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Poem – Salt and Pepper (By Donal Mahoney)

Salt and Pepper

 
White privilege it’s called and recently
I learned its name although I’ve been
white as a sheet for decades.
Like breathing and eating I take 
white privilege for granted. 
I push a cart through a megastore
in bib overalls and no one
follows me and when I hail a cab
in a snow storm, it picks me up.
My freckles may be a stop sign.
 
Not so my friend George,
black as tar in a suit and tie,
who finds someone behind him
in any store he enters.
And cabs are in no rush
to pick him up either 
despite his fine attire.
I can’t do anything about being white.
Nor can George about being black.
We get along despite the difference
because we know each other. 
Salt and pepper, his wife says.
 
White privilege is nice to have.
To live without it must be a problem,
though George has never complained.
If other whites don’t get to know him
he’ll be tailed for life in stores 
and may go gray hailing cabs
as they fly by and he turns white
waving in the snow.

Author Bio:

donal-mahoney
Donal Mahoney lives in St. Louis, Missouri. He has had fiction and poetry published in various publications in the U.S. and elsewhere. Among them are The Galway Review (Ireland), The Recusant (England), The Missing Slate (Pakistan), Guwahatian Magazine (india), Bluepepper (Australia), The Osprey Journal (Wales), Public Republic (Bulgaria), and The Istanbul Literary Review (Turkey). Some of his earliest work can be found at http://booksonblog12.blogspot.com and some of his newer work at https://www.antarcticajournal.com/donal-mahoney-recent-works