One question that really stood out to me while doing the privilege walk was the question about how many people in the class grew up in a family that was a single parent family, or their parents were divorced. I have grown up in a 2 parent house my entire life, and for many years I assumed most children were like me. As I got older I realized how many children were growing up with one parent, or not having their parents together. I never really thought about the impact this could have on a child growing up. Growing up in a family with 2 parents that love each other is truly a blessing. I grew up seeing two people love each other unconditionally every day, and getting to see that can really impact on how you love people in the future. I always had responsibilities as a child growing up, but listening some of the stories other people in the class had about their one family homes really had an impact on me. I have never had the feeling of being the only one to take care of my sibling for the night because my mom worked and I was the only one around. Don’t get me wrong i still had to babysit, but I think it is different when it is a thing that happens everynight, and you cant have free time. This was a very real thing for a lot of the kids in my class; and was defiantly one thing I never thought of till last class. I always had someone at my sport games, at parent teacher interviews, and food on the table for every meal. Listening to other people made me aware that these things weren’t apart of their everyday life. They didn’t always have someone to cook for them, or pick them up from school. I believe I truly am blessed for growing up in a house with two loving parents, and wouldn’t change it for the world. Doing this privilege walk opened up my eyes to some very real issues that go on in society. It also made me aware of how my life is impacted, because of my gender and race. This would have to be the time that I realized what class I could be consider in. I was promptly at the front of the privilege line and I will not say sorry for that, but I will say I am grateful.