Recently I found myself in the waiting room of a public health clinic in San Juan, Puerto Rico. When I called the clinic the day before, I was told patients would be seen on a first-come, first-served basis and that the doctor wouldn’t arrive until 9:30 am. I stratgically arrived at 9 am so I could be one of the first in line. I was a busy professional, after all, and had a full day of appointments; I needed to make this doctor’s visit quick so I could get back to work.
When I arrived at 9 am the following morning the waiting room was full. Already the board displayed numbers in the triple digits. How did this happen?! When I asked the receptionist, I was informed the clinic had been open since 6:30 am. Patients were expected to wait up to 3 hours before the doctor even arrived! First one line to get the forms, another line to return them, then another number for waiting to see the doctor. I had allotted an hour for this visit. As the second hour drew to a close, my impatience had grown. No more phone calls to make, no more text messages to return, no more emails to respond to, no more Facebook posts to read. I could feel my USer entitlement brewing, like a pot of milk left to simmer on the stove–for a long time it can look like nothing’s happening but then all of a sudden the liquid froths over the top of the pot and burns the bottom of the pan!
Patience, Nanci, patience. It was the voice of my papi in my head. I tried to bring him into the waiting room with me. Almost straining I sought to hear his non-judging, gentle, coaxing words about patience. He was born on this island and, while this may not be true of all Puerto Ricans, he understands something about connection, community and waiting his turn so that everyone is treated fairly. I was born in the US where we call this “inefficiency”–a word laced with all the embedded judgment of superiority you can imagine and my tone can muster.
In his book “Uprooting Racism” Paul Kivel writes specifically about white people’s sense of entitlement because of racism: “the feeling that one is entitled to certain goods or services more than others are, or that is [sic] one is entitled to be served by the others because of one’s class, race, and/or gender.” (p. 42) On the US mainland I am painfully familiar with being on the receiving end of this behavior. I have accumulated many experiences where people simply don’t see me because I am female and Latina–and when I was little: disabled, poor and young, or all of the above.
Watching people talk over me, look through me or disdain my presence fed my passion for justice–and outrage at the unjust systems that perpetuate these behaviors. Less obvious to me in the midst of this systemic assault, was the slow and insidious entitlement training I was receiving as a USer. I had internalized the very attitudes and learned to act out the very behaviors that I found so baffling and outrageous.
Standing in the middle of a grocery store aisle without any apparent awareness that you are blocking the flow of carts. Walking to the front of a line, even though there are people clearly waiting their turn to be attended. Not noticing the people who clean the office building where you work. Ignoring the bus person or wait staff at the restaurant except if they make contact, “mess up,” or you require attention. On countless occasions I’ve witnessed these behaviors and felt condemnation toward the person acting entitled. I have also acted out these very behaviors many times myself and also felt these same feelings of condemnation for myself. The condemnation serves none of us–it is yet another by-product of feeling superior to another human being. How can we break this cycle–and bring about an end to entitlement?
1) Slow down. When we are going fast, feel stressed and trying to get a lot of things done we pay less attention to people around us and are vulnerable to acting out entitlement behaviors. When we slow down we are better able to pay attention and be more present–and less urgency helps us be more thoughtful, considerate and patient.
2) Ask someone close to you, preferably from a targeted group, to share some of the ways you act entitled. Because non-targets (the group with institutional power and access) are trained to be clueless, we don’t immediately recognize our own entitlement behaviors. Inviting someone else to “see” us in this way helps us grow and also can deepen our relationships as allies.
3) Question why you feel better than someone else. (This can also take the form of feeling sorry for someone else.) When you pulled to judge or pity someone else, notice why. Usually feeling better than someone else is a cover for where you feel bad about yourself or less than someone else. Remember: both reactions are inaccurate. You are neither better or less than anyone else.
4) Decide to not be clueless. Society grooms its dominant groups into cluelessness patterns. If we were aware we would interrupt the injustice and require the system change. In entitlement we lose connection with other people to the point of feeling superior to them. This is the basis for class oppression and the justification for institutional oppressions overall. When we practice awareness we take important steps to interrupting our own and other’s entitlement.
5) Have compassion. Remember entitlement attitudes and behaviors are not your personal or individual fault–nor that of anyone else with entitlement patterns. If we can seek understanding and to see the goodness in others (and ourselves) instead, we might be closer to having true compassion for that person (or ourselves)–without feeling sorry for them (or ourselves).
Where do you act entitled? Where did you first see this behavior on someone else? Which group(s) of people do you feel superior to (smarter than, better looking than, happier than, more competent than, etc.)? Why? Which group(s) of people do you feel inferior to? Why? Which of the above suggestions did you use to interrupt entitlement? What else have you tried? How did it work? What did you learn?
Truthful words, some unadulterated words man. You rocked my day!!
Glad to hear the words spoke to you and made a difference! (And I am a woman, actually. (smile) )
Very insightful perspective Nanci. I too have been caught in the trap of feeling “entitled” and having to “check” myself. I need to be extremely mindful of things and people in my space and treat all with respect. Thank you for sharing your experience with us, the reminder that we ALL matter, the suggestions to assist us in our thinking about others and for the challenge to be better as well.
PEACE!!!!
It is an easy trap to fall into because where we are dominant, society encourages us to have this attitude and makes it “invisible” to us. Good for you for paying attention and “checking” yourself along the way. Do share an example or story of where it worked or what you tried (even if you couldn’t tell if it worked!)
I need to read this book! Great insight, Nanci
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It’s a keeper! There are used copies at Powell’s Bookstore!
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