthew.
So, while adoption has changed our family in so many ways and it will always be a part of our daily life, it doesn’t define our family.
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SHARON K. TRUMPY lives in Ohio with her husband and their two sons, Cameron and Matthew. She blogs on sharonanddavid.blogspot.com.
Photo: Sharon and David with Cameron and Matthew (7 and 3). Back To Home Page ©2013 Adoptive Families. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part is prohibited. |
Comments
I have printed this article for my husband and family to read. We have 2 addopted bi-racial children (4 and 2) and you have put into words what we have tried to say for 4 years! Thank you for writing it - it lets us know that we are not the only ones that feels this way. I would love to print this out and hand it to every person that "looks" at us in that way when we are out in public. It is all about teaching people that don't understand. LOVE LOVE LOVE IT! Thanks
Posted by: Lisa Smith at 8:37am Jul 6
I am blessed to know Sharon personally, and she's spot-on (as always). Kudos for a great article, and for saying it the way it is.
Posted by: Sara Specter at 8:44am Jul 6
Awesome article!!
Posted by: Christine at 8:46am Jul 6
As the peach-colored grandma of a much-loved adopted little girl with beautiful brown skin, I was so touched by your article. Well said.
Posted by: Meg at 10:36am Jul 6
Excellent, excellent point about the dismissive tone of "color bindness". I really appreciate your writing this! -a dad of three little brown guys
Posted by: Andy at 11:21am Jul 6
Thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you for this article.
Posted by: Carlea at 12:34pm Jul 6
I am "sharing" this on my blog! It's so important for those who don't share in this "life" to be able to understand. Thank you for being "my" words!!!
Posted by: Char at 2:36pm Jul 6
Thank you for putting into words my feelings. As a brown skinned Mom to a peach skinned baby our family baffles others.
Posted by: Andy at 7:14pm Jul 6
This is exactly how it feels! Thanks for putting it so succinctly into words...I shared it on Facebook (as did quite a few of my adoption friends) and it sparked some really good conversation! Thank you so much!!
Posted by: Joy at 9:49pm Jul 6
Thank you! As a biracial person I was always asked first and foremost, "What are you?" Sometimes that even happened in job interviews or other absolutely inappropriate places. But the exact same people who ASKED would later claim that they don't see race. So I'm left to puzzle my racial identity in a society that won't leave it alone but gets uncomfortable if I mention that it took me extra effort. I went through this again when I started interracial adoption training. I walked into a workshop that was supposed to make me see beyond my race. Instead, I was faced with questions like, "How would you feel if you woke up tomorrow and you weren't white." The instructors were very embarrassed when they realized that their materials did not take me into account. After a year of not being selected for biracial baby after biracial baby, we were picked for a lily-white redhead! In a few short months I've already started to get the stares and people asking, "Uh, what does your husband look like?" or "Are you his caregiver?" because apparently I look like the nanny. But the stares will all be worth it. Because he is beautiful even though he doesn't look like me. And this peach-colored boy is going to grow up aware of racial identity instead of taking it for granted. And he will never ask, "What are you?"
Posted by: Missy at 8:53pm Aug 16
I'm the peach-colored mom of a brown-colored beautiful little girl - if I've ever gotten those looks, I never noticed - perhaps because my peach-colored son often acts so goofy that I assume all looks are at him! I've never once questions that my daughter was meant to be my daughter, and even though I see very little resemblance (my son is biologically mine & I see very little resemblance between us too), LOVE when others comment on how much she looks like me (including her biological grandmother with whom we're in touch!). I love how I see my daughter - and how you see your son - they're ours and their beautiful no matter what! And with the attitude I believe we share, our kids will grow up strong and proud of who they are and who they are becoming!
Posted by: Belinda at 11:59am Aug 29
As the "peach-colored" mom (okay, actually I'm lily white!) of both an Asian girl and her African American sister, I enjoy celebrating many of our differences. Sharon, you are so right--what wonderful little people we parent! The three of us will definitely never blend in, but the best comment I ever got was from a very dear friend who once told me that each girl's unique physical characteristics are part of what makes them "beautifully them"!
Posted by: Tricia at 6:53pm Dec 28
I was recommended this blog by my cousin. I am not sure whether this post is written by him as nobody else know such detailed about my problem. You're wonderful! Thanks! more information please
Posted by: japekerma at 8:26pm Apr 18
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