The Harm of Appropriation: Why It's Not Just "Appreciation"
BY NICOLE LAU
"But I'm just appreciating the culture!" This is what appropriators say when called out. They don't see the harm. They don't understand why people are upset. They think appreciation and appropriation are the same thing. But they're not. Appropriation causes real, measurable harmβspiritual, economic, psychological, and cultural. And claiming you meant well doesn't erase that harm.
This article is unflinching about the real consequences of cultural appropriation. It centers the voices and experiences of people from appropriated cultures, showing the multiple layers of harm caused by taking what's not yours. Because understanding the harm is essential to stopping the behavior. And "I didn't mean to hurt anyone" is not an excuse when the hurt is real and ongoing.
The Layers of Harm
Why Appropriation Hurts
Cultural appropriation causes harm on multiple levels simultaneously:
1. Spiritual harm
2. Economic harm
3. Psychological harm
4. Cultural erasure
5. Perpetuation of colonialism
Each layer compounds the others, creating deep and lasting damage.
Spiritual Harm
Violation of the Sacred
What happens:
- Sacred practices are violated and disrespected
- Spiritual protocols are broken
- What's holy is treated as commodity
- Spiritual power is misused or diluted
Real examples:
- Indigenous ceremonies: Non-Natives performing sacred ceremonies causes spiritual harm to Indigenous communities and can be dangerous to participants
- Vodou/SanterΓa: Non-initiates attempting to work with spirits/Orishas without proper training and protection
- Hindu practices: Sacred symbols and deities used casually or incorrectly
The impact:
- Communities feel their sacred practices are violated
- Spiritual power of practices is diminished when done incorrectly
- Relationship with divine/spirits is disrespected
- What's meant to heal becomes harmful
Why "I meant well" doesn't help:
- Good intentions don't prevent spiritual violation
- Sacred doesn't become less sacred because you don't understand
- The harm to the community is real regardless of your intent
Economic Harm
Profiting from Others' Cultures
What happens:
- Dominant culture profits from marginalized culture's practices
- Original practitioners can't make living from their own traditions
- Appropriators get opportunities denied to originators
- Economic exploitation and extraction
Real examples:
- Yoga: White yoga teachers dominate industry and profit while South Asian teachers face discrimination and lower pay
- Indigenous art: Non-Native companies sell "Native-inspired" items while Native artists struggle
- Black hairstyles: White people praised and paid for styles Black people are discriminated against for wearing
- Music: White artists profit from Black musical traditions while Black artists are underpaid and uncredited
The impact:
- People from originating culture can't make living from their own traditions
- Wealth extracted from marginalized communities
- Economic inequality perpetuated
- Appropriators benefit from privilege while originators face discrimination
The numbers:
- Yoga industry worth $80+ billion, dominated by white teachers and companies
- Indigenous artists make fraction of what non-Native companies make selling "Native-inspired" items
- Black creators consistently underpaid compared to white creators doing same work
Psychological Harm
The Pain of Seeing Your Culture Commodified
What happens:
- People see their sacred practices treated as trends
- What they were punished for is now praised on others
- Their culture is reduced to aesthetic or commodity
- They're told they're overreacting when they object
Real testimonies:
"Seeing white people wear headdresses at music festivals while my grandfather was beaten for practicing our ceremoniesβthat pain is real." - Indigenous person
"I was sent home from school for wearing a bindi. Now white girls wear them to Coachella and get called 'bohemian.' How is that fair?" - Hindu person
"My natural hair was called 'unprofessional' my whole life. Now white women get box braids and are called 'edgy' and 'cool.'" - Black person
The impact:
- Feeling of violation and disrespect
- Anger at double standards
- Pain of seeing sacred treated as trivial
- Exhaustion from constantly explaining why it hurts
- Trauma from ongoing cultural violation
The double standard:
- Marginalized people punished for their own cultural practices
- Dominant culture praised for same practices
- This isn't appreciationβit's theft with privilege
Cultural Erasure
Losing Meaning and Context
What happens:
- Practices are stripped of cultural context
- Meaning and depth are lost
- Origin is erased or misattributed
- Culture is reduced to aesthetic
Real examples:
- Yoga: Reduced to physical exercise, Hindu roots erased, spiritual depth lost
- Smudging: Indigenous ceremony becomes "burning sage for good vibes"
- Dreamcatchers: Sacred Ojibwe items become car accessories
- Om symbol: Sacred Hindu symbol becomes trendy tattoo
The impact:
- Future generations don't know the true meaning
- Cultural knowledge is lost or distorted
- Originators are erased from their own practices
- Dominant culture's version becomes "the" version
The erasure process:
- Practice is taken from originating culture
- Context and meaning are stripped away
- Dominant culture's simplified version spreads
- Original meaning is forgotten or unknown
- Originators are told their own practice is "universal" now
Perpetuation of Colonialism
Continuing Historical Harm
What happens:
- Appropriation continues colonial pattern of taking from colonized peoples
- Treats cultures as resources to extract
- Ignores ongoing oppression and inequality
- Reinforces power imbalances
The colonial pattern:
- Colonizers suppress Indigenous/marginalized culture
- Punish people for practicing their own traditions
- Nearly destroy the culture
- Once it's "safe," take what they want from it
- Profit from what they tried to destroy
- Claim it's "appreciation" or "universal" now
Real examples:
- Indigenous practices: Criminalized until 1978, now appropriated freely
- African diaspora religions: Suppressed during slavery, now commodified
- Hindu practices: Denigrated during British colonization, now taken without credit
The impact:
- Colonialism continues in new form
- Historical trauma is reopened
- Power imbalances are reinforced
- Marginalized communities continue to be exploited
The Compounding Effect
How Harms Multiply
These harms don't exist separatelyβthey compound:
Example: Non-Native smudging with white sage
- Spiritual harm: Sacred ceremony violated
- Economic harm: Non-Natives profit from sage sales, Indigenous harvesters don't benefit
- Psychological harm: Indigenous people see practice they were punished for now trendy
- Cultural erasure: Ceremony reduced to "burning sage," Indigenous origins erased
- Colonial harm: Continues pattern of taking from Indigenous peoples
One act of appropriation causes harm on all five levels simultaneously.
