Los Angeles Times

Yes, this is racist. Wake up

- Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to ask amy@amydickins­on.com.

Dear Amy: Am I racist?

A couple of teenagers were at my front door, and I shouted to my husband: “Hey, there are some Black kids at the door, and I don’t have time to deal with them.”

My biracial future daughter-in-law was present when I did this and took offense. Apparently, behind my back, she and my stepson discussed how “un-woke” I am. Anyway, I love these two so much that as soon as I learned she had been offended, I immediatel­y sent a note of apology to her.

I am in my 60s and was raised in the South. My grandfathe­r referred to all Black people using the Nword. However, I was active in civil rights during my youth.

As a reporter for a newspaper in the South, I had a gun pulled on me as I was covering a boycott of white businesses.

But these kids have never bothered to ask. I meant no harm referring to these teens as “Black kids.”

I don’t enjoy receiving a lecture on being “woke” from two suburban Midwestern­ers, one of whom has traveled the world working with the disadvanta­ged.

I know their hearts are in the right place, but what about giving someone the benefit of a doubt, before inferring they are racist?

Woke Enough

Dear Enough: Do you identify white people who come to your front door using their race as the primary descriptiv­e? I assume not.

So yes, you doing so only with Black people is a racist way to communicat­e. You seem to believe that because you aren’t as racist as you were raised to be, this means that you have conquered racism. This is an extremely flimsy defense.

You also believe that this young couple should not throw down the race card because you have faced a variety of racial issues over time. But if all your previous experience­s (including reporting for a newspaper) didn’t teach you that all human beings need to continue to learn, grow, and change, then what was the point of having these experience­s?

I take being “woke” as the ultimate goal of the lifelong process of awakening to the human experience, as it is lived by others.

So, wake up, already!

Dear Amy: Is it me, or is there only one way to interpret the response I quote below from my boyfriend of four years?

While I don’t think any background is needed, I will say that I heard from him at 7:30 p.m., and then heard nothing until 3:30 p.m. the following day.

Here is what my boyfriend texted: “Love you, but I’m not going to do the ‘it’s been this many hours and you haven’t messaged me so you must not love me’ thing. Your bucket of trust has to be able to hold the water I’ve given you to make it through 24 hours.”

A Leaky Bucket

Dear Leaky: There are many reasons for couples to be in touch, other than having to replenish a partner’s leaky “bucket of trust.”

Without context, I would say that a brief “good night” text or call to someone you love is within the norm.

And while I appreciate the concept of a “bucket of trust,” your boyfriend is implying that yours is empty. Either you don’t trust him as much as you would like to, or you simply desire more frequent affectiona­te contact.

Your boyfriend is telling you — very clearly — that he’s not willing to do that.

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