Another phenomenon in a ex-colonial place is to notice that I would automatically feel complicity with white travellers, as if they're "one of us" or "one like me"; I'd easily be drawn by their English or French conversations and not at all see, through their eyes, the person they're perceiving in front of them: a local native, a Chinese grandma who doesn’t resemble them. It's not unusual that they'd start speaking to me, if they do at all, in a slower, more carefully-articulated English.
The white American mother eating breakfast with her little girl next to me, goes out of her way to take a salt and pepper set at a faraway table rather than to simply lean over and ask me to borrow mine. Out of courtesy to not bother me? Out of a moment of hesitation whether I speak English or not?
Flashback to a bus stop in Cassis in the south of France, a few Nordic European travellers preferred to ask for direction to an old white French guy sitting there rather than to me. They simply assumed that I didn't speak English. In these moments the mind's selfie-camera would suddenly swing around the way my automatic DJI Osmo Pocket does, and would make me see myself as the way they see me. Until that very moment I was simply my usual "universal" figure, colourless in my mind, not definable by the name of a country, and certainly even less by a single word denoting a race. Perhaps I've managed my life wrong all these decades after all, going through border controls trying to explain that yes, I'm born in Asia, I'm crossing borders with my Canadian passport but my residential address is in France. Why have a simple life if you can complicate things for yourself?