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Home » Ibram X. Kendi says a backlash has ‘crushed’ the nation’s racial reckoning. But there’s one reason he remains hopeful
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Ibram X. Kendi says a backlash has ‘crushed’ the nation’s racial reckoning. But there’s one reason he remains hopeful

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March 18, 2023
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Few scholars have experienced the fickle nature of fame as dramatically as Ibram X. Kendi in the past three years.

Kendi, author of the New York Times #1 bestseller, “How to Be an Antiracist,” became an intellectual celebrity in the summer of 2020 after his books became a go-to source for millions of Americans trying to make sense of the murder of George Floyd. He was awarded a MacArthur Foundation “genius grant,” became a sought-after commentator on race and helped add a new word to the way we talk about it: antiracist. The term means to actively fight against racism rather than passively claim to be non-racist.

Then came a backlash. Kendi’s books were banned by some school libraries and he was accused by conservatives of corrupting children and offering a grim view of America that casts everyone as a racist. He also became the central villain in a GOP-led campaign to purge the teaching of systemic racism in American public schools. The campaign took off following the massive wave of racial protests that swept across the country in the wake of Floyd’s death, which drew the support of many White people, including students.

Kendi says the current campaign against what one conservative commentator calls “systemic wokeness” is an effort to halt the antiracist momentum generated by the Floyd protests. When asked what happened to that momentum, Kendi gives a wry chuckle.

Protesters face off with police during a rally in Minneapolis on May 26. It was the day after George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, was killed by a Minneapolis police officer.

People gather and pray around a makeshift memorial in Minneapolis on May 26. It was near the site where Floyd was taken into police custody.

Crowds gather in the street at a protest in Minneapolis on May 26.

Three women join hands in Minneapolis as they pray around a makeshift memorial for Floyd on May 26.

People gather outside a police precinct during demonstrations in Minneapolis on May 26.

A car in Minneapolis is hit with tear gas on May 26.

Milk is poured on the face of a protester who had been exposed to tear gas in Minneapolis on May 26.

Police try to disperse crowds in Minneapolis on May 26.

Minneapolis protesters gather in the rain on May 26.

People join hands across a freeway during a protest in Los Angeles on May 27.

Demonstrators in Minneapolis raise their hands during a standoff with police on May 27.

Two police officers stand on the roof of a Minneapolis police precinct during demonstrations on May 27.

Protesters use shopping carts as a barricade as they confront police near a Minneapolis police precinct on May 27.

Demonstrators gather in Memphis, Tennessee, on May 27.

A firework explodes as a fire burns inside an AutoZone store in Minneapolis on May 27.

People look on as a construction site burns in Minneapolis on May 27.

People use garden hoses and buckets to save homes in Minneapolis after rioters set fire to a housing complex under construction on May 27.

Crews work to put out fires after an apartment building under construction was burned to the ground during protests in Minneapolis on May 28.

A woman yells at a sheriff's deputy during a protest in Minneapolis on May 28.

Protesters speak to police officers during a demonstration in New York City on May 28.

A protester is detained by police during a rally in New York City's Union Square on May 28.

People demonstrate outside of a burning Minneapolis police precinct on May 28.

Protesters link arms and surround a police officer to protect him from a crowd in Louisville, Kentucky, on May 28.

A protester in Memphis winces in pain after being hit with pepper spray by police on May 28.

A protester carries an American flag upside down next to a burning building in Minneapolis on May 28.

A protester moves around a smoke-filled police precinct in Minneapolis on May 28.

A protester dumps fuel on a fire at a Minneapolis police precinct on May 28.

People vandalize a Walgreens store during protests in Oakland, California, on May 29.

Protesters gather in front of a burning fast-food restaurant in Minneapolis on May 29.

Demonstrators in Oakland climb atop a truck while blocking all lanes of traffic on Interstate 880 on May 29.

Protesters confront police officers while blocking the 110 Freeway in Los Angeles on May 29.

Police gather along Minneapolis' Lake Street early on May 29 as fires burned after a night of unrest.

CNN journalist Omar Jimenez is <a href=taken into custody during a live broadcast May 29 at the site of protests in Minneapolis. Jimenez’s crew was also placed in handcuffs and later released. Gov. Tim Walz apologized for the arrests and said he took full responsibility.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1080″ width=”1920″/>

Protesters walk through downtown Lexington, Kentucky, on May 29.

A protester takes a knee in front of police officers in San Jose, California, on May 29.

Protesters burn a flag outside the CNN Center in Atlanta on May 29.

Jamela J. Pettiford sings during a protest outside the Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapolis on May 29.

