I get nervous when I’m with people!I get nervous when I'm not with diversified people. It's not normal for me.
I getcha.I get nervous when I’m with people!
Same here. I love my diverse neighborhood. So many different ages, races, sexual orientations, religions, countries of origin and ethnic backgrounds. All are friendly and look out for one another.My neighborhood is a mix of races and ethnic groups (and sexual orientations) and nobody thinks much about it. If you've got a problem with one group or another, you're not going to get along very well here.
This is a fun youtube video put out by Beryl Shereshewsky on grocery shopping in various countries:I've been to a few outa the way places on this planet
Turns out, food is a great connector, no matter where you might be
Don't even have to speak the language
Other than that.....one on one beats hell outa groups
I've got other stories too, but.....it's almost tomorrow here
My Dad was a Merchant Marine during WWII. Blind in one eye (due to scar tissue from childhood injury) no other service would have him. He was a radio operator and after the war became a HAM radio operator. Often assisting families trying to connect with loved ones after a hurricane--he lived in Tampa some 50 yrs.not tryin' to hijack this thread, but just wanna say - welcome aboard...
back when I was working as a Merchant Marine - all I wanted to do when we were up against the dock, was go ashore, hang with the locals and absorb some of their culture - talk about an education...
I’ve lived in GA for 40 years, we have come a long way and, yes, there’s still room for improvement. But I’ve been out to lunch at nice restaurants with black co-workers or friends and we felt comfortableThese days I don't live around many non-European people, most of Utah is pretty lily white. I do work with a few, and get along fine, but they are mostly professionals and fit in pretty well.
My more frustrating experiences have been in the US South with black people. I am afraid that divide that will take generations to break down. I had a few black friends, but never anything close to a percentage representative of the population.
One experience that stands out was a man and his wife who we contracted with to take care of some rentals. They were black, and I really liked them, thought of them as friends. Then I tried inviting them to dinner and after a few failed invitations the man told me honestly, and privately, they just couldn't be seen with us, or any white folks in a restaurant. He offered to go without his wife but it never happened. He was being pretty open with me, and honest. I believe he was embarrassed. After that I started looking around in the restaurants nearby and I did see some black people, but never together with whites. Made me kind of sad. This happened in rural North Florida about 10 years ago.
On the flip side I have a niece who lives in Washington State with her black boyfriend. We just saw them at a family gathering in Oregon, and she is pregnant. All was fine, he seems a nice guy. I don't think anyone reacted or has treated them differently than they would have had he been white. He is from Southern California, a world away from the old South... Got to hope the South is headed that way, it is better than it was when I was growing up. Just not as much as it should be.
I’ve lived in GA for 40 years, we have come a long way and, yes, there’s still room for improvement. But I’ve been out to lunch at nice restaurants with black co-workers or friends and we felt comfortable
(How i wish i'd known then what i later learned about who burned down our home when i was 8 and why)
The racial divide is still thick enough to cut with a knife, in some places down South. One time I was with my ex-girlfriend(who's black) in a place just on the Georgia/South Carolina border, a white female employee there made a comment with-in earshot: "our pastor says it's a sin for the races to inter-marry...". Yea, we heard it, just ignored it.My more frustrating experiences have been in the US South with black people. I am afraid that divide that will take generations to break down. I had a few black friends, but never anything close to a percentage representative of the population.
The racial divide is still thick enough to cut with a knife, in some places down South. One time I was with my ex-girlfriend(who's black) in a place just on the Georgia/South Carolina border, a white female employee there made a comment with-in earshot: "our pastor says it's a sin for the races to inter-marry...". Yea, we heard it, just ignored it.
1999.What year was that?
1999.
I'm glad to see that happening, I was surprised by the incident in 1999, I thought things had changed in the 30 years since the last time I saw racial ugliness(in Virginia), when in public as an interracial couple.Since then, there's been a boom of biracial relationships and resulting beautiful mocha children. I went to an all white high school and several friends now have much loved biracial grandchildren. And when I say beautiful ....I mean it. The kids are usually really attractive going by facebook pics.
The KKK burned down our home. i was 8 so of course my parents shielded me because we stayed in the town for another year and a half so the middle of 3 older sisters could graduate high school from the same place she'd started it. Mom slipped and then i learned more from older sisters. Several powerful people in our little town belonged to KKK. My parents refused to sign an agreement to never sell their property to Black people. Dad had trouble holding a job (long story why) but he left the bill paying to Mom and when he first started a job that kept him away 4 weeks then home 2, money was still tight. She chose feeding us over paying insurance premium, so that meant rebuilding would be difficult.
More, please!
Do you think that woman who insisted your Mom come that day because she Knew your house was going to get burned down and the KKK didn't want deaths, just wanted to send a warning?especially Mom, who would have been home if that woman hadn't insisted her clean that day. We figure she knew something but couldn't say.
Possibly, also she really liked Mom--admired her sewing and cooking skills (tho Mom was also known for her skills at hunting and fishing). And we sometimes played with her kids, rode their big old Draft Horse, Red, bareback. There was little my folks could do afterwards since the most powerful people in town were KKK, one of them even ran a 'Tenant Farm' operation nearby, and likely law enforcement would have been no help, might have been involved.Do you think that woman who insisted your Mom come that day because she Knew your house was going to get burned down and the KKK didn't want deaths, just wanted to send a warning?