I love my white mom, but why is she such an idiot?

This title is spoken in the voice of this woman’s baby, of course.

This article is bothering me so much that I thought I would share the entire thing. You’ll find the link to the original above.

‘I love my mixed race baby - but why does she feel so alien?’
by LOWRI TURNER

“She’s getting very dark, isn’t she?” This is what one of my friends recently said about my much adored - 12-week-old daughter.

She didn’t mean to be rude. But it was a comment that struck me with the force of a jab to the stomach.

Immediately, I was overwhelmed by a confusion of emotions. I felt protective, insulted, worried, ashamed, guilty, all at once. The reason? My lovely, wriggly, smiley baby is mixed race.

Now, I think of myself as pretty ‘right on’. My home is on the border of the London Republic of Hackney. I’ve been to the Notting Hill Carnival, even if I found the music a bit loud. Yet now I realise what a ‘white’ world I inhabit.

I am white and I have two sons from my first marriage who are both milky complexioned and golden haired. My twin sister, who I spend a lot of time with, has a Danish partner. As a consequence, she has two boys who are also pale skinned and flaxen haired.

Into this positively Scandinavian next generation, I have now injected a tiny, dark-skinned, dark-haired girl. To say she stands out is an understatement.

My colouring and that of my children has never really been an issue before. However, three years ago I met the man who became my second husband and who is the father of my daughter.

Although born in the UK, his parents came from India in the Sixties. This makes him British-Asian and our daughter mixed race.

There is another more PC term for the plump little bundle I strap to my front. She is ‘dual heritage’. It’s a bit trendy, but I quite like it. It implies a pride in coming from two cultures, rather than the less attractive connotations of ‘mixed race’.

The usual time something is labelled ‘mixed’ is when it’s a packet of nuts and they’ve bulked out the luxury cashews with cheaper peanuts. I’m not sure I want my daughter to be regarded as an adulterated version of some pure original. Still, it is the most accepted description.

The truth is, whatever the label, the fact there is a label proves that my daughter’s conflicting parentage matters.

At the more frothy end of the scale, mixed-race children are regarded as pretty dolls — white kids with a nice tan.

When I was pregnant and people asked me about the child I was having, and I explained her father was Indian, they would often coo something along the lines of: “Ooh, she’s going to be beautiful!” as if I was discussing a new rose, made from an exotic cross-breeding programme.

On a less benevolent level, mixed-race children can receive a hostile welcome from both white and black communities. Being neither one thing nor another may get you on the cover of Vogue, but it isn’t an easy way to make friends.

But this is 2007, surely things are more enlightened than that? I hope so, but I fear not.

One reason for my fear is my own mixed reactions to my daughter. Don’t get me wrong, I love her. She is the child I didn’t think I’d have after my first marriage broke up. She is the only granddaughter in our family and we all dote on her.

But when I turn to the mirror in my bedroom to admire us together, I am shocked. She seems so alien. With her long, dark eyelashes and shiny, dark brown hair, she doesn’t look anything like me.

I know that concentrating on how my daughter looks is shallow. She is a person in her own right, not an accessory to me. But still, I can’t shake off the feeling of unease.

I didn’t realise how much her looking different would matter and, on a rational level, I know it shouldn’t. But it does.

Evolution demands that we have children to pass on our genes, hence the sense of pride and validation we get when we see our features reappearing in the next generation.

With my daughter, I don’t have that. Do black fathers who marry white women and then have paler-skinned children feel my sense of loss? Or maybe Chinese mothers or Middle-Eastern grandparents grieve when they see a child they know to be their own, but whose features don’t reflect that?

I worry that, as my daughter doesn’t look like me, people will assume she is adopted. After all, it’s all the rage in showbiz circles.

Madonna famously scooped up a black child when she wanted to be a mother again and Angelina Jolie appears to be assembling a ‘pick ‘n’ mix’ of kids from different countries. It’s all very United Colours of Benetton, isn’t it?

In the real world, I fear for my daughter’s sense of self. She has a tiny foot in two cultures. How will she negotiate a path between the two? I worry that my sons will feel less of a kinship with their sister because she is different, although there is no sign of that.

As for myself, there is an inescapable status issue to address. White women who have non-white children are stigmatised as ‘Tracy Towerblocks’ living on benefits, most of which they spend on lager and fags.

Even if I don’t fit this profile, my daughter’s difference definitely points out the fact that my children come from two different fathers.

If I wanted to pass us off as a nice, neat nuclear family, she would blow my cover at once.

