The Mercury News

Woman wonders why people ask about her name

- Ask Amy Amy Dickinson Contact Amy Dickinson via email at askamy@ amydickins­on.com.

DEAR AMY >> Iama foreign-born U.S. citizen from Hong Kong, a formerly British colony for more than a century.

I have lived in the U.S. for over 40 years.

It is common for people in Hong Kong to use a western name and our Chinese name together.

Occasional­ly strangers in the U.S. ask me if “Lily Wong” is my “real” name.

It is on my British passport, U.S. passport, global entry card, driver’s license, property deed and so on.

I feel discrimina­ted against because I have an Asian face and an Asian accent and they want to point out the obvious — that I am not born here.

I think corporatio­ns should include sensitivit­y training to educate their employees not to ask if someone’s name is a “real” name — to point out the obvious that I am not born here.

— Upset Citizen

DEAR UPSET >> People ask all sorts of insensitiv­e questions, not always because they are trying to discrimina­te, upset you or point out your “otherness,” but because they are curious — or clueless — or a combinatio­n of both.

I agree that corporatio­ns should include sensitivit­y training, so that people are sensitized to realize that what sounds like a benign question: “Is that your real name?” or, “Where are you from?” has the opposite effect from what they might intend.

Asking a person from Cleveland who has an American accent, “Where are you from” is perceived very differentl­y than when it is asked of you. An American-born or “Americanlo­oking” (whatever that is) person might see this as a normal social icebreaker. You see it as an indication that the person asking doesn’t think you belong here.

You might be wrong about that, or overly sensitive regarding these questions, but people asking them should be aware of how questions like this are perceived.

I have a Chinese daughter and other Asian family members who also report frequent comments or questions designed to highlight their otherness, such as, “What are you?” “Where are you really from?” or “Where are your real parents?”

Occasional­ly the people asking these questions are also Asian.

I hope you will see the movie “Crazy Rich Asians.” This runaway American hit with an allAsian cast explores, exploits and explodes these stereotype­s.

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