• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
Danny Brown

Danny Brown

podcaster - author - creator

  • About
  • Podcasts
  • Journal

belief

We Are the Creators of Hate

My kids are aged three and five . My daughter, Salem, is three and my son, Ewan, will be five in May.

Both of them go to school. Salem goes to a “pretend” school, meaning she goes to private daycare, and our daycare lady takes Salem to a little school each morning where other kids her age play and learn. It’s almost like junior junior kindergarten.

Ewan goes to full-day junior kindergarten (he started last summer) and has had a blast making new friends, learning new things, discovering who he is, and generally being a kid on a new adventure (much like his sister).

The friends and teachers that both Salem and Ewan are surrounded by are from every race, religion, and colour on our beautiful planet today – and yet neither Ewan nor Salem know this.

To them, they’re simply friends and teachers. There’s no Asian, no black, no brown, no other white kids, no Costa Rican daycare Nana for Salem, no Scottish dad, no Canadian mother.

Because, much like hate, kids don’t see black, white, race, gender, sexual orientation, etc – they simply see people.

So when does innocence and acceptance turn into hate?

Hate is Ingrained

When I was a kid living in Edinburgh, about 8-9 years old, it was in a very white neighbourhood. In fact, there was only one non-white family, an Indian family that lived across the street from us.

They had a little girl my age, who was in the class next door to mine. I’d never met her, had never spoken with her, never played with her – but I did have a singular impression of her, and that was that she was dirty.

Not dirty as in unwashed, but dirty as in smelly. This came from my great aunt, who would loudly and frequently say,

You have Indians living on your street? Make sure they don’t create a health hazard – smelly, dirty bastards.

While I wasn’t quite sure what a bastard was, even at eight I knew it couldn’t be a good thing, if it was tied to smelly and dirty. So, naturally, because my own family had said this (and my mum and stepdad had laughed and agreed), I saw the little girl across the street as dirty. Smelly. And probably a bastard.

It was only when I had to sit down next to her at lunch one day that I realized how wrong I was.

She was an angel. A beautiful, happy little girl who only wanted to be friends and fit in. Who didn’t smell. Who wasn’t dirty. And was clearly not whatever a bastard was.

My world was confused – how could this be? Looking back, I guess that may have been one of the points where I realized life was complicated and not as it seems.

We Are What We’re Told

One of my heroes, Nelson Mandela, has a wonderful quote, that has stayed with me ever since I heard it as a young man. The quote is below.

Nelson Mandela hate quote

The key point that stood out for me when I first heard this was the part about us learning to hate, as opposed to being born hating – because it reminded me so much of my experience with my Indian neighbour and subsequent schoolfriend.

Before I got to know her, I’d already judged and would never have thought differently, because my family – my trusted educators – had taught me there was something undesirable about this little girl.

The same happened many times, in many shapes and sizes, as I was growing up.

  • My grandparents, my stepdad, my uncles, my cousins – they all told me that “the English are bastards, we hate them and all of Scotland does.”
  • My schoolfriends – based on what they’d been taught – made me believe that girls were stupid (intelligence-wise) and this is why they could only ever be any good in the kitchen, and to leave the real jobs for men.
  • My first boss made me believe that sexual orientation was wrong, if it was anything other than a man loving a woman, and a woman loving a man. Being gay wasn’t normal – instead, gay men were fags, gay women were ugly dykes, and they would all kill the human race through dirty behaviour.

This is the atmosphere I was brought up in. The atmosphere I was raised in, every day. The atmosphere my first entry into the adult world as a working person, contributing back to society, was presented as.

When all that is around you, and from the very people that are meant to be the ones that raise you right, is it any wonder we have so much hatred around us?

Change Your Stars

There are many different viewpoints on when children become critical thinkers, and don’t rely on the information put in front of them.

I’m not a scientist or psychologist, and would never claim to be one (nor is this post meant to offer that kind of advice – I merely want to start a discussion around how we combat hate).

However, I do buy into the belief that ages 10-12 is the core age when we’ve lost the ability to positively shape thoughts and ideas, as highlighted across at Parenting Science.

Primarily because it’s the immediate age before our teenage years kick in, where we are under so much peer pressure to fit in and conform if we want to be liked, and also because had I been able to avoid the kind of racism, bigotry and sexism that was in my childhood world, I may have been able to make better decisions long before I did.

It wasn’t until my late teens, when I went to University and finally moved out of home, that I realized much of all I had known and believed was wrong.

