Gaga Jo thank you for your comments. I think you will be wise, regarding moving to a multicultural area for your grandson.
Part of my problems in life are due to the fact that I was completely unsupported as a child, in regards to my ethnicity. My father was a Windrush immigrant, and a founding member of the Caribbean Cricket Club in Leeds. He actively discouraged any discussion on race. Until I was five, my playmates were all of my own ethnicity, but, I lost touch with them as we lived in a different part of Leeds, so I was one of only two brown children at school in the early 1950s, where I experienced very many racist incidents.
My younger sister says she was not affected, but has had counselling many times in her life and is currently having counselling, in her sixties, so I think she was just as much affected as I was.
25Avalon I think this is part of the problem that when people say or do bad things to you then you do get sensitised and you will see remarks that were perhaps not intended to be offensive as just that
This too is part of the problem - being told that people of colour are 'too senstive' to remarks that are not intended as offensive. I have heard very many remarks that were followed by the words 'no offence meant,' or, 'I don't mean you, of course.'
I have reached a point in my life now (late sixties) where I will tell people that offence has actually been taken, whether or not it was intended.
Until I reached my late fifties, my reaction was to try to play it down, or to go off and cry!