Demonstrators protest outside CNN headquarters in Atlanta on May 29.

Demonstrators walk along Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, DC, on May 29.

A police officer in Boston holds down a protester while another officer uses pepper spray on May 29.

Protesters chant in Civic Center Park during a rally in Denver on May 29.

Protesters ride in cars during a demonstration in Louisville on May 29.

A man walks away as a car burns in a Minneapolis parking garage on May 29.

Police form a line near the Centennial Olympic Park and CNN Center in Atlanta on May 29.

People in Minneapolis try to extinguish burning cars on May 29.

A demonstrator is injured during a protest near the White House on May 30.

Police officers kneel during a rally in Coral Gables, Florida, on May 30.

Journalist Ed Ou is seen bleeding on May 30 after police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters violating curfew in Minneapolis. He suffered a scalp wound and needed several stitches.

A Los Angeles Police Department kiosk burns in The Grove shopping center during a protest on May 30.

A police officer shoots rubber bullets at protesters who were throwing rocks and water bottles during a demonstration in Miami on May 30.

People with signs and masks that read

A protester holds a sign while a vehicle burns in a Philadelphia street on May 30.

People gather on top of a baseball backstop during a protest in Los Angeles on May 30.

Thousands of people stage a

Genesee County Sheriff Chris Swanson high-fives a woman who called his name as he marches with protesters in Flint, Michigan, on May 30.

Protesters march near the Salt Lake City Police Department on May 30.

Protesters chant outside Dallas City Hall on May 30.

Bridges over the Chicago River are lifted to limit transportation to and from the Loop, where protesters clashed with police on May 30.

Protesters hold up metal gates as they build a barrier on a Las Vegas roadway on May 30.

Police push people back as they detain a protester in Las Vegas on May 30.

Looters ransack an Urban Outfitters store in Seattle on May 30.

A firework explodes by a police line near the White House on May 30.

Protesters link arms in Charlotte, North Carolina, on May 30.

A protester runs past burning cars and buildings in St. Paul, Minnesota, on May 30.

Jeffrey Maddrey, an assistant chief of the New York Police Department, takes a knee during a rally in Brooklyn on May 31.

A protester kneels in front of a police line in Memphis on May 31.

Protester Kendrick Cutkelvin uses a SWAT vehicle loudspeaker to disperse a crowd of protesters after a rally in Savannah, Georgia, on May 31.

A tractor-trailer <a href=drives into a crowd of protesters in Minneapolis on May 31. As the driver tried to speed up, protesters overtook the vehicle and the driver stopped, video showed.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1067″ width=”1600″/>

People stage a

Police react to demonstrators near the White House on May 31.

A demonstrator jumps on a police car in Washington, DC, on May 31.

A woman is helped after being hit with pepper spray in Minneapolis on May 31.

Kai Ayden raises his fist during a demonstration in Atlanta on May 31. The photo made the 7-year-old a face of the protest movement and <a href=inspired many to create artwork based on him.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”2000″ width=”3000″/>

A police officer aims a nonlethal weapon as protesters raise their hands in Santa Monica, California, on May 31.

A man screams as he sees a police officer take a knee near the White House on May 31.

Demonstrators gather to protest near the White House on May 31.

Armored vehicles from the Minnesota Army National Guard surround the Capitol in St. Paul on May 31.

Two men kneel in front of a line of Kentucky state troopers during a protest in Louisville on June 1.

A firework thrown by a protester explodes at the feet of police in Riverside, California, on June 1.

A woman cries out after being exposed to tear gas near the White House on June 1. Thousands of people were peacefully protesting near Lafayette Park when police started to shoot rubber bullets, tear gas and flash bangs into the crowd. They were clearing the block to allow President Donald Trump to walk to St. John's Episcopal Church for <a href=a photo op.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1667″ width=”2500″/>

Riot police rush demonstrators in Lafayette Park on June 1.

Security forces push protesters away from the White House in order to allow President Trump to visit St. John's Episcopal Church on June 1.

Law enforcement officers kneel with protesters in Atlanta on June 1.

Protesters gather at the J.E.B. Stuart statue in Richmond, Virginia, on June 1.

A demonstrator holds her hands up while she kneels in front of police officers at City Hall in Anaheim, California, on June 1.

Terrence Floyd, one of George Floyd's brothers, visits a makeshift memorial in Minneapolis on June 1. CNN’s Sara Sidner reported. “He had to have two people on either side of him holding him up as he tried to make his way to the spot.” He later spoke to the crowd and called for peace.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1716″ width=”2500″/>

Protesters gather in New York's Times Square on June 1.

