Many transracial adoptive parents wait for their child to bring up race before they say anything. It feels respectful. It feels like following the child's lead. But waiting is itself a choice - and for transracial adoptees, silence around race sends a message just as loud as words do.
You do not have to wait for a hard moment. You do not have to wait until your child comes home upset. The earlier you start talking about race in positive, natural ways, the more normal those conversations will feel - for both of you.
"Be mindful of how you talk about your child's differences and about people who look like them."
Why Starting Early Matters
Children notice race earlier than most parents realize. Research shows that by age three, children are already aware of racial differences. By the time your child asks their first race-related question, they have already been observing, processing, and forming thoughts about it for years.
If race has never come up at home, your child learns that it is not something they can talk to you about. That silence becomes a wall - one that gets harder to break down as they get older.
What to Say at Different Ages
Ages 0 to 3: Normalize through environment
At this age, you are not having conversations - you are building an environment. Fill your home with books, toys, artwork, and media that reflect your child's race positively. Talk naturally about what you see. "Look at this beautiful girl, she has hair just like yours." Simple, warm, and consistent.
Ages 3 to 6: Name it with joy
This is when you start putting language to what your child is already noticing. Keep it positive and matter-of-fact. If your child points out that their skin is a different color than yours, respond with warmth rather than deflection.
"Yes! Your skin is a beautiful brown and mine is a lighter color. People come in so many beautiful shades and we love every single one."
Ages 6 to 10: Introduce the bigger picture
As your child starts school and spends more time in the world, you can begin introducing the idea that not everyone treats people the same because of their skin color - and that this is not right. Frame it honestly but without alarm.
"Sometimes people make assumptions about someone based on what they look like. That is not fair and it is not right. If that ever happens to you, I want you to know you can always tell me about it."
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Saying "I don't see color" - this tells your child their race is invisible to you
- Changing the subject when race comes up - this signals it is not safe to discuss
- Overreacting with discomfort - your child reads your body language
- Waiting until something bad happens to have the first conversation
- Talking about race only in the context of pain or injustice
Making it a Normal Part of Life
The goal is for race to be something your family talks about the way you talk about anything else - openly, regularly, and without shame. That does not mean every conversation needs to be a lesson. It means creating a home where your child knows their full identity is welcomed, celebrated, and safe.
The conversations you have when they are young are the foundation for the conversations you will need to have when they are teenagers. Start now, and those harder conversations will feel natural when the time comes.