More than three decades ago,nike mercurial vapor, fresh from the refugee camp of Vietnam,nike mercurial, I was first made acutely aware of my own Asian looks by a schoolyard bully in my junior high.
He pulled the sides of his eyes back to make them look slanted and sang the ditty now made famous by Rosie O'Donnell a few years ago on "The View " - "Ching Chong, Ching Chong Chinaman."
Well,mercurial vapor, good old I'm-funny-not-a-racist Rosie didn't say "Chinaman,louboutin," but you get the point.
I never thought of how I looked living in homogenous Saigon, but in America,doudoune moncler, as an outsider barely speaking English, I was fodder for teasing and racist epithets.
In the bathroom one night, I used a toothpick to push up my epicanthic folds.
They held for a few seconds,louboutin pas cher, giving me the appearance of rounder eyes,mercurial, and a glimpse of what I might look like with double eyelids. I had contemplated cosmetic surgery, and for a few months,abercrombie, even saved money for the purpose.
I never went through with the surgery,moncler pas cher, but my experience is hardly unique.
The pressure to alter one's features and body is endemic in every group and ethnic community in America,abercrombie and fitch, and in Asia it is as routine as having one's wisdom teeth pulled.
But the number of minorities getting plastic surgery is apparently on a steep rise.
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