Book Reviews

Book Review: “I Know White People are Crazy and Other Stories” by Dr. Jonathan Mathias Lassiter

By Terri Schlichenmeyer

It’s enough to make you lose your mind. You see your goal, but there’s a barrier in front of it, a barrier that

makes no sense. Other people don’t have to jump through hoops or over walls to succeed, feel safe, or get

help so why do you? In “How I Know White People are Crazy and Other Stories” by Dr. Jonathan Mathias

Lassiter, you’ll see that an old nemesis has a new name.

 

He says he is not angry. Dr. Lassiter is just really, really frustrated and for good reason: throughout most of his

life, his father’s life and his grandfather’s, through his college years and his career, Dr. Lassiter says that

“whiteness mindset” – defined as a condition that causes people of any race (but most often

white people) to assume that their lives are more important than others, which allows them to

justify oppressing those who are different – has never been far away.

Sadly, Lassiter says, anyone can be on the receiving end of whiteness mindset, but it happens

most often to the majority-minority including Black people, Asians, woman, and to gay people

like him.

 

He says that his grandfather lived under racism and it showed: he loved his children, but didn’t

feel that he could demonstrate it. Lassiter’s father parented similarly because that’s all he knew.

Living low-income also affected Lassiter’s mental health, as did the barriers he was forced to

overcome in college due to racism and the oppression he felt because of his sexuality. Seeing

what could be, if there were no such things as racism and oppression, didn’t help.

Through his work as a licensed clinical psychologist and the patients he’s treated, he knows his

experiences are not unique. He also knows that whiteness mindset is not limited to higher

education or the workplace and to combat it, we first have to admit that whiteness is not theconcern. The

mindset itself and what it does to mental health are bigger issues, and becoming

educated is a great way to combat them.

 

Don’t be surprised if you’re a little confused at the outset of “How I Know White People are

Crazy and Other Stories.” It is confusing; Dr. Jonathan Mathias Lassiter writes quickly with a

whirlwind of ideas that circle back to one another like ripples in a pond on a windy day. It might

make you want to just back away.

 

Instead, stick around and trust that the meat of the book is coming through stories of real-life

counseling and of Lassiter’s own life, experiences, and family history. These tales eventually

settle the chaos down, offering the clarity missing in the opening pages and allowing readers to

see “whiteness mindset” in action and to understand the conflicts within it. You’ll be able to

cleanly see where Lassiter’s frustration lies, and what can be done about it.

Just know that to get there will take some doing and patience with “How I Know White People

Are Crazy and Other Stories.” Try it, though. Persevere, and you might not mind.

Johnson’s inexperience fuels skepticism among FAMU stakeholders

Rhetta Peoples

Digital Editor at The Florida Sun + CEO of Creative Street Marketing & Public Relations Group

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