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Do You Feel More White or Asian?
“Do you feel more white or Asian?”
I hate this seemingly innocuous question.
Everytime I hear it, a sort of inferno gurgles in the depths of my soul as I am reminded of the days when my white friends would insult my Asian friends and my Asian friends would insult my white friends and how I was entrusted with the hasty “Oh wait, please don’t tell them I said that.”
Following these heart wrenching memories of the burden of being a secret keeper for years is a certain query, which without fail always seems to worm itself into my head: “Why can't I feel both equally? Why must one trump the other?”
Sometimes, when I was faced with this question in the past, I answered with a simple “I don’t know”. Other times, I responded with the answer a friend expected.
Truth is, I feel neither and both all the time.
No matter who I am with, our identities-- defined by how we were brought up, what food we eat, what language we speak, what holidays we celebrate, what stories we have-- connect. But not enough for satisfaction.
My friends often compare me to an electron because I have fallen into a pattern of switching between groups of friends. When I reach a point in which one group of friends and I connect very little, I move to another group seeking the original magnitude in connection and when that ends, I seek another and another and another.
I see myself as a chain between two worlds of rich histories and beautiful cultures and it is an incredible privilege yet an agonizing pain as I am cast aside from both worlds, that seem to invite me, in ways both sides don’t understand.
I must make my own world.
So I lend myself to this question and confidently answer upon the epiphany that I am my own world.
“Yes,” I say every time.
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Christina is a junior at Hathaway Brown School in Shaker Heights, OH. In her free time, she likes to play violin and ice hockey, experiment with new types of writing-- specifically humor that isn’t all that funny and playwriting-- and is a huge classical music nerd. Her work has been recognized by Scholastic Art and Writing Awards and The Incandescent Review.