I was 12 years old when we moved to Pensacola, Fla., and I was enrolled in a brand new school. It was my seventh school so far if you counted kindergarten, so I was accustomed to being the new kid.
But I had never experienced anything quite so different. I had always been in middle class suburban schools where almost everybody looked and acted like me. But when we moved to Pensacola, we lived on the beach — and the beach kids were bused all the way to the inner city, where nobody looked like me.
Academics were terrible and the classes were way behind where I’d been in my previous schools. Mostly, though, it was a different culture. There was only one other white boy in all of the seventh grade. Almost every student in the school was black and they came from homes and neighborhoods very different from mine. It was a culture clash.
On one of my first days at the school, a knot of kids gathered around me in a hallway to make fun of my pants.

Why does the mainstream ignore those whose predictions were right?
A year after surreal experience of surgery, I’m still happy to be alive
If you ask wrong questions about politics, you’ll get wrong answers
Words on paper don’t give governments the right to rob us
I’ve been sent to Facebook jail — and nothing about it makes sense
I can’t help wanting to replay life with emotionally healthy parents
NOTEBOOK: The forest is burning, so quit arguing about single trees
What if a key to knowing what to do is built into everybody’s gut?
Film hurts when I hear, ‘I’ve seen what we can be like together’