  • Gay men and women are not evil sexual destroyers – if anything, we (the “clean-living heterosexuals at all costs”) are;
  • Men are by far the more dumber of the two sexes, in many, many ways – just look at the misogyny around #Gamergate and the new Ghostbusters movie if you want further proof of how we, as men, continue to be dumb;
  • People of different colour, race and religion are just like you and me, often with the same dreams and goals – go figure.

Once I realized this, it broke my heart – because it essentially meant my life leading up to that realization had been a sham, a series of lies from a time gone by, from a family whose poisonous members were creating another purveyor of hatred.

And that hurt like hell.

But, as the father of Heath Ledger’s character in the movie A Knight’s Tale advises, we can always change our stars and be better people. We may have had our paths set for us, but that doesn’t mean they’re permanent – we have the power to change them.

The Question Is – Can We? Will We?

I’ll be the first to admit, as a young man alone in a different country (ironically, England – that place of so-called hated bastards…) it was scary trying to redo who I was.

My ingrained prejudices still came to the fore now and again, and it took me a long time to completely change the person I’d been taught to be. But it did happen.

We are responsible for the hatred we possess. Whether it’s as adults teaching kids, or adults finding our own place in the world, all we know is not always all we have to learn.

I’m not naive enough to believe that the hatred, vitriol, abuse, and everything else that’s inherently wrong with us as the human race will disappear anytime soon. But if we make more of an effort to allow and encourage open thinking, maybe we can start the process.

Teach kids non-gender neutrality

Yes, there will always be things that boys prefer and girls prefer, but colours and games aren’t necessarily the case. Why is pink only for girls and blue for boys? Why can’t my son play with his sister’s Princess toys (hint: he does, the same way my daughter plays with my son’s Thomas the Tank and Avengers toys). My wife and I are very determined to raise equal gender strength and opportunity kids.

Teach kids it’s okay to challenge

Yes, we want to raise our kids to be respectful of others, and that – for the most part – adults may know better, depending on how old the kids are. But make sure children know it’s okay to ask why, challenge the status quo, and not be brushed off with the “because you’re a child” routine. That teaches nothing.

Answer childrens’ questions about those that are “different”

In my son’s class, he has a friend who is permanently in a wheelchair. But he never asks why – because he’s never been taught that this is “different” because, simply put, it’s not. A child is in a wheelchair, and won’t be able to do some physical things the other kids can – but that’s all. In every other aspect, he’s a smart, funny, wonderful, and – yes – NORMAL kid. Because that’s who he is.

Present the atmosphere your child’s learning needs

I grew up in a household where my stepdad beat my mum, my sister, and me. He was a violent asshole, and the day he died was a day I celebrated. The atmosphere changed completely then, and I’m sure that helped settle my sister and I (although the bigotry and other crap was there, unbeknownst to me). Kids are smart – how we present life around them is what they’ll take into the world.

Like I said, I’m not a psychologist. I’m not trained in the mind, or how children learn. This post is from my own experience, what I learned and then had to unlearn.

I could have been an extremely hateful person. I’d like to think I’m not, and that – with my wife and the teachers we’re really fortunate to have educate our kids – my kids will grow up not knowing what hate is too (the word is banned in our house).

It’s not too much to ask, is it?

The Little Boy That Could (Or Why We Need to Make What We Do Brilliant Every Time)

Stephen was born in 1942 at a time of worldwide struggle. Europe was divided and broken, Asia was in turmoil and the United States had been dragged into a conflict it had tried to avoid.

In fact, Stephen was almost never born ? a missile fell on a property just two homes away from his parents? house.

So even before he was born Stephen was faced with adversity.

As a child, Stephen was known as a good student, but not brilliant. He chose safe subjects like math and science, and continued this to University.

He almost never made it this far, though, due to poor study habits and lack of note taking ? his passing grade was just enough to get him into University.

At University, the problems started.

Stephen began to feel frequently weak. His muscles would become sore and stiff and he suffered terrible cramps. He would continue to suffer throughout University with these attacks, but this didn?t prevent him from gaining his Ph.D.

After leaving University, Stephen continued to suffer from poor health. Then, in 1974, the weakness and the cramps became an aside as he lost all use of his limbs. His speech slurred and then that, too, was lost. As a result, Stephen has been confined to a wheelchair for more than 30 years and communicates through a voice box.

Yet that?s just half Stephen?s story.

