I found this short article interesting and in keeping with Buddhist ideas on who we are and how we become so, and how our self-identity is a construct in so many ways.
Children need not be like their parents or grandparents.
I always say that Zen is about dropping "divisions and judgments from mind." Certainly, there are some divisions and judgments which we can particularly learn to do without.
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Children aren't born racist. Here's how parents can stop them from becoming racist.
Gassho, J
STLah
Children need not be like their parents or grandparents.
I always say that Zen is about dropping "divisions and judgments from mind." Certainly, there are some divisions and judgments which we can particularly learn to do without.
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Children aren't born racist. Here's how parents can stop them from becoming racist.
Some parents of white kids, meanwhile, fear they'll raise children who will grow up to be racist -- if not the kind of racist who suffocates a man with a knee to the neck, then the kind who will quietly commit microaggressions.
How, they wonder, can we raise kids to be anti-racist?
The first step is understanding where racism comes from -- the underlying psychological and cognitive functions that lead us to see and categorize people by color, according to May Ling Halim, associate professor of psychology at California State University, Long Beach, and Sarah Gaither, assistant professor psychology and neuroscience at Duke University.
Babies as young as three months can distinguish faces by color, and 3-year-olds are fully capable of understanding racial categories, and even the hierarchies that come with them. The trick is to accept that this categorization is normal, and to keep it from mutating into racism.
How, they wonder, can we raise kids to be anti-racist?
The first step is understanding where racism comes from -- the underlying psychological and cognitive functions that lead us to see and categorize people by color, according to May Ling Halim, associate professor of psychology at California State University, Long Beach, and Sarah Gaither, assistant professor psychology and neuroscience at Duke University.
Babies as young as three months can distinguish faces by color, and 3-year-olds are fully capable of understanding racial categories, and even the hierarchies that come with them. The trick is to accept that this categorization is normal, and to keep it from mutating into racism.
Gassho, J
STLah
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