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When Neighborhood Diversity Meets White Anxiety [citylab.com]

 

For most of its modern history, Old Brooklyn in Cleveland has been a working-class white neighborhood. But it’s changing. Over the last decade or so, it has become a destination for black and Hispanic families; Today, Cuban cafés and Guatemalan businesses are sprinkled among old-school coffeeshops and Polish restaurants. Some longtime residents are happy to see new energy injected into the neighborhood. But others have been wary of newcomers—in part, because of their race.

Jeffrey T. Verespej, the executive director of the Old Brooklyn Community Development Corporation, which has been working to revitalize the neighborhood, tries to assuage the anxiety of these residents by contextualizing that change. “We have this phrase: ‘Old Brooklyn has always been an aspirational neighborhood,’” he said. “Folks have always moved to Old Brooklyn because it’s a land of opportunity; it’s just that now, the face of that aspiration has changed.”

In some way, the story of Old Brooklyn is the story of America, where research shows that many white Americans fear losing ground to immigrants and minority populations. Indeed, the narrative of “white extinction anxiety” is often cited in explanations for the rise of President Donald Trump, and resistance to diversity has been one consistent theme among defenders of his administration. “In some parts of the country, it does seem like the America we know and love doesn’t exist anymore,” Fox News host Laura Ingraham recently declared. “Massive demographic changes have been foisted upon the American people—and they’re changes that none of us ever voted for and most of us don’t like.” (She later denied that her comments were about race.)

[For more on this story by TANVI MISRA, go to https://www.citylab.com/equity...hite-anxiety/572041/]

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One solution to this challenge is educating those who feel threatened by diversity, teaching and training how to access their self-empowerment in difficult circumstances, and access the greater empowerment offered by the treasures embedded in diversity.  This turns fearful competition into mutually supportive cooperation.  Additionally, those who fear "the other" carry trauma's of disempowerment from early childhood, when they learned that the only way to escape the terror of feeling less-than is to cause another to feel less-than.  In my work with adults and, particularly, parents, dealing with these challenges I teach and train them in The 7 Mindsets Of Empowerment Through Compassion - and how to pass those Mindsets onto their children.  Training in these Mindsets re-structures the brain to match the patterns of those who have overcome the gravest of challenges, and who have accomplished the greatest of goals, with happiness.  These Mindsets are being taught as a Social Emotional Learning Curriculum; to date we've reached over 500,000 students. (See www.7mindsets.com).  I'd be happy to discuss my pro-bono service options with anyone interested in bringing these trainings to communities divided by "fear of the other".

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