Who Gets Hurt
The Impact on Communities
Individuals:
- Personal pain and violation
- Economic loss
- Discrimination for practicing own culture
- Exhaustion from educating appropriators
Communities:
- Cultural practices distorted or lost
- Economic opportunities stolen
- Ongoing trauma and violation
- Fighting to protect what's left
Future generations:
- May not know true meaning of practices
- Inherit distorted versions
- Lose connection to heritage
- Continue to face discrimination
Why "I Didn't Mean To" Doesn't Help
Intent vs. Impact
The defense:
- "I didn't mean to hurt anyone"
- "I was just appreciating the culture"
- "I had good intentions"
Why it doesn't matter:
- Impact matters more than intent
- Harm is real regardless of intention
- Good intentions don't erase damage
- Claiming good intent centers you, not the harmed community
The analogy:
- If you step on someone's foot, saying "I didn't mean to" doesn't make their foot hurt less
- The appropriate response is: apologize, get off their foot, be more careful
- Not: argue that you meant well so they shouldn't be hurt
Crystals for Accountability and Truth
Facing Reality
Truth-seeing:
- Obsidian: Facing uncomfortable truths, seeing your impact
- Smoky quartz: Grounding in reality, transmuting defensiveness
- Black tourmaline: Protection from self-deception
Accountability
- Sodalite: Truth, honest self-assessment
- Hematite: Grounding, staying accountable
- Clear quartz: Clarity about your actions and their impact
How to Use
- Hold when examining your actions
- Meditate with to see truth about your impact
- Use to stay grounded in accountability
- Keep as reminder to prioritize impact over intention
What to Do When You've Caused Harm
Accountability Steps
1. Listen
- When told you've caused harm, listen
- Don't get defensive
- Center their experience, not your intentions
2. Acknowledge
- Recognize the harm you caused
- Don't minimize or excuse
- Take responsibility
3. Apologize
- Genuine apology without excuses
- "I'm sorry I hurt you" not "I'm sorry you feel hurt"
- Don't center your feelings
4. Stop the behavior
- Immediately stop the appropriative practice
- Don't argue or negotiate
- Just stop
5. Make amends
- Support the community you harmed
- Amplify their voices
- Give back financially when possible
6. Do better
- Educate yourself
- Change your behavior going forward
- Don't repeat the harm
Integration: The Harm Is Real
Cultural appropriation isn't just "appreciation gone wrong." It's not a misunderstanding or oversensitivity. It causes real, measurable harmβspiritual, economic, psychological, cultural, and colonial. The harm compounds and multiplies. Communities suffer. Individuals are hurt. Cultures are erased.
Your good intentions don't erase this harm. Your desire to "appreciate" doesn't override their right to protect what's sacred. Your feelings about being called out don't matter more than the pain you caused.
The harm is real. Believe people when they tell you you've hurt them. Stop centering your intentions. Start centering their impact.
That's what accountability looks like.
Next in this series: Power Dynamics and Spiritual Theft: Colonialism's Legacy
Related Articles
Building an Ethical, Personal Practice: A Framework
Complete framework for building ethical spiritual practice with five pillars: ancestral foundation, ethical principle...
Read More β
Cultural Exchange in the Digital Age: New Challenges
Navigate cultural exchange in the digital age with ethics. Understand new challenges of viral appropriation, online l...
Read More β
The Difference Between Syncretism and Appropriation
Understand the crucial difference between syncretism (organic cultural blending by people within cultures) and approp...
Read More β
Supporting Indigenous Practitioners: Reparations in Action
Learn concrete ways to support Indigenous practitioners through financial reparations, amplifying voices, advocacy, a...
Read More β
Decolonizing Your Spiritual Practice: A Self-Audit
Conduct practical self-audit of your spiritual practice to identify and remove appropriation. Learn step-by-step proc...
Read More β
The Ethics of Learning from Other Cultures
Learn how to ethically learn from other cultures through relationship, reciprocity, and respect. Understand permissio...
Read More β