If You Were Shocked To Learn You Have "Privilege," Tell Us About Your Experience

It's probably not something you think about daily, but the fact of the matter is that everyone benefits from a form of privilege in our daily lives.

NBC / Via giphy.com

The weight of those privileges may vary from person to person, but they provide us with advantages that we may take for granted.

And before y'all go into a full panic over the word, let's quickly go over examples of what it means to have "privilege."

VH1 / Via giphy.com

It's not so black and white as "privilege = bad person." There's not one identity or group that holds all of the privileges or lack thereof.

NBC / Via giphy.com

Take me, for example. As a Black person, I fully realized I had privilege once I visited someone from a different socioeconomic ($$) background with a single-parent household.

Overheard shot of Cabrini Green projects

Maybe you first realized your privilege when you visited a building that your loved one with a physical disability couldn't access because there were no ramps or assisted access available.

A man on a wheelchair sit at dinner table with another man
Gaumont

Perhaps you realized there was only one woman in the room, and the weight of her opinions and ideas or the opposition of her thoughts rested solely upon her and her alone. She was greatly outnumbered.

A woman stands in a room full of men
Focus Features

Or maybe your partner with darker skin was wrongfully singled out by a security guard for suspicion of stealing or creating danger while you were ignored and presumed innocent.

Man and woman speak to a police officer
Universal Pictures

To help get you thinking about it, here's a list of some types of privileges.

list of attributes that make someone privileged

Tell us about the first time you recognized you had privilege, whether it was one or many. What happened, and how did it make you feel?

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