I was walking back from the campsite bathroom when a child on a bike whizzed past me. 

“Midget.”

Before I could fully process what was going on, the child, no older than 10, whipped his bike in front of me. He looked me right in the eye and said “Ha.”

My first instinct was to push him off his bike. But I was a 27-year-old woman and he, again, was but a child. I felt the words, “You don’t say that to people,” build in my throat but that’s as far as they got. 

And he was already gone.

I’m Sallee Ann Harrison, an audience editor at USA TODAY, and I have dwarfism. And you’re reading “This is America,” a newsletter centered on race, identity and how they shape our lives.

First, stories we’re reading this week on race, identity, and justice: 

Let’s talk about Dwarfism

“I have dwarfism.” Even that reads funky to me. I know saying someone has a condition is the best way to talk about disability instead of saying they are their disability, i.e., I don’t say “I’m a dwarf.” I don’t like saying “I’m a little person” either, but I blame that on the 654 TLC shows with little people puns while I was growing up.