You've found us! Yes, you have arrived at a happy place, and we hope you make yourself at home. 🏡 I'm Rebecca, a life-long creator, and this is my all-purpose space for you to enjoy! It's all here - my creative outlets: writing , dance, scrapbooking, photography , homeschooling, stamping, card-making, home decor, and your link to shop with me for beautiful products to get creating, yourself! SHOP WITH ME: http://rebeccalaird.closetomyheart.com SPRING & FALL CRAFT RETREATS FOR CREATIVE INSPIRATION: YouTube: simplyscraphappy Pinterest: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RebeccaCTMH?mibextid=ZbWKwL Rebecca Laird, CTMH Maker PERFORMING ARTS: Local Studio: http://gracedance.org YouTube: Grace Worship Arts, Inc. PHOTOGRAPHY : Online Albums: Instagram: Created Image Photography OUR MUSIC : Laird Creative Productions
These are our boys. In the summer one gets so dark, the other stays fair, freckled and light. Nevertheless, I am told we are supposed to call ourselves "white" and label others "people of color." Is this helpful or accurate in any way? I chose this picture because their skin is like day and night. While these brothers share the exact same parentage, one is dark, and the other is fair. They are a unique blend of several nationalities, as are ALL of us in 2020. We throw out words like, "the black culture" and what do we really even mean? Does our skin tone define just one cultural background, one identity? It simply cannot. If it did, how "black" does someone have to be to be included? What shade of light skin enters another into "privilege?" Is there a chart somewhere, like paint chip palettes, to properly divide us into which are privileged and which are oppressed? If one has dark skin and is the descendant of slaves, but l
Comments