Being one of the greatest athletes in the history of professional sports comes with a tremendous degree of privilege. But at the end of the day, Serena Williams is a Black woman first. And as she explained during a recent sit down on The Kelly Clarkson Show, she hasn’t always felt like herself on the tennis court despite her accolades.

“In tennis—which is a sport that no one really looks like me, at least in the beginning—you can’t really express yourself or it’s seen as bad,” she said. “Or you might say something, and you could never even use profanity at all, and they’ll take a game from you, which is crazy.”

 

There’s been such a surge of cases that a Nevada hospital is treating patients in its parking garage

 

Since arriving on the scene at 13 years old at the Bell Challenge in Quebec, the 23-time Grand Slam champion has endured more than her fair share of blatant mistreatment and racist onslaughts.

But in being a trailblazer within the sport, she’s also acutely aware that being branded as an “angry Black woman” could adversely affect other Black women and women of color who continue to follow in her footsteps.

“There’s a double standard in everything that we do,” she said. “And that’s just the society that we happen to live in and it takes generations to change.”

Source: Serena Williams Keeps It 100 on the Challenges of Being a Black Woman in Tennis: ‘There’s a Double Standard in Everything We Do’

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