Skip to main content

A Staffer’s Take On The Intersection Of Race, Trauma, And The Summit

 

Voices for Virginia’s Children held The Virginia Summit on Childhood Trauma and Resilience on April 25, 2019. The Summit featured an array of workshops, including The Intersection of Racial Inequity and Trauma led by The Southside Trauma-Informed Community Network (like their Facebook page here). The presenters identified and discussed the challenges of racial inequities and how trauma may later present within people of color. The supporting organization of the Southside Trauma-Informed Community Network, the Crater Health District, will also host its second Beyond ACES Summit, which will discuss the impact of race, culture, and poverty on ACES, on August 8th and 9th. Register for the summit here!

Voices Outreach Coordinator, Chloe Edwards, sat in the breakout session hosted by the STICN. Edwards has a high ACES score of eight and still witnesses the obstacles of racism and oppression. She openly talks about entering kinship foster care at fourteen, which gave her the desire to advocate for permanency for all children. Once served by a Court Appointed Special Advocate, Edwards became a Court Appointed Special Advocate for Henrico CASA. Chloe touches on her experience of being the daughter of a now recovering addict, which encouraged her to become a board member for the Henrico Too Smart 2 Start Coalition. Chloe is proud to support the Campaign for a Trauma-Informed Virginia to prevent and treat trauma on behalf of other children. Edwards added, “The adversities I faced in my childhood are not quite as complex as the obstacles rooted in the color of my skin as a Black woman.” The race-focused breakout session at the summit created a safe space to discuss racial trauma. She said, “However, creating safe spaces for people of color and creating communities for people of color are two different challenges.”

“The adversities I faced in my childhood are not quite as complex as the obstacles rooted in the color of my skin as a Black woman.”

While sitting in the breakout session, Chloe recalled the Professionals of Color Networking Event that was hosted by Voices the day before the summit. Edwards noted that being surrounded by other people of color and not being one of the few minorities in a room reminded her of the level of comfort that comes with culture, “But then you leave that safe space, and it is an unspoken conclusion among all who were present that now it is time to return to the realities of conformity, assimilation, racism, and oppression.” Chloe believes that the most unfortunate part about racial trauma is not the actual racism, but instead, the denial that it even exists. She says, “Color blindness only leads to color blind racism. It tells a minority her experience with racism does not exist.” In reality, whether one  chooses to see color or not, the world is not colorblind; unconscious biases are a real thing. She is pleased with the work that these organizations are doing around racial trauma, but it reminds her that there is still so much work to be done.

On the same day as the Summit, The Family and Children’s Trust Fund (FACT) highlighted the intersection of race and trauma by launching its issue brief titled, Systems of Trauma| Racial Trauma. The brief explores how racial trauma worsens toxic stress caused by family violence, adding to the emotional pain of a person’s experience with racism and discrimination. Eliminating race-related trauma requires intervention on all levels because it happens institutionally, culturally, environmentally, and on an interpersonal level. FACT’s brief noted, “Because of the prevalence of racial discrimination, being a racial minority generally leads to greater stress. Simply anticipating racist events will switch on the body’s stress response systems.” The brief delves into the historical aspect of trauma  and how it impacts entire communities as a result of cumulative psychological harm across generations of families.

“Because of the prevalence of racial discrimination, being a racial minority generally leads to greater stress. Simply anticipating racist events will switch on the body’s stress response systems.”

Learn more about the effects of racial trauma on communities of color and strategies to prevent and combat race-based traumatic stress by reading The Family and Children’s Trust Fund’s issue brief here. Voices appreciates all of our partners who work to prevent and mitigate the impact of trauma across all sectors of the child-serving fields. If you missed The Virginia Summit on Childhood Trauma and Resilience, see an overview on our page.

Attachments

Images (8)
  • BeyondACES Summit Flyer
  • Dr. Camara Jones: Summit Speaker
  • Dr. Helga Luest: Summit Speaker
  • Dr. Joy DeGruy: Summit Speaker
  • Dr. Marleen Wong: Summit Speaker
  • Ivan Juzang: Summit Speaker
  • Javier Sanchez: Summit Speaker
  • Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove: Summit Speaker

Add Comment

Comments (4)

Newest · Oldest · Popular
Chloe Edwards posted:

If you are interested in attending the Beyond ACES Summit, here is information below!

Chloe:

Thank you for sharing this. Your words reach far. Cissy

Chloe:
Thank you so much for this writing.  You wrote:

“But then you leave that safe space, and it is an unspoken conclusion among all who were present that now it is time to return to the realities of conformity, assimilation, racism, and oppression.” 

Thank you for sharing your experiences and I'm sorry so much of the ACEs movement has been, as Dr. Ken Hardy has said, "Silent on race" and racial trauma. 

I learned about ACEs five years ago and I was one of those people not looking at race and racial trauma and not knowing that it's because I'm white that I could do that.

This line is as clear as it gets. 

“The adversities I faced in my childhood are not quite as complex as the obstacles rooted in the color of my skin as a Black woman.”


Thank you for sharing and it must get exhausting and tiring. 

Massachusetts Essentials for Childhood is prioritizing racial equity in our work together. However, saying that and knowing how to do that, as a team of mostly white people who benefit from the way things are, is way more work than having an intention. I think our movement often ignores, minimizes, or acts as though racial trauma is something we can get to later or just add a bullet item on a list of ACEs even though racism is lifelong and across all systems and occurs for folks who have an ACE score of 0 on the original ACE test. In include myself in the them who has been silent on race. Often, it's uncomfortable for those of us who are white to think, talk and understand racism. But that's a terrible reason for not doing so and especially among those of us who know that so much of the impact of adversity in childhood is also compounded enormously by the block of discomfort and silence among people who have avoided topics like pain, suffering, trauma and adversity because it was not comfortable.



I hope that for those of us who are white and who have failed to understand, learn, acknowledge, educate ourselves about racism, who have the luxury of not addressing it at all or being traumatized or hurt by it, that our awareness and education about other types of trauma, and trauma responses, (internally and externally), knowing deeply the science of toxic stress, and what is and is not healing, learning how adversities we may have as well as have not experienced can impact humans across the lifespan is deeply embedded into our work. If we can understand trauma and generational trauma it is not hard to understand the enormity of historical trauma. 

There are lots of criticisms about the ACEs movement being mainly for and about middle-class white folks and "silent on race," as Dr. Ken Hardy has said or neutral when thinking about the differences say of ACEs scores and their impact when they exist with (or without poverty), in people who are living in systems with whilte privilege and without and if it includes those most impacted most often by ACEs in meaningful ways. 

I hope that those of us who have been mired in our own pain, experiences, trauma, and healing, and feel epic relief from the impact of #ACEs and understanding wider context, socially and medically, also get that there's more work to be done to better understand, address, speak to and include racial trauma and bias and other health inequities that exist. 

Thank you so much for sharing and writing on this topic. I'm going to share on Parenting with ACEs, Becoming Trauma Informed and Beyond and with the MA Essentials for Childhood community as well. 

Cissy

Post
Copyright © 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×