Hidden Brain - Between Two Worlds
Episode Date: June 13, 2023Determination, hard work and sacrifice are core ingredients in the story of the American dream. But philosopher Jennifer Morton argues there is another, more painful requirement to getting ahead: a wi...llingness to leave family and friends behind. This week, we revisit a favorite 2020 conversation about the ethical costs of upward mobility.Make sure to listen to our episodes about the science of meditation, Seeking Serenity: Part 1 and Seeking Serenity: Part 2. And if you like Hidden Brain and want more of it, please join our new podcast subscription, Hidden Brain+!Â
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Doing better than your parents, having a better education,
living a better life, this is universally seen as a good thing.
But a century ago, a poet named Christo Smirnanski
wrote a parable that raises important questions about the nature of upward mobility.
The tale of the stairs is about an impoverished young man standing at the foot of a marble staircase.
He's gazing up at the wealthy people above him.
Quarer, enjoy in themselves and having drinks while the people down below don't have enough food to eat and are really suffering.
This is philosopher Jennifer Morton.
Blocking the young man's ascent to the party above is the devil himself.
The devil asks him if he wants to get closer to the top.
There's just one catch. The devil wants a bribe.
The young man protests.
I am poor, a youth and rags, he says.
But I'm willing to give up my life.
The devil says he doesn't want the young man's life.
He wants to replace
his hearing with a new pair of ears. The young man agrees. And so, the devil lets him walk
up a few steps. Now he can no longer hear the people below who are moaning out of hunger
and distress. The young man is still only part way up the stairs.
To go higher, the devil asks him to trade in his eyes for a new pair.
And he can no longer see the people moaning down below and who are suffering.
He's near the top. The devil asks for a final bribe.
He wants to replace the young man's memory and his heart.
The young man protests, but the devil assures him
a better heart and a new memory.
The young man is now at the very top.
His face is radiant.
The crowds he sees below are in fancy clothes
and their mones are now hymns.
So by the time he gets to the top
and he is there with the other wealthy and well-to-do people,
he can no longer even really recognize the problems
down the low where he came from.
The young man has forgotten the people he left behind. As a parable, it's a powerful warning about the dangers of wealth and luxury.
But in the real world, not all who climb that marble staircase are indifferent to the problems
they've left behind.
Many in fact are deeply torn about what it means to climb the economic and social ladder.
This week on Hidden Brain we consider the complex trade-offs involved in climbing the ladder of upward mobility.
The Termination, Enterprise, and Sacrifice have long been core ingredients in the story of the American Dream.
Philosopher Jennifer Morton argues there is another less obvious ingredient in the story
of upward mobility, a willingness to make ethical trade-offs.
She doesn't mean lying or cheating, but something subtler and far more consequential.
Jennifer Morton, welcome to Hidden Brain.
I'm delighted to be here, Shankar.
So what are some of the classic ingredients we recognize in strivers, the people who are on
this path to upward mobility? What are the ingredients that we think go into the American dream?
For the most part, it's drivers are, as you might expect, ambitious,
hardworking, smart, but also I think are willing to make trade-offs
in the pursuit of those ambitions.
And some of those trade-offs, in some cases, are quite difficult and painful.
You've spent much of the last decade teaching at a school that wanted to give people a shot
at the American dream.
I understand students at the City College of New York don't usually come from the one
percent?
Yes.
Most of our students come from working- class families, immigrant families, or their
immigrants themselves. Many of them come from families that make less than $20,000 a year.
And they see City College as a ticket to the middle class, to having better lives than the ones that their parents have,
or then maybe the people in their neighborhood have.
And the city called to New York has held this place and the imagination of New Yorkers for
a long time.
So, you know, when it started, it was a school that accepted Jewish immigrants when they
weren't accepted elsewhere.
It used to be free and it was called the Harvard of the Poor by many
because it was a place where the brightest and smartest kind of working class kids could go
and really have a shot at transforming their lives through education.
have a shot at transforming their lives through education.
Jennifer found that more than three quarters of the students at City College were people of color and nearly half were the first in their families to go to college. But as exciting as it was to
teach these drivers, Jennifer Sessie regularly heard from students dealing with a variety of crises on the home front.
