Got a question the other day: "I'm confused about white, male privilege--I'm trying to be more aware, but I have 3, white boys who I can't raise not to be white men. What do I do?"

Let's chat a little, & I'll share some resources that worked for me.

Welcome to Coffee & Culture
What is privilege, white or otherwise? To paraphrase @IjeomaOluo, privilege is something that you were born with, didn't (can't have) worked for, that gives you advantage, favor or immunity not enjoyed by other groups of humans that are not in your demographic.
Privilege comes in many flavors: whiteness, maleness, able-bodiedness, intelligence, attractiveness, & generational wealth are a few. A big problem to understanding is that people get stuck on inherited wealth--thinking that if they weren't born rich, they can't have privilege.
This graphic is great--esp. since most people feel others have attractiveness advantage, we don't fight the concept as hard. Check this out, & just try to believe that this works similarly for every form of privilege (called intersectionalities).
Reality: we nearly all have some level of privilege which we gained by chance of birth. Think you worked hard to get into college, therefore it's all on you? Not so. If you were born into a country where the literacy meant you were taught to read as a child--that's privilege.
At the end of the day, privilege is about how you were taught to show up in the world. Men walk through the world differently than women (Women have to worry about assault by men), white people differently than Black people (Black people have to worry about assault by cops), etc.
There's a book called White Fragility, which, while it has received some criticisms, I think can still be a good starting place for those tired of institutionalized racism & willing to begin doing the work, but unsure of where to start. (make sure you read Black authors too).
Here's a quick review I wrote about it when I was doing some heavy work to unculture myself from subconscious racism over the last few years: daniellayoung.medium.com/white-fragilit…

One of the things I love in this book is she helps us understand white privilege through male privilege= 2-for-1.
It's quite challenging to understand privilege from examining your own experience alone, bc privilege is about how you were taught to show up in the world
Ex: preteen white boys don't get 'the talk' from parents about how to protect themselves on the street from cops, or men.
We just don't know what we don't know, so, if you've never been exposed to other groups being disadvantaged due to the 'lottery of birth', in ways they can't change & don't control, then you'll have a hard time seeing that, if you are the opposite, you have an unfair advantage.
Dr. Robin DiAngelo, of White Fragility explains: Since we naturally see ourselves as protagonists, we feel that any indication that we might be operating under racist patterns is an attack on our character, rather than an indictment of the society that socialized us.
“We cannot understand modern forms of racism if we cannot or, will not, explore patterns of group behavior and their effects on individuals." --DiAngelo

Ding, ding, group behavior again. It's everywhere. We really can never escape our socialization.

But we can understand it.
If you're white, esp, if you are a white, cisgendered, able-bodied man, please dig into studying privilege more. Once you see it, you will never unsee it. That's when good people will want to correct the unjust system. It does mean the privileged using their power for good
So what can we do about it? This question pops up a lot--sometimes by angry white men who don't want to have to do the work, "I can't change that I'm a white man, can I?"
But, more recently, it pops up sincerely: "how can we change? How can we not raise our kids in this system?"
These are the questions we need to be asking. When I was 15, I moved to the US from a childhood in Brazil & Mexico, countries that very much struggle with their own racist systems.

But in America, I found something darker about the racism--esp. how we pretend it doesn't exist.
The most important thing to teach our children is to listen (Obviously, we must be listening ourselves). I don't think we can ever understand systemic injustice if we are still justifying to ourselves that it doesn't really exist, or that, it's not our 'fault' or responsibility.
We have to understand, & teach our young ones, that you can never really understand the experience of a group of people that we're not in (just imagine someone telling you they understand war or being in the Army because they have friends or have seen movies?). Doesn't work.
Once we accept that others have been unfairly disadvantaged, we can accept, by contrast principle, that we have been advantaged. If we truly believe that all humans are equal, we should want to learn to change that.

This mantra from DiAngelo has helped me alot:
1/2 “I know that I have blind spots & unconscious investments in racism. My investments are reinforced every day in mainstream society. I did not set this system up, but it does unfairly benefit me, I do use it to my advantage, & I am responsible for interrupting it.
2/2 I need to work hard to change my role in this system, but I can’t do it alone. This understanding leads me to gratitude when others help me.”

