3 Comments

I remember being afraid that I *would* be stereotyped in college because I got my Bachelor's degree in fashion and I was convinced people wouldn't take me seriously. So because of that, I went to graduate school to get a master's in business. In hindsight, that was all of my own insecurities coming to the surface, thinking that I wasn't smart, thinking that I'd never get a "good" job. I think I ended up stereotyping myself, and anyone else who focused on fashion as a career path, and I wish instead I had just been proud of it and where it took me.

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When I stopped drinking alcohol 6+ years ago, I was surprised how many people made assumptions about me because of it. Some friends wondered aloud if I would still be “fun.” New acquaintances would ask a series of questions—from subtle to bold—to as to why. (One even asked if I was Mormon.) Alcohol is such a charged force in mom culture that one or two people even seemed personally offended by my choice—as if my abstinence was a reflection on their own choices.

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There were a lot of boarders from Hong Kong at my school when I was in middle and high school. I once was mistaken as a boarder, despite being day girl. What’s interesting is that I haven’t heard other Asian kids say that they, too, were mistaken! I don’t really speak Cantonese with friends, nor did I gravitate towards class that international kids (or even Asian day students) typically take (STEM).

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