Protesters walk off the Manhattan Bridge in New York after being blocked by police on June 2. Police were on both sides of the bridge as peaceful protesters were in the middle. Eventually the protesters <a href=were allowed to walk away and leave the area. ” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1333″ width=”2000″/>

Protesters lie down in an intersection, blocking traffic in Coralville, Iowa, on June 2.

Members of the National Guard watch as demonstrators march along Hollywood Boulevard in Los Angeles on June 2.

Protesters on horseback rally in downtown Houston on June 2.

Protesters rally in Bethesda, Maryland, on June 2.

A resident of Clarksville, Tennessee, holds up a sign that says

Protesters rally outside the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus on June 2.

Hundreds of surfers in Encinitas, California, gather in support of Black Lives Matter on June 3.

Demonstrators brave the rain to protest near the White House on June 4.

Protesters march in San Diego on June 4.

Jessica Moore attempts to hold dialogue with a counter-protester while rallying in Anna, Illinois, on June 4.

Demonstrators paint the words

Protesters stretch more than five blocks during a demonstration near the White House on June 6.

Protesters walk across the Brooklyn Bridge in New York on June 6.

Protesters pack the lawn at the Indiana Capitol on June 6.

Tamika Palmer, the mother of <a href=Breonna Taylor, closes her eyes during a vigil for her daughter in Louisville on June 6. Taylor’s death was another flashpoint in national demonstrations over police brutality. She was killed in March 2020 by police officers executing a no-knock warrant.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1667″ width=”2500″/>

Demonstrators take to the streets in Clayton, Missouri, on June 6.

Protesters are arrested after violating curfew in New York on June 5.

The <a href=new Black Lives Matter Plaza is seen in Washington, DC, on June 5. The words “Black Lives Matter” were painted on two blocks of 16th Street. The painters were contracted by Mayor Muriel Bowser.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1464″ width=”2206″/>

A person watches protesters march in St. Louis on June 7.

Protesters lie in a street near the White House on June 7.

NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace wears a shirt that reads

Seattle Police and Washington National Guard personnel retake control of an intersection as demonstrators clashed with law enforcement near the Seattle Police Department's East Precinct shortly after midnight on June 8.

Josiah Brown fist-bumps a member of the US Secret Service after he and his mother, Alexis Brown, prayed over the officers near the White House on June 9.

Minnesota state troopers surround a statue of Christopher Columbus after activists pulled it down in front of the Capitol in St. Paul on June 10. <a href=Columbus has long been a contentious figure in history for his treatment of the Indigenous communities he encountered and for his role in the violent colonization at their expense. ” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1333″ width=”2000″/>

Members of the 1199SEIU union, the nation's largest union of health-care workers, kneel during a June 11 vigil at the Brookdale Hospital Medical Center in New York.

Demonstrators set fire to a Wendy's restaurant in Atlanta on June 13. Rayshard Brooks, a 27-year-old Black man, <a href=was fatally shot by police near the restaurant’s drive-thru on June 12. Brooks was shot after police moved to handcuff him for suspected driving under the influence, according to videos from the scene. The videos show that Brooks took an officer’s Taser during the attempted arrest and then fired the Taser at the officers as he ran away. One officer then fatally shot Brooks three times with his service weapon, authorities said. Brooks was shot twice in the back, according to a release by the Fulton County Medical Examiner’s Office. The police officer who killed Brooks, Garrett Rolfe, was charged with murder. Rolfe’s attorneys say he was legally justified and acting in self-defense. Atlanta’s police chief resigned.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1349″ width=”2000″/>

A woman shouts slogans as she protests outside the burned Wendy's restaurant in Atlanta on June 15.

Police in Albuquerque, New Mexico, detain members of the New Mexico Civil Guard, an armed civilian group, after a man was shot during a protest on June 15. <a href=The shooting happened as protesters were trying to pull down a statue of Spanish conquistador Juan de Oñate. A 31-year-old man was arrested in connection with the shooting, police said. The New Mexico Civil Guard told CNN by email that the man was not part of their group.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1786″ width=”2500″/>

Members of Spark-Y, a nonprofit youth empowerment group, build a garden at the George Floyd memorial site in Minneapolis on June 17.

Fireworks explode over the statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee during a Juneteenth celebration in Richmond, Virginia, on June 19. <a href=The Juneteenth holiday commemorates the end of slavery in the United States.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1875″ width=”2500″/>

Activist Angela Davis raises her fist during a Juneteenth shutdown and protest at the Port of Oakland in California.

People pray together during a Juneteenth event at Atlanta's Centennial Olympic Park.

