When I’m Mixed
By Mariam, 14, Arizona
When I’m too black
When I’m too white
And still get the vicious racist comments
When I’m too white for the black kids
And can’t speak my home language
When I still have messy afro hair,
Get the weird stares from strangers when I’m only with one parent
When I get told I look adopted
When I’m paler than the white girls who get tans in the summer
When I‘ve been the diversity in school yearbooks all my life
When seeing other people in school that are black is a shocker
After a sea of white faces, being the odd one out
When my parents try to relate but can’t and never will
When white people think they’re entitled to touch my hair, never even asking
“I’m just curious,” they say
When a six-year-old me asks what princess I can be
And all the white girls laugh together and say “You could be Maui”
When teachers talk about slavery and all the kids look at me
When I was naturally bigger than the other white girls at eight
When I get told “No you’re so pretty” every time I complain
When I’m so unique yet so plain
“Being biracial is great because you have two cultures”
When I barely feel like I’m enough for one
If they lived a day in my shoes would they really find it as fun?
Getting told by people how much of each half is supposed to consume my identity
When I’m too black
When I’m too white
When I’m mixed
My work is inspired by my experience of being mixed and growing up in areas where I don’t see people like myself. I have always had people remind me of it in different ways, whether it was racist remarks or from black aunts who thought I was “whitewashed.” Being mixed has been a big part of my identity and writing a poem on it has made me be able to sit back and remember that I don’t need to fit anyone’s standard on how white or black I should be.



One Comment
GG
A thoughtfully written piece with unique insight.