MyItThings.com
  Signup to publish, interact and network!   Already a Member?
Login:         Forgot Password?
MyItThings.com
SEARCH     
Today's Top Stories
Fashion Top StoriesShopping Top StoriesPeople Top StoriesRunway Top Stories>>
prolificmuse's Column View All 

prolificmuseGeneral >> It Thought

What Are You?

By: prolificmuse (9)  |  06/08/2007 02:37 AM
 |  Comments (0) |  |  

More than my parts.
More than my parts.
It's almost eleven on my last Thursday in my Freshman dorm and I've just skimmed through my art professor, Kip Fulbeck's book Part Asian, 100% Hapa, and of course this means that I have to write a "mini" manifesto of my own "Hapa" identity, because it's the end of a year where everyone knows me.

At the beginning of every year, I get this question: What are you? Sure, there are a few people who don't ask, but they usually find out soon enough. I am so desperate to say that I am Filipino, to prove that I am Filipino, that I tell them straight away. When I am not fast enough, I get that question. A lot of people I meet immediately think I am Latina, mostly other Latinos and Latinas.

I hate hate hate when they speak to me in Spanish and when I tell them I don't speak it, they become irritated or puzzled. "No," I tell them. "No habla espanol." I had to learn that phrase to survive. They often do not believe me. What Latina doesn't speak some Spanish? "No, I am Filipino," I say. They do not believe me. I can't be Filipino. Finally I manage to convince them that I am Filipino. "My mother came from the Philippines when she was young to marry my dad."

But what is your father?

My father is white. I am Filipino and white. He's something specific like Scottish, something Western European, but he's not the parent that I am asked about. When they hear that he is white, they are happy. They have discovered what I am.

But I am not just the daughter of a multi-racial couple. I am more than the sum of my parts. I am neither. In a room full of Filipinos, I don't fit in. I never learned Tagalog because my white grandmother thought it wouldn't be good for me to learn two languages at the same time, especially in an English speaking country. In a neighborhood of whites, I can't disguise the natural tan of my skin.

I'm an outsider to both worlds, but I am a part of my own world. I'm not half and half, I'm one whole me. My hair isn't black, it's dark brown, and it is naturally curly. I have always wanted it to be straight so I could be more Asian and I used to tell my mom that I wanted to dye it black like hers. Now she dyes hers lighter to match mine.

I am just finishing my first year of college where I found out for the first time that other "Hapas" like me actually feel the same way I do when we get this question. Next year, I am sure that I will get it again, after I go away for a summer and have to return to campus and meet all new people in all new classes. I've had to deal with it my whole life with only my brother to understand.

So what am I?

I am a writer, amateur comic artist, singer, scholar, young woman and more than the sum of my parents.




DISCLAIMER: This posting was submitted by a user of the site not from our editorial staff. All users have acknowledged and agreed that their submission and its contents is in compliance with our terms of use. Sign Up now to submit your content for the feature on MyItThings.com.


Members who voted for this story (1)

Comments (0)

To comment please Login OR Sign Up
Join Now
Advertisement
View All 
MyWalit- Rainbow Colored Wallet.Filofax Finsbury Terminplaner (Personal)Muse
Candy JarZombie girl business cardsChi
bauer hockey skate bagI M Active HeadbandMonogrammed Flip Notes Notepad
Advertisement
NY Fashion Week Spring 2010
"It" Giveaway: November '09.
MyItThings.com Launches "It" Designer Contest Winner S/S 2009 Collection by Wakana Koike.


©2008 MyItThings.com All Rights Reserved. MyItThings.com is a Trademark of 2 Brains Media, LLC