Protesters try to enter a gate leading to the BOK Center, where President Donald Trump <a href=was holding a rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on June 20. It was the President’s first rally since the coronavirus pandemic began.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1455″ width=”2183″/>

Protesters near the White House <a href=try to pull down a statue of former President Andrew Jackson on June 22.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”2000″ width=”3000″/>

Protesters march in the street during a demonstration in Minneapolis on June 25.

A couple <a href=draws guns on people who were protesting against St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson on June 28. The demonstration came after Krewson, on a Facebook live video, read the names and addresses of people calling for police reform, according to CNN affiliate KMOV. The man and woman with the guns were identified as Mark and Patricia McCloskey, who live on the private street the protesters were walking on. “The peaceful protesters were not the subject of scorn or disdain by the McCloskeys,” their attorney, Albert S. Watkins, said in a statement to CNN. “To the contrary, they were expecting and supportive of the message of the protesters.” He said “the actions of violence, destruction of property and acts of threatening aggression by a few individuals” put the McCloskeys “in fear of imminent harm.” In October, the McCloskeys were indicted on weapons and tampering with evidence charges. They pleaded not guilty. ” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1765″ width=”2500″/>

Artists and volunteers descended on a basketball court in a historically Black neighborhood of Annapolis, Maryland, <a href=to paint a 7,000-square-foot mural of Breonna Taylor over the Fourth of July weekend. The project was led by Annapolis-based Future History Now, a nonprofit art collective that creates murals with youth facing adversity in underserved communities.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”1333″ width=”2000″/>

People in New York City paint a Black Lives Matter mural on the street <a href=directly outside of Trump Tower on July 9.” class=”image_gallery-image__dam-img image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading” onload=’this.classList.remove(‘image_gallery-image__dam-img–loading’)’ height=”2000″ width=”3000″/>

How George Floyd’s death reignited a movement

“The momentum was just crushed by a pretty well-organized force and movement of people who are seeking to conserve racism,” he says. “Who’ve tried to change the problem from racism to antiracism. And who’ve tried to change the problem from police violence to the people speaking out against police violence.”

Kendi has written a new book, “How to Be a (Young) Antiracist,” that could help recapture some of that momentum. He and co-author Nic Stone have reframed his aforementioned 2019 bestseller, this time for young adults. This version, according to the book’s publisher, serves as an instruction manual for youth “seeking a way forward in acknowledging, identifying and dismantling racism and injustice.”

The book offers those lessons by recounting how Kendi, as a young person, absorbed some of the same racist beliefs he now argues against. The confident, professorial Kendi that most see in public is replaced in the book by a younger version who struggled with doubts over his intelligence. The book features some of the most personal disclosures of Kendi’s public career.

02 ibram kendi intv

What may be most surprising, though, is the book’s tone of optimism. Despite the change in the political climate since Floyd was murdered nearly three years ago, Kendi still believes racism can be vanquished. He says it’s It’s not an all-powerful “deity” that can never be defeated. That’s one reason he remains hopeful about antiracist activism.

“Racist ideas are not natural to the human mind,” he wrote. “In the grand scope of human existence, race and racism are relatively young. Prior to the construction of race and racism in the 1400s, human beings saw colors but didn’t group them into continental ‘races’ and attack wholly made-up positive and negative characteristics to said races. That’s something we learned to do.”

Kendi, is currently a professor at Boston University and founding director of its Center for Antiracist Research. He recently talked to CNN following the release of his book. His comments have been lightly edited for brevity and clarity.

You said near the end of your book that this book stretched you in a way that no other had before. How so?

I think because of the depths of vulnerability that I had to reach, and what I had to express publicly. It’s very difficult to be vulnerable with ourselves and to be honest about those hurtful and harmful things we’ve said and done. It’s yet another thing to be willing to share that with the public. And to deal with the shame that other people would know. That’s why it was so difficult.

You talk in the book about having doubts about your own intellect because of standardized testing. How did you overcome those doubts?

I didn’t fully overcome those doubts until I started rethinking what it means to be intelligent. We have been taught that the more intelligent you are, the better test scores you’ll get. But the more I understood intelligence, the more I realized that intelligence should be defined as a great capacity to know. And so I knew that I did have a desire to know, particularly as a researcher. For me it allowed me to better understand my own intelligence.

Are people taught racism, or are human beings born with this instinct to assign value to skin color? Some people think racism is just part of being human.

This is hotly debated among scientists and scholars, particularly the instinct part. Based on my research, I don’t think that people are born racist or antiracist. But I think depending on the environment that they are raised in, they go in one or the other direction.

