How can she not look in the mirror and tell she’s mixed? Like I’m a mixed man. I can easily spot others who are mixed. She’s very light like me but she’s definitely not just white. Not at all.
Same here. I'm mixed raced. My dad is Chinese-Jamaican and my mom is Portuguese and Native American. I have reddish brown complexion, slanty eyes and long wavy hair. I get mistaken for South Asian all the time. Either from India or Pakistan
I was thinking she probably had a black bio dad but in the thumbnail she resembles her white bio dad (in that one pic of him & her bio mom). The bio mom looked biracial to me (maybe she ‘passed’ for white?). It’s interesting that her adoptive parents went to their grave without telling her (she would NOT want to know about her ancestry? she would find this info unimportant?). These days ppl are paying $ to find out where they came from…
I agree with you about a biracial heritage. However, looking closely at a picture of her father that appears in a video here on UA-cam titled "African-American Woman Finds Out She's White", her father appears as if he may be the one who is biracial (timeframe 3:07). Also, in the same video, in the 2:20 timeframe, where Verda Byrd meets her biological sister, you will note that her biological sister's hair appears to be heavily curly and wavy --- even in her advanced age at that point. Most people with curly and/or wavy hair find that their hair relaxes quite a lot especially after they hit middle-age. However, her middle-aged biological sister's hair managed to remain strongly curly and wavy. Hmmmm! I would love for a news organization like 60 Minutes to approach her biological family, and try to get them to agree to a DNA test. I wouldn't be surprised if they rejected the idea. I think that Mrs. Byrd's biological family, upon meeting her, had to realize that some of the family physical traits pointed to a biracial heritage, and they became bent on keeping that biracial heritage a secret. Unfortunately, I think that Mrs. Byrd, in seeking out her biological family, once again, became the collateral damage in her biological family's quest to remain white to the outside world.
She should have another DNA test. No way an adoption agency at that time would give a white child to a black couple.
You got that right!😌
How can she not look in the mirror and tell she’s mixed? Like I’m a mixed man. I can easily spot others who are mixed. She’s very light like me but she’s definitely not just white. Not at all.
Same here. I'm mixed raced. My dad is Chinese-Jamaican and my mom is Portuguese and Native American. I have reddish brown complexion, slanty eyes and long wavy hair. I get mistaken for South Asian all the time. Either from India or Pakistan
She looks like she has a lot black in her
shes soooo adorable as a baby.... shes deff mixed and so beautiful ❤
😊 I know ❤❤❤
I was thinking she probably had a black bio dad but in the thumbnail she resembles her white bio dad (in that one pic of him & her bio mom). The bio mom looked biracial to me (maybe she ‘passed’ for white?). It’s interesting that her adoptive parents went to their grave without telling her (she would NOT want to know about her ancestry? she would find this info unimportant?). These days ppl are paying $ to find out where they came from…
I agree with you about a biracial heritage. However, looking closely at a picture of her father that appears in a video here on UA-cam titled "African-American Woman Finds Out She's White", her father appears as if he may be the one who is biracial (timeframe 3:07). Also, in the same video, in the 2:20 timeframe, where Verda Byrd meets her biological sister, you will note that her biological sister's hair appears to be heavily curly and wavy --- even in her advanced age at that point. Most people with curly and/or wavy hair find that their hair relaxes quite a lot especially after they hit middle-age. However, her middle-aged biological sister's hair managed to remain strongly curly and wavy. Hmmmm! I would love for a news organization like 60 Minutes to approach her biological family, and try to get them to agree to a DNA test. I wouldn't be surprised if they rejected the idea. I think that Mrs. Byrd's biological family, upon meeting her, had to realize that some of the family physical traits pointed to a biracial heritage, and they became bent on keeping that biracial heritage a secret. Unfortunately, I think that Mrs. Byrd, in seeking out her biological family, once again, became the collateral damage in her biological family's quest to remain white to the outside world.
She needs to do a ancestry dna
She mixed.
Mixed! Bi-racial
I'm confused, she looks biracial. How is she completely white?
She's gotta be. Somebody, somewhere is black. We could be wrong, but I doubt it.
@@nosender2399 oh yeahh, so true
Not with that nose
Possible Samoan. Oceania. Phillipines etc etc.
The nose gives it away. Good try though.
Ok lady😒
Um maam u are black I
Lol
LOL
🤔🧐