There Is Nothing But You Holding Yourself Back

Despite his disability, despite his inability to move and talk normally, Stephen is one of the most successful people in the world.

He?s been awarded an OBE in the United Kingdom; he?s won numerous awards and distinctions across the world; and he?s consistently cited in thousands of magazines and publications for his knowledge.

He?s made scientists worldwide rethink a lot of their discoveries.

Perhaps most unlikely of all, Stephen took a zero gravity flight in 2007 that allowed him to move freely without his wheelchair for the first time in 30 years. He?s also fathered three children.

So what?s the moral of this story?

That you can do anything. There is nothing but you holding yourself back.

That business you want to start? Do it.

That book you want to write? Do it.

That one big pitch to set you up for life? Do it.

That unbelievably beautiful girl or guy you want to ask out? Do it.

Life is short. We have a limited time to do everything we want to do, or need to do.

We need to make what we do brilliant every time. We need to nail that sales pitch. That marketing plan. That PR strategy. That customer service experience. That blog post. That online connection. That offline connection.

If a little boy called Stephen Hawking can overcome adversity from before he was born and be brilliant in his adult life in spite of an insane obstacle to overcome, then surely we can try and be brilliant every time too?

———————————————-

Parables of BusinessThis is a chapter from my ebook “The Parables of Business: How Old Wisdom Can Help You Create New Mindsets”.

Available for just $0.99, it offers 11 chapters of business tips and advice through the art of storytelling.

You can learn more about it here.

Why You Need to Be the Bane of the Status Quo

We fall into comfort zones easily. We see something that works, or appears to be working, and we settle for that.

It?s understandable. After all, experimentation isn?t always fun. It can be hard work. It can backfire ? results are never guaranteed.

Compare that to the safe and the tried, where we know something has been proven to be successful (relatively or otherwise), and you can see why comfort zones are easier to be part of.

The thing is, though, comfort zones make us lazy. They confine us, and inhibit continued learning. And once we stop learning, we stop living. Maybe not physically, but certainly mentally.

Once the learning disappears, so does the ask. And humans were built to ask.

It?s what?s helped us grow and evolve to where we are today. Seeing something new, and not just taking it at face value but asking why it?s better, or why we should even care, since the status quo has got us this far.

So if we were built to ask, why do so many of us feel afraid to do so?

If we want someone to work with us, why do we always go for the softly, softly approach as opposed to giving hard reasons why someone?should work with us?

Why do we fear asking that pretty girl or good-looking guy out, when the worst they can say is no?

Why do we willingly work the craziest hours under the sun, knowing our value is so much more than we?re being paid, yet never ask for that meeting to discuss being paid for our worth?

In short, why do we accept, rather than ask?

Isn’t it about time we reversed that, and ask instead of accept?

Before We Believe You

Behind the mask

Behind the mask

We buy products and services every day.

Some we need, some we don?t. But we?ve heard good things about them so we buy them.

Who have we heard good things from?

Our friends. Our family. Our colleagues.

People we trust.

Why do we trust them? Because they?re not a mystery to us.

They don?t wear masks. They don?t hide behind veils. They don?t try and fool us with trickery.

They simply are.

You?re in business. You have a blog. You have a podcast. You want to be popular. You want people to like you; connect with you; follow you.

You want people to trust you.

We will. Just don?t wear a mask. Be yourself. Be true. Be honest.

We know you need to occasionally have your professional head on. Your business head. But does that mean you need to trick us? Does it mean you need to be the person you?re not, the business you?re not, the people we?re not?

No.

So wear the mask, but make it transparent. Wear the hat but make it your own. Pull the veil down but let us know it?s still you underneath. Make us trust you. Let us know who you are and that it?s you each time we talk.

That?s the way you?ll get our business. Our eyes on your blog. Our acceptance on Twitter. Our recommendations to our friends.

If you want us to believe, then make us believe in you. It?s not that hard.

Is it?

Image: GALERIEopWEG

Give to Get

Giving up is easy. Close our eyes, wait for problems to go away – anyone can do that. The highway of life is full of sleepers and short stay hotels of those that have given up.

Getting back up? That’s the difficult part. But think how many times you’ve been ready to give up in the past, only to keep getting back in the game for more.

No-one likes giving up, but sometimes it’s the only natural thing to do. How, and if, you get up is the separator.

Ready to get?

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Go to Next Page »
© 2026 Danny Brown - Made with ♥ on Genesis