
Editorâs note: Kayla Ludlow, a college student who is proud of her Hispanic heritage, shares she does not look Hispanic due to albinism. Read on to learn how Kayla publicly dispels stereotypes.
Celebrating the Diversity of Hispanic Heritage with Albinism
Kayla Ludlow loves being a Latina. Sheâs proud of her Hispanic heritage â her father is from Ecuador â and even though her parents split up when Kayla was young, her American-born mother made sure to teach Kayla about her heritage, including encouraging her to learn Spanish and take Latin dance classes.
But people donât always believe Kayla when she tells them sheâs Hispanic. Thatâs because she was born with albinism, so even though she has all of her fatherâs features, sheâs fair-skinned and blonde. Kayla says she inherited the condition â which means the body produces little or none of the pigment melanin â from her paternal grandfather. In fact, on one of her visits to Ecuador she was able to speak with her grandfather about his life with albinism.
âI wanted to listen to his story and his tips, so that was really cool,â says 20-year-old Kayla. âAlthough I wasnât raised in a Hispanic culture, Iâm Hispanic â and some traits from my father pop out every once in a while.â
Living with Albinism
Like many people with albinism, Kayla has vision loss caused by the lack of pigment, which canât be corrected with glasses or surgery. She also has nystagmus, which is involuntary shaking of the eyes, caused by her albinism. Kayla sometimes struggles with depth perception and hand-eye coordination, and her eyes are very sensitive to bright light because of the lack of pigment. She still has some vision, although she has to get really close to objects to see them, especially reading materials in small print.
âIt was a challenge in school, but I had a great vision advocate,â Kayla says. âShe got me a closed-circuit TV and made sure I was always in the front of the class, and had dome magnifiers, monoculars â all that stuff to enlarge things and bring them closer.â
Now in college, she is pursuing a degree in communications with an emphasis in digital media.
Spreading Awareness
Kayla already has a great head start in communications and digital media. Sheâs very active on TikTok, where her account, @kayla_lud, has more approximately 450,000 followers and 7.8 million âlikes.â Her bio states that sheâs there to educate about albinism and answer questions â and thatâs exactly what she does.
âWhen I tell people Iâm Hispanic, about 80% of them donât believe me,â she says. âI want to educate and spread awareness about albinism.â
For example, while Latin dancing Kayla has met many people from Hispanic countries â and their responses to her own heritage were skeptical.
âGuys would ask me to dance and Iâd ask where theyâre from,â she says. âWhen they asked me Iâd say Iâm from America but Iâm half Ecuadorian. So many people would just stop and laugh and Iâd say, âNo, Iâm serious,â and I think about half of those people walked away and didnât believe me.â
In addition to TikTok videos that share facts about albinism, Kayla created a side-by-side photo comparison of how she looks in real life and how she would look if she had her dadâs dark skin tone and hair color.
âI get a mixed reaction,â she says. âSome people donât believe it, some people think itâs funny, and some people think itâs really cool.â
On TikTok, Kayla is also mindful of peopleâs different accessibility needs. She includes captions for people with hearing loss and puts comments in a larger font for those with vision loss like her.
Prouder Than ever to be Hispanic
As sheâs gotten older, Kayla says sheâs embraced her Hispanic side more, partly because it didnât come up that often when she was a child. Her visibility on TikTok gives her an opportunity to help people understand albinism, which she says is good for everyone. But it also demonstrates an important point about being Hispanic.
âEven Hispanic people without albinism can be lighter-skinned, and people donât always believe them, either, when they say theyâre Hispanic,â Kayla explains. âIâm putting the idea out there that if you donât look exactly like a stereotype, it doesnât make you any less a part of a particular culture. Being able to embrace your culture and where youâre from is really powerful.â
National Hispanic Heritage Month in the U.S. runs from September 15 to October 15.
Learn more:
- Eye Health Among Hispanics/Latinos | National Eye Institute (nih.gov)
- Dicapta: Spanish Audio Description Services and Technology for Accessibility – CareerConnect (aphcareerconnect.org)
- Bread, Rice, or Tostada: Cultural Inclusion at The Transition Table, Part 4: Cake – CareerConnect (aphcareerconnect.org)