"Stories are always going to be around and have always been around. Because they exist as survival information. And that's not necessarily life or death survival, but more like, sometimes the survival information you need is just to see that people have survived situations that you've been in. Or shared a part of your identity and have just been here before you."
Read More“I live in East Ravka, but I’ve never been welcome here because I look like my mother, and she looked like the enemy.”
Quote from one of our articles or a quote from a new Netflix fantasy drama with mixedness as a key theme? You guessed it, we’re reviewing Netflix’s new hit series Shadow and Bone, it’s casting controversy, overall enjoyability, and the racism presented in the show.
Read More“Too much, not enough, It’s not that hard to comprehend, I am not one but many, I am the perfect blend…”
Read More“I wrote this article, "Does Being Asian Enough Matter?" sometime in early March of 2020. I’ll touch upon my thoughts on that piece later, but after some waking up and leaning in, here are some lessons about mixed identity that I am internalizing everyday.”
Read More“A hand reaches out – to open that door? Yes and no because they drag me through that door. Run me through like the freshness of spring dirt off celery down the drain, particles of toxic lead safely stored in the Brita filter, yolk of an egg as the white trickles through patient hands. Whites are examined for shells, for bits of yellow, for anything non-white.”
Read More“As a blasian, I have to worry about whether or not my Black father will encounter aggressive racist cops, or if my Japanese mother will be safe at the grocery store if she goes alone…”
Read More“What I discovered was that in this struggle that felt uniquely mine, were five other people who had been tackling the same things. Mixed-raced, multiracial, and white-passing stories need to be told. My hope is for these stories to find the eyes of a mixed-raced reader searching for clarity and community. What you will find is that even within a single family, the mixed-race experience varies greatly. There is no single archetype, but that diversity is what unites us.”
Read More“…she asked me, how are you so tan? it’s winter. I thought to myself, I am tan because when amber drips down a tree it hardens dark. I am tan because when you crack open the sunburned shell of the coconut sweet water spills out and you sink your teeth into its meat grateful for the jungle and its saccharine sustenance….”
Read More““Se dice…”, a phrase I know all too well. In Spanish, an expression of correction that is used to express “It is said like this.... and not like that”. A phrase I hear too often to have learned Spanish as my first language. A phrase of embarrassment.”
Read More“My granny spent her childhood feeling the thorough effects of the Raj. Her grandmother would tell her to speak Konkani. My granny speaks English. It’s no source of shame to her, to my knowledge. She said that all the women in her family, her whole family in Mangalore would speak Konkani to her & she would reply in her mother tongue, English.” Beka Bowkett tackles the tightrope between language and ancestral responsibilities in this striking poem and statement, click to read more!
Read MoreA collection of mixed identity and literature and an essential reading list! Whether you’re looking for an escape from the chaos of today or have a few of your own mixed questions you want to explore through some great novels, this list is for you.
Read More“she speaks to me in my dreams in the language of my ancestors - she does not know the sinful syllables of white men, she teaches me to do the same. she speaks to me like she spoke to juan diego, she speaks to me like she spoke to all of mexico…”
Read More“Many other Latinos are also mixed, whether it be with Indigenous, Spanish, African, or a multitude of other races. However, due to colonization, a lot of mixed people, or mestizos, feel a disconnect between their Native culture and the one of the colonizers. They may not feel comfortable with identifying as White or Native because of that disconnect. I myself, feel this disconnect sometimes as well…”
Read More“Texture: strands of hair that seem minor, but are packed with history and significance. My father’s hair is close to the 1b hair type. My father’s hair tells a story of the multiple ethnicities coursing through his veins. (Czechoslovakian, Cuban, White and Italian). My mother’s hair tells a different story…”
Read MoreSarah Bernadette is a Singer/songwriter from NJ- her new EP passionately explores being mixed from her unique perspective and is a must-listen. We had the opportunity to hear from her thoughts on writing this EP and about her mixed identity, check it out here!
Read MoreAs a first generation Chinese-Israeli, food has always been an important source of connection to my culture, food binds my grandparents and I. I am growing up in a world drastically different than any of them could have even imagined, but their food is a source of consistency and serves as a connection. I wanted to share a recipe from both sides of the family that has always been important to me.
Read More“It’s a weird thing when you’re mixed. I feel like your identity is partially how you self-identify, but also how other people perceive you. So then I went through this thing where I was like, oh, how do I identify?” We had a chance to interview mixed writer and director, Sarah Kambe Holland about her journey with her film Egghead and Twinkie.
Read MoreTia Monet is a biracial, Black and Japanese woman, who affectionately calls her TikTok followers "The Lovelies Gang." Through her platform, she shares her experiences being mixed race, her occasional encounters with racism, teaches Japanese, and inspires others through comedy and art.
Read More“How a lover would water me down enough, until they are comfortable swallowing my existence…”
Read More“It was very confusing growing up. I was raised solely by the white British half of my family and had little exposure to my cultural heritage as a child, meaning I never saw myself as any different to any of my Caucasian school friends. But I was bullied, badly. People didn’t like it because I was brown but I had a white mother, of course I couldn’t understand the problem with it…”
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