I think human beings are taught instinctually to protect ourselves. When you grow up in a racist society where you’re taught that those “other people” are the source of your pain, those “other people” are not like you because they look differently or because they have different hair texture, it can then lead to people instinctually wanting to protect themselves from those “other people.”

But what if we taught that skin color is as irrelevant as the color of one’s shirt? What if we taught that hair texture is as irrelevant to the underlying person’s humanity as the glasses that they are wearing? We can teach people to think differently about people who look different to the point where they’ll see the humanity in that person, despite different skin color and hair texture.

That’s very optimistic. It reminds of something else I read in your book. You said racism isn’t this all-powerful deity that can’t be defeated. What do you mean by that?

Researching the history of racism — who created it, for what purpose, how its evolved over the last nearly 600 years, how it’s spread around the world, how it’s impacted people — it’s allowed me to really take a step back and see the structure, which then allows me to believe that it can all be deconstructed. Somebody built this (racism). And they’re rebuilding it. But you can actually deconstruct it. Anything that can be constructed, like racism, can be deconstructed.

A child watches others swim at the Emancipation Swimming Pool on July 19, 2022, in Houston.

In the meantime, what kind of practical advice would you give parents about how they can talk to their kids about incidents like in Memphis, where a young Black man (Tyre Nichols) was beaten to death by police officers?

First, it’s important for parents to talk to their children about what happened in Memphis. It’s important because the child is going to ask why: “Why did this happen to him? He wasn’t doing anything wrong. He kept doing what the officers asked him to do, but they kept beating him?” In answering those questions, you have to talk about the pervasive violence in American policing, particularly toward Black and brown people. You have to talk about the pervasiveness of racist ideas that imagine that Black people are dangerous.

At one point at your book, you’ve said that there is no neutrality in the struggle against racism. What does that mean?

Currently there are deep racial inequities in our society. Black people are more likely to die of police violence, of heart disease, of cancer. They’re more likely to be impoverished. They’re less likely to have wealth. They’re more likely to be incarcerated, and on and on. That’s the status quo. If you “do nothing,” what happens to that status quo? You’re part of this society. It’s not like this is a war happening across the world, and you’re deciding to be neutral. No, this war is happening in your own community, in your own society.

And those inequities are the outgrowth of that war. If you do nothing, what happens? It persists. Which is to say, you contributed to its persistence because you’ve chosen to not challenge it. So one’s feigned neutrality is actually being complicit with racism. That’s why it’s important for us to know that we’re either being racist through our actions or inaction, or being antiracist through our actions.

Parents and education officials have banned or tried to ban your books across the country. GOP politicians in Florida have passed laws that say certain aspects of African American history can’t be taught if they make White people feel guilt or anguish. What’s your reaction to this?

It doesn’t surprise me because as a student of history, abolitionist literature was almost totally banned in the South, especially after the 1830s. During the civil rights movement, particularly throughout the Jim Crow era, you had all sorts of books that told the truth about slavery, about Reconstruction, about American racism, that were banned in many schools.

For the better part of American history, books about people of color or racism have largely been challenged or banned. What’s happened (lately) is more consistent with American history. But just as we fought those book bans in the past or just as my enslaved ancestors found ways to read abolitionist literature, so too can we fight and still read today.

Opponents of the academic doctrine known as critical race theory protest outside the Loudoun County School Board headquarters in Ashburn, Virginia, on June 22, 2021.

How challenging has it been for you – physically, emotionally, and spiritually – to constantly talk about this complex issue of racism and to be the object of hate from people who don’t know you?

In many ways it has certainly been difficult, just as it as for a physician who routinely treats people who are sick, to have to continuously diagnose, identify and describe the sickness of racism in our society. But at the same time, like physicians who do this every day, it’s so necessary. And we’re so committed to this work and to healing people and society.

The greatest difficulties are when people try to delegitimize me and my work because they disagree with the evidence. They don’t want to make assessments based on research. They want to make assessments based on their own ideology, or what’s best for their own political faction. Clearly that’s difficult. When people threaten me in all types of ways, of course that’s difficult. But at the same time, I knew what I was getting into. And I’m figuring out ways to get through every day.

So how do you get through the days?

I’ve learned what can be too much. You spend a lot of time trying to care for humanity. It’s important to recognize that you’re part of that humanity. It’s important to care for yourself as well. I’ve been figuring out ways to do that, particularly around my physical and emotional health.

John Blake is a Senior Writer at CNN and the author of “More Than I Imagined: What a Black Man Discovered About the White Mother He Never Knew.”



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