When
it comes to black women and girls, some folk suddenly don’t know or quickly
forget where the boundaries of decency are...congrats to the brilliant Quvenzhane Wallis
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I
was actually thinking about it the other day when at church. Most of
the black women who are well put together, slim and well coiffed and
with the best voices in the choir were all ringless. This contrasted
glaring with their white counterparts. Even those who would in our
society be classed as homely were married or in some kind of
permanent relationship.
Of
course this has a lot to say about the view of white men and marriage
and wanting to be with women in such arrangements, and in addition,
says a lot about the fact that the word is not out yet that black
women themselves desire these partnerships and are happy to expand
beyond black men. But despite the explanations that we can read into
the situation, it is all very cold comfort.
We
know that the black community represents the 'no marriage zone' for
black women, (despite the fact that one or two of your girlfriends
managed to get the ring...eventually, this still holds true) and this
is why we BWE writers always strongly advice black women to get away
from black enclaves and black social milieus where they are not at
all taken seriously for marriage.
However and also, many white men
don’t think they should/can ask black women out, despite all the
signs that black women give out, and this is just a fact and I too am
getting a bit 'p$%#3' with the excuse that somehow people just don’t
know that a black woman might want to be with a man. Indeed I have
seen white women who look like they 'don't do men' who men still go
after and pursue and never ask, 'is she open to men, to my advances,
or is she looking to date?' No one asks these questions, they just
assume she is in the dating and relationship game until it is said
otherwise. However with black women, it appears the opposite view
holds for us and that is, 'she doesn’t want a man, until she says
otherwise.' This is what black women face, the general assumption
working against them and frustrating their relationship ambitions,
the assumption that unless told otherwise we are not into love and
relationships and are not a natural target for men's attention, we
are 'Miss independent', who doesn’t want or need to be bothered by
all this men-woman and pairing off business, we have better and more
serious things to do with our time!'
There
is nothing wrong with sadly acknowledging the fact that black women
occupy the blind spot of society. It helps to acknowledge it and not
pretend or skip over the sadness and try to claim it doesn’t affect
you especially when it hits hard certain days.
The
thing though is don’t waste too much time just feeling sad. It is
an issue that affects all black women (some more and some less),
which means that you must throw everything at the problem to dig
yourself out of this general black female predicament. Like I have
said many times, you earn money and resources so you can shore yourself up
in areas of struggle, deficiency, shortfalls etc. Not all of us will
have troubles or struggle in the same areas of life. I might have a
problem in the area of finding relationships and you might have it in
the area of finding a good job. You must divert resources to
ensure that you help yourself out in the area of your struggles and I
must also spend my finances to help me in my area of struggles.
This is how one proactive black women reader of this blog has put into effect my strong suggestion to get registered with a Matchmaker to, as she put it 'expedite' meeting a man for marriage.
For example, on your blogs about self-improvement and expanding your dating set you mentioned a few times about paying for a matchmaking service to expedite meeting Quality men. A few weeks ago I took the plunge and invested a significant amount of money in a matchmaking service! I've been online for years, sometimes meeting great men (usually they lived far away), and I started to get frustrated with the weeding out process. I'm very excited because tonight I have my first 'matchmade' date! So thank you so much, I never thought of taking my personal life to this level until you brought it up.
Ladies, if you can afford (or maybe if you cannot) you should definitely consider a matchmaking service. Yes, it's expensive, but the men usually pay 2-3 times more. I did not know this until recently. Men are not going to fork over several thousands of dollars if they are not seriously looking for a woman who has wife material! These men are SERIOUS! Plus, I know so much about the guy before we've even met.
And yes, I will admit I was initially hesitant because I want to only be matched with White or Asian men. Most matchmaking services are run by (White) women and I feared some sort of sabotage. Well, I can tell you ladies, not all are like that. After some initial surprise, (I was very blunt with my preferences; and on the phone I do not sound "Black") my matchmaker is excited and is making every effort to get me dates with the men I want. I do recommend that you are very blunt with your preferences. You do not want to fork over hundreds/thousands of dollars and get matched with Black men; if that is not your preference. These services only guarantee a minimum number of dates and you don't want to waste a single one!
The
fact that we are not seen or appreciated and ignored on the level of
being a woman is ugly and disheartening and it is OK to acknowledge this, but
if you stay in this state of being sad, what good will it do. You must never give up in
trying to turn the tide for yourself. Acknowledge the sickness, the
pure twisted nature of society with respect to black women, take a week off if you like, however
the sooner you push back the feelings of sadness and get back into doing
something, the better. Lastly, do not spread your discouragement online to other black women. Some of us just spread discouragement, we do not realize we can seriously damage others. It is a mature acting woman who knows she is going through a down time and just cuts off and takes time out, so as to not spread negativity. Share positivity and dont feel that you have a right to offload your ill feelings and negative emotions on other black women. What might be a passing phase for you may then very well bring about the downfall of loads of other black women.
Next blog post available from 16th March
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