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“Friendly” Comments That Aren’t Friendly: When Racism Hides Behind Small Talk

  • Posted on February 17, 2026

Sometimes racism doesn’t sound loud or hateful. Sometimes it comes wrapped in smiles, casual conversation, and “concern.” It sounds friendly — but leaves you feeling judged anyway.

I remember when I was in cosmetology school. There was a white woman there in her 40s. At first, we talked casually and seemed to get along. Like many conversations between women, the topic of children came up. When she asked if I had kids and I said no, her response wasn’t neutral or curious — it carried an undertone.

She told me I was “too young” to have children and suggested motherhood would hurt my career prospects. On the surface, that might sound like advice. But the way it was said felt different — like an assumption that I wouldn’t be capable of balancing motherhood or making responsible choices.

She made similar comments about some of the other Black female students who were pregnant — implying they were simply “having babies” and making poor decisions. The judgment felt automatic.

What stood out most was the contrast.

An 18-year-old white student who was pregnant joined the school, and the tone shifted completely. Her pregnancy was treated with acceptance, even softness. There was no mention that her career prospects would be ruined wow! Meanwhile, this same woman spoke proudly about her 17-year-old daughter as someone who “never had sex,” reinforcing the old stereotype that only certain girls — often Black girls — are seen as sexually active or irresponsible.

That’s when it clicked for me: this wasn’t just personal opinion. It was a racialized assumption disguised as friendly conversation.

Racism Disguised as Advice

There are certain things a white person — or anyone — should avoid saying to a Black person because they reinforce harmful stereotypes, even unintentionally:

  • Assuming Black women are more likely to become mothers “too young.”
  • Questioning motherhood goals as if they conflict with ambition.
  • Framing Black motherhood as a problem to avoid rather than a normal life choice.
  • Treating similar situations differently based on race.
  • Projecting stereotypes about sexuality onto Black girls and women.

These comments often come wrapped in concern: “I just don’t want you to ruin your future.” But when that concern only appears in one direction, it stops being advice and becomes bias.

The Double Standard

Historically, Black women have been judged through contradictory stereotypes: seen as overly sexual yet simultaneously judged harshly for motherhood. When people assume Black women are likely to make irresponsible choices, every conversation becomes tinted with suspicion — even when the same choices are celebrated or accepted in white women.

What makes this especially harmful is how subtle it is. There’s no obvious insult. Just a tone, a raised eyebrow, a difference in how people are treated.

Why It Matters

Words shape expectations. When Black women are constantly spoken to as if motherhood equals failure or irresponsibility, it reinforces societal narratives that question their nurturing ability and character.

And the truth is simple: wanting children, having children young or older, focusing on career first, or doing both — none of these choices define someone’s worth or potential.

The Bigger Lesson

Sometimes the most damaging comments are the ones people think are harmless. Being “friendly” doesn’t cancel out bias. True respect means listening without assumptions and treating everyone’s choices with the same level of humanity.

Because the issue was never just one woman’s comments. It was the stereotype underneath them — and the double standard that made it visible.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tags: Facts, Racism, Stop, Truth
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Young Faith: My Story, My Struggles, My Triumph, My Faith by Shalonda Falconer with Lorian Tompkins