If we accept privilege exists, & we educate ourselves, listen to others, & teach our children to show up differently, we can end it.
For the tiniest example of how socialization works from something that seemed innocent, but was really socializing young white boys to be extremely toxic, check out this youtube show called "Zack Morris is Trash & really think about it:
"All we have to do" to overcome privilege is to dig deeply into our own socialization, realize how we were taught to take up space in the world is heavily based on our demographics & what groups we belong to, & then begin to actively dismantle those systems--& not pass them on.
Good places to start are reading White Fragility, How to Raise White Children, So You Wanna Talk About Race, & How to be an Antiracist. For male privilege, check out Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men & Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America.
This isn't a negative journey about having to change who you are to be accepted in a new, 'woke' world. It's about waking up to something you might never have seen before, but as absolutely been infecting all of us for our whole lives.

We can choose to detoxify ourselves.
Thanks for hanging with me for another Sunday. Happy Unculturing!

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More from @daniellamyoung

4 Apr
Hi everyone (& my new followers), thanks for stopping by for Coffee & Culture #10. ☕️☕️☕️

Today, we'll be talking about bunnies, chocolate, & the power of getting out of your comfort zone & changing up your perspective.

The Easter Bunny Conundrum: Changing Perspective
In the pre-COVID days, I was in an airport lounge with my husband, sipping bubbly, snacking and trying to relax prior to what was sure to be a stressful trip.
Part of the stress would come from managing our overly tired 3-yr-old, who at that moment was laying full out on the ground under the table, with her feet up in the air, singing loudly in Portuguese (one of her three languages), & generally being a little out of control.
Read 22 tweets
28 Mar
Thanks for stopping by for Coffee and Culture, Episode 9. Today, we are talking about privilege, but also the game Minesweeper.

How are those things related, you ask?

A Thread 🧵

(Please see this link for the 'trick' of how to play Minesweeper: drive.google.com/file/d/1AI2Eoz…)
Okay, so, if you didn't watch the video, suffice it to say, there's a trick to Minesweeper that most people do not seem to know.

I know this because I figured it out while isolated in a religious cult (yes, I had access to a computer so I could learn to be a secretary).
The trick is that if you click both mouse buttons on any square, it will show you which squares can be bombs. If you do that on a square where all possible bombs have already been marked, then it will automatically expand more squares. If you don't get it, video 👆
Read 29 tweets
25 Mar
One night, after my husband had a very close call, & the other guy didn't make it, I woke up with this poem forcing me to write it down. Didn't do anything with it, (cuz it's not good) but it still makes me feel stuff.

Anyways, Daniella does poetry, a thread:

#justanarmywife
"Oh, you're just an Army Wife",
is this gonna be my life?
Is this meant to be all I am,
someone who just understands?
I’m only there to be decorative,
without the chance to really live.
Mission first, they always say,
you’re just there to love and pray.
We’ll call you when it all goes wrong,
when we need someone to bury our son.
Read 12 tweets
21 Mar
Happy Sunday, all. Welcome back to Coffee & Culture #8.

We're gonna have a 🧵 about the term "Loyalty", how we use it individually, how we use it organizationally, & how it becomes problematic fast. And cults, of course, y'all know me.

"When Loyalty & Obedience go too far"
2/ First, like any good English major or social scientist, let's define our term:

Loyalty: the quality or state or an instance of being loyal.

"LOYALTY implies a faithfulness that is steadfast in the face of any temptation to renounce, desert, or betray."

@MerriamWebster
3/ We can already see from this definition that loyalty might require sacrificing ourselves or personal value system, but more on that soon.

First, let's talk about how we are likely to use the term colloquially, when we talk about individuals like friends or family.
Read 22 tweets
18 Mar
I found it in the research!!! "...the kinds of deconditioning & resocialization operative in most new religions (cults) is essentially the same as that used by traditional religions, the military, therapists, & many other legitimate social organizations."

Basically, my book 👆
"individuals are subject to certain well-recognized social psychological processes of influence, of varying degrees of intensity & potential coerciveness. But the members of new religions do not lose their capacity to think for themselves or determine their own actions."
People are active participants in their
own conversion and resocialization, not the passive victims of exploitive leaders.
Read 5 tweets
28 Feb
By request, here on some thoughts on why Soldiers and service members may be refusing the jab. This will not really be about vaccines, but rather about group think and culture, because, you know, that's what I do.

Let's have a short thread:
First of all, in the study of how this pandemic has played out differently than other pandemics, (Ebola, AIDs, Zika, etc) a big impact was from the politicization of community responsive behavior (a human health term), in this case, mask wearing.
No other country made it a debate of left & right, thanks Trump. Now, obvs, AIDS was dealt with horrifically, but at least once it became clear that things like condoms & not sharing needles were the community behavior needed, people began to comply--or risk being seen as jerks.
Read 28 tweets

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