Family drama in the words of one student.
I didn't cry to find out exactly what was going on, but later as I taught at City College
for many years, I sort of uncovered what this family drama phrase meant.
And what it meant for many of my students who felt
comfortable enough with me to share was that they had families who were going
through a lot. For example, people whose parents were getting kicked out of
housing or who themselves were homeless, I had a student whose mother became
disabled and couldn't work anymore and the disability checks weren't enough to cover all their expenses and so she had to work full-time as well as
attend college full-time.
I've had students who had to do childcare for extended family because child
care fell through or a cousin couldn't afford child care when they were going to a job interview.
And so what I saw was that my students were playing all sorts of care,
taking and financial support roles for their families and extended families and often even members of their community.
And they were having all of that on their shoulders as well as trying to study for exams, write papers,
and do well in college.
Hmm.
Now lots of students face challenges in college.
Lots of students make sacrifices,
and in fact, this is true of the workplace as well.
You know, the banker who's working 80 hours a week
might be giving up a social life.
The musician who's trying to get into the local orchestra
might be sacrificing, you know sacrificing her health or sleep.
But the challenges that your students were facing
felt qualitatively different to you,
and you included that there was an ethical component
to these challenges.
What do you mean by that?
What happens with strivers is that in order to succeed
in higher education, they often
have to deal with the fact that their parents, families, communities need them, and it becomes
very hard for them to navigate both trying to succeed in college and to be caring sisters, sons, daughters,
friends, or community members. So if you're going to classes and studying for
exams, you might not have enough time to, for example, take care of a little
cousin who needs care or take your grandmother to the hospital.
And so what happens is that these students
end up feeling torn between doing the things
that would seem to be required by being, to say,
a good grandson and doing the things that are required
to be a successful student.
And so your sense was that these trade-offs
or these sacrifices that students were being
asked to make involve sacrifices about their families or their communities, perhaps even
their identities, and your sense was that in many ways these sacrifices involved an ethical
trade-off. Why ethics, Jennifer?
Yeah, I think often we don't necessarily think about ethics as playing a role here, but
I think whenever a person is caught between trying to figure out what the right thing to
do is when, on the one hand, they feel the obligation or the desire to help somebody
that they love.
And on the other, they also feel the desire
to succeed in their own path. They're balancing and trading off against each other, two important
and valuable dimensions of what a good and flourishing life would entail. And I think what's particularly sad about these cases is that
strivers will often internalize some of the decisions they make and think of
themselves as, I was a bad son or a bad sister or a bad brother or a bad friend
because I ended up going to class or studying for my exam,
instead of being there for this person that I love.
And that's, I think, the really kind of poignant
and difficult ethical position that strivers are in.
So you decided to explore this idea
not just among your students but more broadly.
And in fact, one of these case studies I think might encapsulate really well the ideas
you're talking about. I want you to describe a few of these case stories to me. A young
man whom you call Todd told you he grew up in Atlanta telling me the circumstances of
Todd's childhood. Todd grew up in predominantly African-American
Lewin gum neighborhood of Atlanta and he grew up with his mom who was in and
out of work and with his grandparents and his grandparents home. His whole family
had been well connected to this neighborhood. So his mom had gone to the local public school,
his cousins lived in the neighborhood,
and his grandparents' home was kind of a hub
for his extended family in France in the neighborhood.
And so his family was very well integrated
into that community.
Now Todd was going to the public school,
but he didn't like it because he was teased for,
as he said, trying to be white.
What that meant for him was that he was trying to get good grades and do well,
and he felt that the students were teasing him and bullying him on the basis of that.
Todd's mother decided at some point that Todd needed to leave that school
because the teacher had gotten stabbed in the school
and so she thought Todd needed to go to a different school.
She then found a friend who lived in a more wealthy suburb of Atlanta
and who allowed them to use her address in order for Todd to go to a suburban magnet school.
So they lied to get Todd to go to this different school and Todd's life changed pretty dramatically at that point.
