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Single black women should end the blame game

05 Jan

Hat Tip – The Grio

This is part of an opinion piece by Dr. Boyce Watkins dealing with the falling marriage numbers in the black community. For the whole thing – go here.

Watkins points out that while black men have been assigned much of the blame, the reality is that black women share much more of the blame than is typically assigned to them. He questions the “common wisdom” – even that voiced by President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder…

Having recently gone back on the market myself, I have to admit to one huge pet peeve. Trying to make an introduction and speak to an attractive black woman can be a minefield – no matter how politely approached, or well accoutered a guy is. Sisters are experts at the shoot down. Now – that’s not a one way thing, in that I’ve certainly seen some low class hardheads come with some pretty crude crap, after being shot down with a crude intro, and maybe that, in part – poisons the market. However, that iron wall shuts down conversation at any level.

Second, no guy in his right mind wants anything to do with a woman describing herself as a “Diva”. Don’t need a “Queen” either. And any guy who thinks he’s going to be a “King” in a household with any woman worth her salt deserves what he gets, which is almost always a lot of frustration. Maybe if a few more folks valued the concept of partnership instead of primitive ego gratification?

To Dr. Watkin’s critique –

I often wonder if there is more to the black relationships story than that. Here are some thoughts to consider:

1) Whites aren’t staying married either, so this is not just solely a black issue. The next time Barack Obama gives a speech about black men “behaving like little boys” because they don’t live with their children, I would love to see him give that same speech to the millions of divorcees in white America. Given that roughly 50% of white marriages end in divorce, we can’t presume that black people create the only dysfunctional families in America. All of America is turning away from marriage, and that’s just a fact.

2) Are men the only ones to blame here? When I watched the beautiful women on the ABC special who felt that they could never find a husband, I heard some of my educated, fully employed male friends say, “I’d marry any one of them right now!” Over the years, I’ve seen many women pass over good men who would make excellent husband/boyfriend/baby daddy material. (Sorry, I hold no ill will toward baby’s daddies – I only care about love, not labels).

I’ve noticed that there are many women who spend all their time chasing the alpha male who may have 10 different girlfriends at once and ignoring the less-than-perfect man who is willing to be their lifelong mate. Given that it’s illegal to marry more than one person at a time, many of these “Michael Jordan types” fill the gender gap single-handedly by occupying the attention and loyalty of several women at once.

Perhaps the next time you’re chasing the super-fine, super-hunk man of your dreams, you might consider the fact that there is probably a new woman chasing him down every single day. That’s not to say, however, that you don’t have the right to be attracted to whatever you want – just realize that dating is a market, like searching for a job. The more constraints you put on your search, the fewer options you are going to have. So, if you are passing up men because they are 6’1″ instead of 6’2″, you’ll get very little sympathy as you sit around the fire with your girlfriends crying into a glass of red wine. Your Prince Charming may never have belonged to you in the first place, and you may have kicked the real Prince Charming to the curb.

3) Doesn’t it take two to tango? The last I checked, there were usually two people in a relationship. So, although Attorney General Eric Holder has joined the chorus of politicians gaining political points for blaming black men for being the sole cause of the breakdown of the African-American family, I often wonder why African-American women are rarely held to account. This does not imply that black women are systemically unbalanced; we all know that each individual is unique. But it does imply that the same challenges imposed by racism have affected all of us.

I’m sorry if this hurts your feelings, but I’ve got to be real. Most kind, attractive, intelligent women are able to find good husbands. Some of us spend our lives either barking up the wrong trees or barking in a way that sabotages our objectives. To obtain a good mate, you must learn how to be a good mate and how to choose a good mate. So, after you finish reading Steve Harvey’s book, you may want to read, “Secrets about Men Every Woman Should Know,” by Dr. Barbara De Angelis. She also wrote, “What Women Want Men to Know,” a book based on scientific research, not just speculation. The idea is that in order to get what you want, you must learn how to give what others want. But you can’t effectively give to others if you’re only thinking about yourself.

4) What’s REALLY going on with families and children? You don’t necessarily get to declare yourself the hero in a failed relationship just because you kept the kids. In fact, oxytocin production in the brains of women during pregnancy creates a nearly unbreakable bond that makes it almost impossible for women to let go of their children. So, for us to presume that black fathers are being irresponsible because their children do not live with them is a terribly misguided assertion.

Also, while we are quick to share stories of fathers who don’t spend time with their kids, we are not so quick to share the stories of fathers who’ve been alienated from their children or have children who’ve been trained to hate them. Trifling fathers need not apply for this explanation, but we know that irresponsible behavior does not always align with gender. The most important determinant of a child’s outcomes in life is the disposition of the mother. If the mother does not open the door for a child to have a good relationship with his or her father, then no such relationship is going to exist.