But it is more than that. I am frightened, frightened of others’ reactions to her, as well as my own. I didn’t think of myself as racist and yet my daughter has shown me a side of myself about which I feel deeply uncomfortable.

Even admitting to having mixed feelings about her not being blonde and blue eyed, I feel disloyal and incredibly guilty.

I know the obvious comment is that I must have known how a child of our union would look when I married an Indian man, but it is a wise woman who thinks that far ahead when she falls in love.

I didn’t think about any of this before I got pregnant. I wanted to have a baby. Her colour and culture were immaterial then.

But self-flagellation is not useful. I have more pressing concerns. I am now the mother of a ‘black’ child, even if she is more the hue of weak tea than espresso.

This is a role for which I am utterly unprepared. Part of me thinks I should be playing sitar music to her in her cot, mastering pakoras and serving them dressed in a sari, but that would be fantastically fake coming from me.

When she was born, pale but with lots of dark hair, I asked the midwife if her eyes would stay blue. ‘Asian genes are very strong,’ she said in what I took to be an ominous tone.

No more Brady Bunch kids for me. The midwife has been proved right and every day my baby’s eyes get a little darker.

Even so, when she looks up at me as I feed her, my heart melts. My love may not be colour blind, but hers is, and that is truly humbling.

I am so offended I don’t know where to begin. If this woman had a child just so she could make a clone of herself then she had her for the wrong reasons. My mother is Indian and my father is white. I AM this baby all grown up. While racism is something I am unfortunately not a stranger to, I can’t imagine how I would feel if my father had written something like this. These are issues this woman should be working out in therapy or with her own husband, not sharing with the world so that one day this poor girl will read. I am shocked and saddened at the fact that this little girl will obviously be raised to be worried or ashamed that she is not white like her siblings. I’m proud of both of my ethnic backgrounds and certainly not concerned with how people might “react” to me. That’s their problem, not mine. So what if people thought I was adopted? Wouldn’t they feel happy for me rather than freaked out that I wasn’t white like my dad? It’s amazing to me that someone who married an Indian person is the least bit concerned about a mixed child. It’s a complete oxymoron. Maybe one day her baby and I can meet and discuss the sense of cultural alienation we feel because our white parents never played sitar music in our cribs. Get real, lady.

5 Responses to “I love my white mom, but why is she such an idiot?”

  1. Aardvark Says:

    I bet she doesn’t have lots of baby bling either. Damn honky mother!

  2. mcarolinep Says:

    I will play you sitar music, Shekira. It will help me work out my own issues as I am uncomfortable being friends with a woman of “dual heritage.” By the way, my father was from Pawley’s Island, South Carolina, a wealthy family, and my mother is from Brimingham, Alabama, a rather poor family (at first, anyway). That’s dual heritage, wouldn’t you say? The beach and the coal furnaces? Rich and poor?
    Society and non-society? Please! Let me into your club!!!
    It seems very trendy.

  3. Susan Says:

    You got it right. As a mixed-race person (sorry, no peanuts here) I too was so disturbed by this article. I read somewhere that the couple split. No surprise there. I think the dad ought to take full custody of that baby. It should be easy to sway the judge–just print this stupid article (which shows as much forethought as her decision to marry an Indian man in the first place) and voila! Evidence. ‘Nuff said.

    Susan

  4. White Mom Says:

    As a “white mom” never once have I looked at my Black/Mexican adopted son and thought the things this woman has thought. Shame on you! When I look at my son I see the miracle God allowed me to love and nourish as a Mother. He is beautiful in everyway. We celebrate our difference, but more importantly we celebrate us as a family. Our skin colors enhance who we are as a family. We only really notice our skin difference when it is pointed out to us. We see more of who we are not what we are. Shame on you! Mother’s are supposed to be wired to love unconditionally. Shame on you!

  5. A.S. Says:

    You know what’s funny is that I am Indian and my husband is white and oftentimes, I get odd comments which take bits and pieces of the article. I had come across that article a long time ago and was also appalled at the reaction of the mother to her child. For goodness sakes! You know, there are white people out there who are fair skinned and fair haired, yet end up with a child who has darker eyes and hair, yet is still white! Does anyone freak out about that?

    I truly hope that I’ll be able to bypass the bullshit that people like the author say and teach my children that they can embrace and identify in both cultures, and not just one. I mean, why would a mother look at her child, knowing that she carried the baby for 9 months and not feel connected, regardless of how the baby looks?

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