The school offered him academic opportunities that he didn't have at his local public school. Most of the people that he went to school with
were middle class, or upper middle class,
the sons and daughters of doctors and dentists,
and so on.
And everybody at this school was college bound,
which was not true at his public school.
And sometimes started living kind of two lives.
He would go to the suburban magnet school
and have friends who were more ethnically diverse.
His school had been as he described it 100% black.
The school was, there were a lot of white students,
much wealthier students, more academic opportunities.
And then he would come home and be back in his neighborhood
and Todd described kind of feeling sometimes ashamed opportunities, and then he would come home and be back in his neighborhood and taught
the scribe kind of feeling sometimes ashamed about where he came from and hiding
that from his school friends and his school friends parents.
Todd eventually picked up basically from his friends how to apply to college and was
the first person in his family to go to college.
While at college taught lived where he went to college,
but he would still go back home.
So he was writing distance from home.
He would still go back home and visit his grandparents
and try to stay connected to his community.
But little by little, as Todd starts to succeed in college,
he starts to distance himself from his family, and then when his grandparents die, he starts
going home less and less.
So once Todd graduates from college, you mentioned that after his grandparents died, he started
to lose some ties to his home community.
Talk to me a little bit about that.
You write about how he was still
in touch with some people, but some of those conversations became very awkward and difficult.
Why was that?
Yeah, so Todd got a prestigious internship with a federal government and moved to the Northeast.
He was so calm to talk to his sister especially, but those conversations got very difficult
because his sister was always complaining about not sending enough money home.
So Todd had started to send money back to his family as soon as he started working.
But his sister thought it was never enough.
And so the conversations got very tense and it would make it hard for
Todd to want to call his sister because he thought we're going to have another argument
about money. And so this led to further distancing.
So it's interesting in every step of the way you can sort of see how Todd was disengaging
or felt like he had to disengage from things that were very core to him as a person, his
family, his community,
his identity.
When he was in school, back in his old neighborhood, you know, moving to the magnet school meant
a new set of friends with a new set of social norms.
When he moved to college, it meant adopting the norms and attitudes of his peers in college,
which were in some ways very different from the norms and attitudes of his friends and neighbors back home.
And as he eventually started working, he found that conversations with his family became very fraught,
because the family relied on him to support them.
And he was happy to do that to some extent, but he felt like all they wanted to talk about was money.
And you can see at each step how Todd's connection with his past, his roots is it a becoming disengaged?
Yes, and one interesting thing was also that a lot of the conversations around money that were
difficult stem from his family not really understanding Todd's situation. To their
eyes he was making a lot of money, but of course he was living in DC and kept up an apartment
and there were a lot of things that were kind of expensive about leading this middle-class
life.
And from his family's perspective, that didn't quite make sense.
So there was a disconnect also in understanding from not just him kind of becoming more and
more like the people he went to college with or he was working with,
but his family not fully understanding this new world that Todd was head entered.
The interesting thing is if you look at Todd's life from the outside, from our perspective,
you might say, you know, here's someone who started out life with a deck stacked against him.
And he figured out a way to get himself a good education
and get himself a great job.
And he's clearly, he's the standard bearer
for the American dream.
And what we're not seeing in some ways
is what's happening under the surface,
all these things you're talking about.
Yeah, and I think what we're not seeing
is that Estad loses friends and his relationships
with his family gets strained, it's also true that the community grew up in those people
he was friends with, his extended family, his family is losing somebody too.
So I think if we look at it from both sides, the ethical cost that Todd pays also reflect an ethical cost paid by the community and that family in those friends.
Strivers are often told that trade-offs you make are good.
The personal and social relationships you will form in your new life will compensate
you for the ones you have sacrificed.
When we come back, why the logic of exchange and transaction breaks down when it comes
to our relationships and our identity. Jennifer Morton is a philosopher at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill.
In her book, Moving Up Without Losing Your Way, she explores the ethical costs that
arise at the intersection of communities that face concentrated social disadvantage
and the strivers from those communities who are on the path to upward mobility.
Jennifer, if you're born into a family that isn't the bottom 10% of the income spectrum and you're
black, you have a 42% chance of staying in that income band all your life. Many of your friends
and relatives are also very poor, so making it for many strivers from such a community usually
means making it out.
