I got a job yāall! Iām doing social media for local cafe called Brooktonās Market. That means I get to stay in the Ithaca area of Upstate New York.
This job came together right as I was getting ready to leave town, so the last week has been a bit of a scramble. There hasnāt been much time for me to write and think, so today I thought Iād dig up an old favorite from the archives.
Enjoy!
I HATE FALL

āI Am Loving This Weatherā
a white friend told me the other day. I was faced, in the moment, with a choice. Do I quietly let the remark pass, agree with it (and lie)? Or do I speak up and tell the truth?
I ran the calculus in the precious seconds I had to respond. The math said this was a safe person, safe place and safe time.
āActually, I miss the summer heat,ā I said. āIām always a little bit cold from now until April.ā
Thereās This Thing White People Do
They say things and then assume everyone else feels the same way. Especially in groups, Iāve noticed. If youāre the sole person of color in the group and speak your truth, it can kill their vibe.
Keeping my mouth shut during those moments is one of those unconscious habits I built up as a homeschooled kid whose only social outlet was Sunday church services with white evangelicals. I learned to treat my Indian-ness as incidental, almost an embarrassing quirk of birth.
I found myself avoiding and even disliking other Indians. I didnāt want to be considered āone of them.ā So I made sure to tip generously, so I couldnāt be accused of being a ācheap Indian.ā I was loathe to become a programmer since the nerdy Indian coder is a cliche at this point. I would entertain friends by using an Indian accent as the punchline to a joke.
At one point I told a friend that I thought of myself as a white person with brown skin. And I remember saying to someone, āWhy would I want to be part of a culture that has been dominated by another?ā
Today, I recognize those beliefs and behaviors as something called internalized racism. Itās a form of self-hatred based on the belief that another race is superior to your own. Sometimes I see and hear it among more prominent South Asians here in America:
āWho the heck is this skinny guy with a funny last name and what the heck is he doing in the middle of this debate stage?ā
Vivek Ramaswamy, Republican Presidential Primary Debate, August 2023
āI know itās an Indian thing, but my forearms look like the frigging floor of a barbershop.ā
Devi Vishwakumar, Never Have I Ever
Discovering That I Rejected Parts of Myself
was like living in a horror movie. I went down into the basement only to discover that I had been poisoned and desperately needed an antidote.
The cure is ongoing.
Iāve changed my name to honor my ancestors in Kerala, I took some Hindi on DuoLingo, dipped my toe in the ocean of Indian cinema, met up with other South Asian journalists and filled my Instagram feed with brown folks.
Honestly, it doesnāt feel fair. I have to do all this extra work that my white peers donāt have to. Iāve realized that parts of the American dream just arenāt for me: Iāll never be as desirable to women as a white guy, the presidency is still blocked off for brown folks and Iāll constantly have to be the first or only brown person in a room.
I was born and raised in this country. And yet I still have to explain, again and again, that I hate fall.