5) Perhaps we should work together to solve the problems. Anyone who simply sits around complaining about how irritating other people are without doing any serious introspection is doomed for a life of frustration. Additionally, given that there are serious obstacles being faced by black men, perhaps we should all work together to support causes that serve to liberate African-American men from the shackles of oppression.

President Obama should hear consistent chants from the black community about the fact that black male unemployment is as high as 50% in some urban areas, keeping these men from being able to provide for a family. Anyone who loves any black man anywhere should tell Attorney General Holder that we must stop supporting the prison industrial complex and simultaneously create paths for ex-convicts to re-enter into society.

If you have a black son, brother, father, or husband, you should want to fight against the fact that black boys are nearly five times more likely to be placed in special education than white kids, severely impacting their graduation rates. An uneducated, unemployed man in the criminal justice system is not going to make a good husband; not every black man in these circumstances is consciously choosing to end up this way.

Whether we like it or not, we are in this boat together, and most of us are guilty of the blame game on some level. Perhaps it’s time to stop blaming each other and find the real cause of these very real problems. To slightly modify the words of Steve Harvey, “Act like a lady, but fight for your man.” The black family needs support from us all.

 
10 Comments

Posted by on January 5, 2010 in The Post-Racial Life

 

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10 responses to “Single black women should end the blame game

  1. t-shirts101

    January 5, 2010 at 1:34 PM

    Ya’ know, I’m beginning to think the “art” of relationships is lost on us… I had parents that showed me through example, and my wife’s parents were together until death. She tells me fond stories about how wonderful her father was to her mother…

    The same way some women may rely on status, income, height, etc., and men rely on attractiveness and general attitude, a better predictor of how we will be treated is whether or not our mate has been exposed to / has witnessed a loving relationship. Does he/she actually know what one looks like?

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    • btx3

      January 5, 2010 at 2:13 PM

      One of the more interesting “Gates” I’ve seen in exploring dating sites is “Must have a relationship with Jesus”. Interesting pre-condition, considering most Christian faiths put no time limit on “accepting Christ”. Since statistically you are going to find a lot more black women than black men embracing evangelicalism – that automatically severely limits the possible field of men as potential mates. Meaning the evangelical “church”, in embracing an aspect of cultism (“we good, they bad”) has become a major impediment to the very institution, marriage – they are supposed to protect. This sort of evangelical christianity is more interested in it’s survival and prospering, than that of it’s community.

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      • t-shirts101

        January 5, 2010 at 2:27 PM

        Couldn’t agree with you more.

        My question to women like these is if they can’t find the type of men they seek IN church, why do they feel as though they will have a better chance outside of it?

        Not to mention the contradictions between what’s professed and what’s done. My experiences have been that those who claim to “know Jesus” usually don’t.

        And that’s OK, we all fall short in some way or another. My point is: don’t judge. Don’t use faith as a club to beat someone over the head.

        Urban communities are filled with liquor stores and churches for a reason.

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      • brotherbrown

        January 6, 2010 at 10:35 AM

        “Must have a relationship with Jesus.”

        Too many men in that relationship, especially if Jesus is first, eh?

        Relationships between a man and woman are as individual as snowflakes, so generalizing about them is a problem. I have come to conclude that the key ingredient is L-U-C-K.

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      • btx3

        January 6, 2010 at 12:40 PM

        Never heard of Jesus making Whoopie, Brotherbrown – despite some folks energetically calling his name!

        But the issue here is who is defining the validity of that “relationship with Jesus”.

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      • t-shirts101

        January 6, 2010 at 2:30 PM

        Rev. Chicken Wing… or whoever the sister is quoting relentlessly Sunday evening.

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      • btx3

        January 6, 2010 at 3:28 PM

        One of my siblings is a high level cleric. He’s no jack-leg – possessing a Phd in a highly technical discipline, and having attended a real Theology School. We debate over dinner frequently about balancing the two thought systems, which I see a number of the jack-leg types debase with creationism and other “isms”. He gets pissed off at me sometimes, because of my belief that most organized religious sects are inherently, and irretrievably…

        Corrupt based on “Organization Theory” which happens to be a field I did some study in.

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  2. nanakwame

    January 5, 2010 at 2:44 PM

    What is that classic film Which Way Is Up

    Folks need to do and stop the rallying around money

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    • btx3

      January 5, 2010 at 2:48 PM

      There are a lot of false canards out there, Nana – money is just one of them.

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  3. DW Jazzlover

    January 5, 2010 at 4:12 PM

    This is simply amazing to me in everyway..

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