Can you talk about this idea for a moment, which is that part of the problem that you're
describing has to do with the concentration of disadvantage, not just in communities
within the United States, but across the world?
Yes, I think an important part of the ethical costs that strivers pay and both the fact
that they're growing up in communities
in which poverty is concentrated. What that means is that you're growing up in a family that's poor,
but you're also making friends and developing connections and being connected to a community
in which everybody is in a similar situation. And so you don't have the chance to develop friendships
or relationships with a lot of middle class
or upper middle class people,
and there are a lot of consequences to that.
The first is that once if you do make it into a college
or a middle class workplace,
you might not have had as much experience with
the culture and the norms of the middle class people that populate those spaces.
And so you might feel like an outsider.
But it also means that if you're going to access those middle class jobs and opportunities,
you're going to have to leave your neighborhood in order to access those middle class jobs and opportunities, you're going to have to leave your neighborhood
in order to access them.
And you're going to have to leave behind many of the people
who you love and care about and you grow up with.
And staying with your community, staying with your friends
and your extended family, often means being
resigned to stay in poverty.
And of course, this is not a choice we ask of everyone.
If you grew up in a wealthy city or a prosperous community,
you often don't have to leave your neighbors and communities
in order to go to a good school or find a great job.
Exactly. So for someone who grows up in concentrated poverty,
accessing the kind of educational and career opportunities that would propel them into the middle
class requires leaving their community.
A middle class student in a middle class suburb
who wants to leave to go to a boarding school
or maybe they have a dream of going to California
or something like that, that's a choice they're, but not a choice they're required to make in order to have
the kind of middle-class life that their parents have and the people around them have.
So we all love to hear stories of poor students who are the first in their families to go to college.
You know, we applaud first-generation college students for their grit, for their determination.
We don't usually talk very much about the social and emotional cost
they might be paying. And I'm wondering if those costs might be behind some of the astonishing
statistics you cite, only 21% of low-income first-generation students who enroll in college actually finish compared to about 57% of other students.
Yes, so we know that first generation
and low income students face a lot of obstacles in college.
Some of these are purely financial, right?
So it might involve the cost of books
or the cost of housing or the cost of food
in addition to the cost of tuition.
But it might also involve the kind of sacrifices
that their families are able to make
to support them through college.
So we know that there's a financial component
to the fact that students find it hard to finish college.
But I think something we don't talk about
is that for students, it can be very difficult,
emotionally and psychologically and ethically to make it,
because they feel torn between helping their families, being there for their friends, staying
connected to their communities, and succeeding in college. And when students feel torn in that way,
I think sometimes it's very reasonable for them to think, well, I don't think finishing
college is worth everything I'm giving up.
So I think one of my goals in writing this book was to help us understand how someone
could be in a situation where potentially they have this opportunity for upward mobility
and they end up not taking it or dropping out of college because they find that the sacrifices are too much. I think
many of us understand that if we were asked to sacrifice our relationships with our friends
and family and become disconnected from our community, we might not do so even if we could
make more money and get a better job by doing so.
Well, once you started working on the book,
one of your best students whom you call Carlos
was eager to tell you his story.
And some of this had to do with a very troubling
series of events involving his brother.
Tell me what Carlos told you, Jennifer.
He had the kind of story that a lot of other drivers have.
He was hardworking, smart kid, made it into city college, but his brother got accused of
rape at one point while Carlos was in college and went to prison.
And after his brother left prison, it was actually very hard on the family to deal with this whole process of his brother,
going to prison and trying to find legal aid for him to have a good defense. But then once he
came out of prison, his brother developed a mental illness. And the mental illness was very hard
on Carlos and his mother and a uncle that was kind of like a parental figure in his life.
Everybody was finding it really hard to figure out what to do. They couldn't afford the kind of
care his brother needed. And finally, his brother went back to prison. And Carlos told me that he
felt so guilty about how relieved he felt once his brother went back to prison because obviously he loves his
brother but he also felt like it was really destroying his ability to
continue to pursue higher education and to make something of his life dealing
with his brother's mental illness. So Carlos felt like a bad brother for
feeling relieved when his brother went back to prison.
