pikir-pikir
Tuesday, February 15, 2005
  ethnicity as a source of insecurity
i think that one the things i'm most insecure about - and i've only recently become conscious of this insecurity - is the notion of cultural/ethnic loyalty and duty. it's something that seems very prevalent in society (not necessarily the particular portion of society with which i am best acquainted, but the abstract idea of society throughout the world). the obvious reason for the insecurity this fosters is my lack of cultural/ethnic classification. i worry that those who i need/want to accept me into their hearts will, in part, reject me because of the lack of shared heritage and social backgrounds.

that's a really difficult insecurity to avoid. once it gets into my head, i see possible situations for it everywhere. even tougher to take is the consequential realization that this insecurity has probably only developed during my time at harvard. while my first inclination is to blame the passively stubborn infrastructure of boston/cambridge/harvard society, i think the reasons also go deeper. they must include the fact that, at harvard, i am no longer at home where, although i don't share the same cultural heritage as either of my parents, collectively we do. they must also include the possibility that my expectations for acceptance were inflated by the melting-pot aspect to los angeles culture.

whatever combination of these and other reasons may be the true cause, the fact that these insecurities have developed in this specific location makes me glad to be leaving to explore other parts of the world. i don't really expect to 'solve' this by going some place else and gaining new perspective, but it really couldn't hurt.
 
Comments:
speaking with brian: he suggested that it's possible that this whole ethnic insecurity thing could simply be a politically correct way of framing an insecurity that everybody has. i think that, in a lot of ways, he's right. but it still seems clear to me that this insecurity - in my particular case - is magnified by my highly developed uniqueness-complex.
 
perspective is always helpful. i do agree that harvard is a place where cultural/ethnic loyalty and duty are rather emphasized... but this can be a positive thing. we can celebrate difference and enjoy it... without being exclusive. it is a hard line to walk, but there is that possibility. and as you said, being insecure about it only aggravates the situation. besides, lacking a cultural/ethnic classification, or rather being "hybrid" is cool in that it offers you perspective in and of itself. i think. yes.

all that said, i spent today being upset about ethnicity/culture/identity issues... so who am i to talk.
 
yea i'm surprised by how aware people are here of ethnicity; it's less that growing up in honolulu people weren't "racist" or whatever, and more that no one even really noticed what ethnicity their friends were. here, someone might have friends of a whole mix of different races, but he'll be so aware of that fact. that's one of the things that i hadn't realized about the "mainland" before. lol.
 
it was the exact same way growing up in LA
 
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