When I was growing up, I loved spending time with my grandfather. In the summer and for holidays, I traveled down to Washington, D.C. to spend time with him. We used to sit on his front porch and chat and people watch. He waved and said hello to every black person who walked by.
I accompanied him to the grocery store and the same thing, any time he passed a black man or woman he nodded, waved, and said hello.
I asked him, “Who was that?”
He replied, “I don’t know.”
“You don’t know that person?”
“No,” he replied.
I noticed the pattern; every single time, he saw a black person, he said hello.
So one day, I asked him why he said hello to every black person.
He stopped and looked at me like I had three heads and said, “It’s what you do, Khristee.”
I took that statement to heart.
I grew up in a white community where my family was one of a couple of black families in town at the time. Besides my family, I didn’t come across many African Americans, so when I went to college and was exposed to more blacks, I made a point to say hello to everyone who I saw.
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