But you know, someone might tell Carlos, you know, look at it this way.
Once you get a good job and move into a nice middle class neighborhood, you're going to make
lots of friends and you're going to have relationships that in some ways compensate you for the
relationships that you might have lost.
And in many ways, this model is the model we have when we think about sacrifices in general,
you drive a cheap car today
in order that you can save money
to make a down payment on a house tomorrow.
But you argue that relationships don't work this way.
Why is that Jennifer?
So the recent that relationships
don't fit this economic model of trade-offs
is because when we love somebody,
we love that particular person. You know, I have a
charming three-year-old daughter who's very funny and a little loony is three-year-old to
are and imagine that in the, you know, one morning I wake up and go into her room and it's not her,
but it's another three-year-old who is equally funny and equally loony.
And you might say, well, you lost your daughter, but there's this other equally funny, equally
loony three-year-old you now get to take care of.
Of course, I would be devastated if that were to happen, and that's because when we love
someone and we're attached to them, we don't only care about their qualities or the role
that they play in our lives.
We care about them, that particular person.
And when we lose that, we lose something that in a way cannot be replaced.
As any parent whose last a child knows in the most romantic case, but I think most of
us who've maybe lost a friendship know that yeah of course you make new friends and those new friends are
great, but you might still mourn the friend that was lost even as you
appreciate the new friends that you make. And so I think when strivers are
losing these relationships or maybe those relationships are getting a weekend
by upward mobility, they still have a right, I think,
in good reason to mourn what they have lost, even if there is much to be gained from those losses.
And of course, we've hinted at this earlier when strivers leave their homes and communities
when their new lives make it difficult for them
to retain their ties with those communities,
the losses are not experienced merely by the person
who has left.
In many ways, the losses may be even more acute
for the people who have been left behind.
Yes, I think that is right.
And one of the questions that remains in my mind
after having worked on this book
is that I interviewed strivers, but I also wanted to know more about what their families
and communities experience because families, friends, communities also lost
someone valuable when the striver moved away or when those relationships were
fractured by the stress of upward mobility. Mm-hmm.
And so I wonder what the family think about that
and what the members of the community
that stay back think about having lost someone in this way.
And, you know, we talk about this idea sometimes
in the context of migration where we say,
you know, that we call this brain drain.
But I think the point you're making is actually a subtler point.
It's not just about people who are talented leaving a community and going somewhere else.
You're also losing someone who was an important relationship in your life.
So in other words, there's an emotional loss in addition to any kind of professional or
intellectual loss when someone leaves your community?
Yes, and I think a loss that potentially makes your life worse, at least for a while, right? And I think the pandemic gives us a way to recognize this, right? Because some of us are feeling that
loss that distance brings and how it makes our lives not as rich as they were before.
And so I think in a way we can relate to that experience of having to distance ourselves
from people that we love and care about and feel that our lives are not as rich as they were in virtue of that.
So strivers want to move on from their origins, but simultaneously feel like they can't.
You tell the story of a young man from Austin who compared his life to the story of crabs in a bucket.
Tell me that story and what he meant by it.
Yeah, so this young man, the name I give him in the book is Juran. grew up in a predominantly minority low income neighborhood of Austin. And his life was much more
difficult than even the life of Todd, who I talked about earlier. So, Joran's mother was addicted
to drugs and his home life was very chaotic. To the point at which in high school he left home and was basically homeless
and living on other peoples so fuss and he had a bucket in which he kept all his belongings.
And his football coach found the bucket and sort of asked him what was going on. And Jaron told him, and basically this coach took him in
and helped him apply to college.
And Jaron, when I talked to him,
was working to support exactly the kind of student
he had been at a college.
So he was, I think his role was something
like a residential advisor.
And so he had done really well for himself as well. But one
the thing that he told me about was that when he went to college, he felt like he
had to completely reinvent himself, like basically start from scratch. He had to
change his demeanor, how he dressed, how he talked, how he behaved. And he told me
that that was because of crabs in a bucket. And I had never heard that phrase.
