Ebony and Ivory in Harmony
One of my friends has to write a paper for a college class she's taking this weekend, and one of the topics she is supposed to address is interracial marriage. She asked me if I would take a few moments and write something up for her about my experiences, and I figured I would share it here as well (in case any of you had a burning curiosity about the same topic!)
Since I am half of an interracial partnership, sometimes I
get asked what it’s like to be married to someone who is so clearly from a
different background. What kind of
challenges do we have? Do people treat
us differently? What does it mean for
our children?
For the most part, the questions baffle me. Quite frankly, our marriage is no different
than nearly every other married couple I know.
We have differences, it’s true.
Our backgrounds are starkly different—we were raised in different
regions of the country (Mississippi is a different world from Southern
California), we are from different socioeconomic backgrounds and family
situations (my husband was raised by a single mother who went through a series
of abusive relationships, while my parents are a college-educated couple who have
been married 40 years), and we even had different religious backgrounds as
children (he was Baptist, I was Mormon).
However, all these differences can be a part of any marriage, even when
the spouses have the same racial background.
We’ve had to overcome those disparities and work together in the same
way that any other couple manages to reconcile their differences in a
successful relationship.
There have been a few road bumps along a path that were
specifically related to our different races though. When my grandparents learned that I was going
to marry someone black, they were so concerned that I was making a mistake that
they met with my mother to try and get her to break up our engagement. My parents had supported my choice all along
(they loved Terence right from the start) so my mother just tried to reassure
her parents as best she could, while reminding them that I was an adult and I
would make my own choices. It was never
any more difficult than that. Terence
and I were not offended (we recognized that they came from a generation where
interracial marriages had much harder challenges). My grandparents never said a word to me
personally, they came to our wedding and celebrated with us, and as they got to
know Terence, loved him and took him in as part of the family.
On Terence’s side of the family, I have never felt anything
but welcomed. Most of them still live in
Mississippi, but when we travel back as a family his family members have always
treated me with love and kindness. We do
attract a lot of stares though. Often
while in public in the small towns we visit heads will literally turn as the
people watch us go by. Our family is
even so unusual that while taking my children to the park in Terence’s tiny
hometown, after we got the standard wide-eyed stares, I heard one of the men
exclaim really loud, “Oh, I know who she
is.” Everybody in town probably knows by
now that May’s grandson “married a white girl.” But nobody is ever offensive or hostile, we
are just so unusual still in that part of the country that our family is an
object of curiosity.
Occasionally we have situations where we could take offense
but choose not to. Every so often
someone assumes that I must be a stepmom or an adoptive mom of my five
biological children. (I guess they take
more after their dad.) When registering
my two eldest children for school, the state required that we list their racial
background—and only let us choose one (without even “mixed” as an option, as most
paperwork does). I flipped a coin and
listed our daughter as black and our son as white. (They changed that rule so that by the time our third
child entered kindergarten I was allowed to check more than one box.)
With our children, we have made a conscious decision to make
sure race has never been a part of our family life. We don’t identify or put any of our family
members into categories or label them as “black,” “African-American,” “white,”
“Caucasian” or anything else. When
people ask our kids if they are black or white, my kids are puzzled. They don’t see their skin color as any more
important than their eye or hair color.
(The older ones have begun to be aware of racial categories though, and
they will answer “both”). We consider
both parts of our racial heritage to be an important part of our family,
without focusing on labels and stereotypes.
We have talked about racism and segregation with our children for we
want them to know about the past and how things have changed, but we do not
focus overly on the negative. We feel
that it’s important not to focus on racial differences, but rather on the truth
that we are all human beings and children of God, and our skin color is not who
we are.
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