Along with Peggy McIntosh's "White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack," Frankenberg's analysis was my first introduction to how whiteness, as well as color, was a socially constructed and reinforced category and to where whiteness gave me "invisible" privilege in what I was raised to think was a fair and just society. Under the tutelage of the amazing Michelle Rowley, in deciphering this text, I began to witness white privilege and systemic racism clearly for the first time. The fact that I was able to make it into my 30s before someone could effectively call me on and illustrate to me my privilege is an effect of and evidence of that privilege. Simultaneously, I was hearing from fellow students in my professional degree program about driving while Black or Brown, about skin-color discrimination within Black and Brown communities (a legacy of slavery and racism), and more social, economic, and political realities that plagued my peers and professors. This is an excellent introduction for those who can't see their own privilege and don't understand how they can be both poor *and* privileged (because not all privilege comes in the form of wealth or earnings) in this culture.