So I asked him what he meant.
Then he said, well, when a crab is trying
to get out of a bucket, the other crabs are pulling them down.
And he was afraid of getting pulled down
by staying connected to his community
or having any remnants of his old self remain.
And so he thought, I have to leave all of that behind, start over, and that's how he made it.
When we come back, how to battle the ethical cause of being a striver. Stay with us.
Philosopher Jennifer Morton has thought deeply about some of the ethical costs of upward
mobility, the pursuit of the American dream. A lot of this comes from her research, but some of it
is also informed by her own story. Jennifer, I understand that you were largely raised by your
grandmother. Can you describe that childhood for me please? Yeah, I grew up in Lima, Peru. My mom
got pregnant with me when she was 17 and Peru in the 80s was beset by terrorism,
high inflation, political instability.
I mostly grew up with my grandmother,
but I also had a wealthy aunt who,
my mother's sister had married a very wealthy man.
And so I was able to go to a very expensive private school,
the American School of Lima.
So I wouldn't say that I grew up poor,
and by the standard to Peru,
I think we grew up middle class.
But I definitely had the experience of growing up
in a working class home.
My grandmother had immigrated from the mountains of Peru
to Lima.
She was a secretary, very smart, loves reading the paper,
but she definitely didn't have the kind of education
that I saw my friends' parents had,
because a lot of my friends were friends from school.
So I grew up in kind of like
having a working class family life and then going to school with extremely wealthy people
and some of whom were, you know, the children of the prime minister or owners of big companies
in our country. And so it was very strange. I grew up straddling these two worlds and that's I think where my interest in this topic started.
So eventually you make it to the United States, you come to college to go to Princeton and most people might look at your story and say, okay, she's made it.
I mean, this is terrific. She's at an Ivy League school. That's fantastic. This is her ticket up. But in many ways, you did not feel such confidence
while you were at Princeton. Why not? There were a lot of aspects of being at college that I had
trouble navigating, but I didn't really know who to ask. The story that sticks out in my mind is
that I went to Princeton thinking that I would major in math or philosophy.
And so I was placed into a very advanced math class because I had done very well in my international graduate math exam.
And the first day I walked into this class, they were 40 or so students. I think there were only two or three other women
and the professor never made eye contact with us,
just wrote on the board.
And the professor was famous
because he had just won a big prize.
And so I was excited about taking a class
with this famous mathematician, but nothing he said
made sense to me.
And I just assumed immediately, as I think a lot of students who are first-generation would
in that situation, that I just wasn't well prepared and, you know, I should never take
another math class again.
Later, I found out that a lot of the students in that class
didn't know what was going on
and that they had gone to talk to some other graduate students
at these problem set sessions.
And then my experience in a way
hadn't been that dissimilar from theirs,
but I immediately, because I think I felt very much
like an outsider assumed
that it was that and that I just didn't belong there.
It's interesting, because drivers have to navigate very different identities.
They often become exported, what is sometimes called code switching.
You have two surnames, Morton and Galdos.
I hope I'm pronouncing that correctly.
You say that while you were at Princeton,
Morton became the name of my American self
and Galdos the name of my Peruvian self.
Morton became my dominant public self
when I live in the United States
while Galdos sprang to life again
on the streets of Lima during your trip's home.
Tell me about this experience with Code Switching Jennifer.
Yeah, so it's funny that I have the last name, Morton,
because it's the name of my first step, dad.
But it kind of enabled me to do this thing
of compartmentalizing myself in a way
between the person who is more at home
in an American college versus the person, Galdos, who carries the name
of my family back in Peru, who I am when I go back home.
So I was always navigating these two worlds and still due to some extent, although now
that I've been in America for so long, I feel like Morton has overtaken many aspects of
my identity.
I saw this and when I talked to the strivers for my book,
a lot of them felt like they were navigating two identities.
They were going back and forth between the person they were at home
or with their friends they grew up with,
and the person that they were at work or at college or in their professional lives.
