*The way I always see this is that you can't help who you're attracted to. BUT, it's wrong to say things like 'I don't find white people attractive' or 'I don't find Chinese people attractive'.
What you SHOULD say, is 'I've never met a Chinese person who I've found attractive.' So you're not ruling the entire race out, and are accepting the fact that you may, in the future, find someone attractive from that race.*
The way I always see this is that you can't help who you're attracted to. BUT, it's wrong to say things like 'I don't find white people attractive' or 'I don't find Chinese people attractive'.
What you SHOULD say, is 'I've never met a Chinese person who I've found attractive.' So you're not ruling the entire race out, and are accepting the fact that you may, in the future, find someone attractive from that race.*
I agree with this. How do people know for sure that they aren’t attracted to an entire race of people? I find it strange because obviously all races aren’t monolithic and don’t all look the same.
I also agree with a pp that it comes down to cultural and personality preferences for me.
Even though my husband and I are from different countries and different races, our upbringings weren’t that much different, faced similar struggles growing up, and have similar views on a lot of things. Where we differ actually balances us out.
I wasn't really attracted to the black men at uni...too much American gangster crap or incredibly arrogant couldn't take rejection...I think I saw too much of my family in them.
I had this issue too and if you weren’t into that or them you were a stuck-up b**tch. I will admit the most ridicule I have had in life have mainly been from black boys/men since I was a child. Many of them bullied and ridiculed me from the age of 7 and continued even into secondary. I did date some in uni but it always came back to culture and upbringing that made the difference.