When a child talks back, forgets instructions, rolls their eyes, or makes a careless mistake, most people see something small — a normal part of childhood.
But for many African American parents, descended from slavery, those moments don’t register as small.
They feel dangerous.
That is not because Black parents are overreacting.
It is because history trained our nervous systems to treat children’s behavior as a matter of survival.
During slavery, a Black child’s curiosity could bring a beating.
During Reconstruction and the Black Codes, a child’s misstep could get a family arrested.
During Jim Crow, a child’s tone could trigger violence.
During the Civil Rights era, a child’s presence could make them a target.
So Black families learned something that lives deep in the body:
There is no such thing as “small” when it comes to our children’s behavior.
Those lessons did not disappear when the laws changed.
They were passed down through the limbic system — the brain’s emotional and survival center — where fear, threat, and protection are stored.
So when your child does something naïve, playful, or impulsive, your mind may know they are just being a child…
but your nervous system remembers a world where Black children were never safe.
That is why your heart races.
That is why your voice rises.
That is why the moment feels bigger than it should.
You are not reacting to your child.
You are reacting to history stored in your body.
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