And this kind of going back and forth can sometimes lead to some tension, right? And I think
for some strivers, you might feel inauthentic sometimes in the professional world because there is a part of your identity or the way that you are or the way that you talk
and that you're withholding
You write I can now make a good living and spend most of my hours
Engaged by work that I find fulfilling and rewarding
But I am ever more distant from my country my culture culture, and crucially, the people I grew up with.
Tell me about that, Jennifer.
It sounds like you feel in some ways guilty
that you have become disconnected from your roots in Peru.
Yes, I do feel guilty,
although, at the same time, I understand
that there were a lot of factors involved in making it so that this was the path
upward for me.
But it is hard, I think, to go back home and to feel not as comfortable and not as at-home
as I used to feel and to have lost touch with many of the people that were a part of my life growing up.
And so it is sad to me that I have become so disconnected from the community in which I
grew up.
Hmm.
Do you feel like you want to do more for your grandmother and understand she still lives
in Peru?
Yeah, and I still talk to her fairly frequently.
And one of the saddest aspects of the pandemic is not being able to go visit her or to have her come visit me.
And I know that one of the sacrifices I made in coming here is not
being able to be as close to my grandmother.
And I was extremely close to her growing up.
I mean, for me, she was the world.
And now to not be able to be as close to her,
it's a very painful cost.
Hmm.
You had a wonderful insight in the book
about one way to overcome some of the ethical challenges
of upward mobility.
And this insight comes from your own family.
You say that going back three generations now your family has been made up of
immigrants, people who have basically migrated from one place to another, often
looking for better economic opportunities. I'm wondering if you can describe for
me how the frame of immigration might be a defense against some of the ethical
dilemmas we've talked about today? Yes, I think personally the immigrant narrative that I had really helped me navigate
challenges that I faced as a college student as a graduate student because I think it
does a few key things.
So the first thing is that it acknowledges the value of what you're leaving behind. As immigrants know, we miss not just the people back home, but the food, the culture.
There are all sorts of things that are valuable that we're leaving behind when we immigrate
somewhere for economic opportunities. And the acknowledgement of that can be so important.
And that's why I think when an educator is talking to a student, just acknowledging,
it must be so hard that your brother is going through this
and you can't be there for them.
That can really be quite powerful.
But I think also immigrants know that they're making
these trade-offs.
I was taught from very early on that you're
going to have to go somewhere else to find an opportunity.
And that will come at a cost. It might be, you might feel sad, you might feel lonely. It might be challenging
to navigate this new culture, this new community. And it helps the person tell themselves a
story about the challenges that they're confronting, that it's not just about them. And I need
to figure out a way to understand
the situation so that I can succeed.
You had an insight in the book that I thought was really interesting. You point out that
there are lots of Peruvians who made a different choice than you did. They could have left Peru,
but they chose to stay. And you're right, it would be preposterous for me to blame my
fellow Peruvians who chose to stay, even
if as a result, their educational or economic achievements were diminished.
Yet it's not unusual to hear or read that same sentiment about those who remain in impoverished
communities in the United States.
That's a really interesting insight, Jennifer.
Talk about that.
Yes, I think when we start to see the sacrifices
that people have to make in order to be upwardly mobile,
we start to see why people might not choose that path.
So in the case of myself,
I saw that there were lots of people who stayed at home.
And I think it would be preposterous, as I say in the book for me to think that
they were being irrational or to blame them or to hold them to account for doing that.
In some ways they were choosing valuable aspects of their lives over economic advancement,
whether that was thing close to family or friends, or being somewhere where
they felt at home and where their identities were valued.
And so I think there's a lot to be said for being deeply rooted and connected to a place.
And so I think in the case of students and young people who are growing up in concentrated poverty in
the United States, there's a similar rhetoric that opportunities are elsewhere and that
they would be lucky to leave, and then puzzlement that those who might have been able to leave
and don't leave as if they're making some sort of mistake.
But I don't think in many cases they are making a mistake. They are prioritizing other valuable things in their lives over economic advancement and opportunity.
Jennifer Morton is a philosopher at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, she's the author of Moving Up
Without Losing Your Way.
Jennifer, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you.
This was fantastic, Shengor.
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