Hey people with privilege, you need to be OK with making mistakes and being called out

- When you have privilege, you will have gaps in knowledge: Cisgender men will never know what it is like to be a woman or to be transgender. White colleagues will never truly know the challenges experienced by colleagues of color. People who are currently able-bodied may not yet understand the inaccessibility and discrimination faced by people who use wheelchairs. We must believe the people of marginalized identities when they point out something we, due to our privilege, can never fully know.
- You’re not a bad person when you make a mistake: No one is immune to screw-ups. The only way to avoid making mistakes is to stop doing this work. Your screw-ups are an indication that you are actively in the arena fighting to make the world better. Just like with other polarities, you can make mistakes AND still be a good person.
- It’s OK to feel hurt when you get called out: If your feelings are hurt when someone points out something problematic you did or said, it means you care. If you didn’t care, you wouldn’t worry about other people’s opinions. It’s OK to spend some time feeling like crap. The trick, though, is to not stay there in that state, but to use it as a way to grow.
- Weigh your discomfort against the harm done to people: Your (and my) temporary embarrassment at being called out for various missteps is real, but it does not compare to the ongoing systemic discrimination faced by people with disabilities, Black and Indigenous and other people of color, LGBTQIA, women, and others in our society.
- When someone calls you out, it does not mean they hate you: Often, it’s the opposite: People care enough about your personal and professional growth that they are taking the time and energy to provide you with perspective about how your actions and words may be interpreted and the impact they may have on others. Think of it as a friend telling you have spinach stuck in your teeth, and the spinach is radioactive and might poison you and everyone you talk to.
- Stop obsessing over your intentions: Yes, intentions do matter. You have good intentions. I have good intentions. We should recognize one another’s intentions AND we have to address the harm being done when we screw up despite what we had intended to do or say.
- It is exhausting being defensive: It is our first instinct to be defensive, because it is uncomfortable and sometimes existentially threatening to be told we did something wrong, probably because our survival evolutionarily has depended on being an accepted member of a group. But defensiveness takes a lot of energy. I’ve learned that it is so much less exhausting to admit to a mistake, apologize for it, and figure out how to learn from it.
- A genuine apology affirms everyone’s humanity: Somehow we have lost our skill in apologizing. “I’m sorry if anyone was offended” is not an apology. A real apology acknowledges the harm that’s done, expresses genuine regret, provides explanation if needed but avoids excuses, and commits the person to doing better. In admitting to our mistakes and committing to be better, we affirm one another’s humanity and strengthen community.
- It is about you AND it is not about you. The polarities of the personal and the systemic are something we all need to keep in mind. When we interact with others, it is thousands of years of human nature coalescing in these dynamics. We did not individually set out to create systems of privilege and oppression. But they do play out every day, and we must try to understand how we personally benefit from these dynamics and how they harm others.
- The burden weighs on those with privilege to effect change: When you have privilege, you consciously and unconsciously have more power and influence. Therefore, the burden must be on you to change things. Because, as Spiderman says, with great power comes great responsibility.
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