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Mozell I believe that we must know where we come from in order to fully understand where we're going. True you have to make your own way. But at the same time you want to hold on to your sense of identity. And yeah we all know that brother (or sister) that just looks black. But talk to them. I bet they have had bad racial experiences just as we have. They have been plagued with being stereotyped at some point. What I'm asking is if you have found this dilemma to be true, how do you deal? This may not have been your experience and if so I'm happy for you because it's not easy. As a semi-successful young black man I often find myself feeling caught in the middle of two worlds. Neither of which fully accepts me. It's a tough situation sometimes. I'm just looking for people who have navigated their way through this and asking for tips.
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I too have read this book. It is some truth to this. Think about it, many of us make every attempt to make sure we are not perceived in the same light of some of our own people ( those that choose to live a life of crime, the so called "ghetto mental" and at the same time we work very hard to so that we are not inferior to whites has some choose to perceive black people in general. In doing either we also hold on to the not forgetting where we came from. As for the how I deal with it, I just be me and don't consign to the notion that I only fit into the catagories that have been placed for us to fit in.