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Updated
06/05/05 |
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Recently
I received this letter via email. Supposedly the letter was recently published
in the Washington Post. Due to its length and personality, I doubt if
The Washington Post would publish such a piece in its editorial section.
Be that as it may, the letter still bears some truths about the state
of black male-female relationships. I have read it numerous times hopefully
objective in my thoughts. Now I bring it to you and ask if you accept
what the writer is trying to convey? Much like the infamous Willie Lynch
Letter, many have already attempted to discredit this striking piece of
prose. Moreover, like the Lynch letter, this letter certainly has resonated
in most who have read it and fueled the debate about black relationships.
Why do black men and women continue to grow further apart when society
still views both as unequal? How is it that two who arrived the same time,
kidnapped, raped, tortured, chained in the bowels of bulwarks, soaked
with one another’s excrement only later to stand together against the
peculiar institution of slavery and triumph together yet today we have
no love for one another?
One rhetorical piece will not change
the detriment we commit upon ourselves but hopefully this piece will spark
an open and honest debate about the future of our race. Black men and
women can not make it without one another. Isn’t it obvious? If not to
you then just look at our children who are being left with this legacy
of hatred and distrust for one another. So I post this letter on my site
not to debate its authenticity but to examine its merit and use that knowledge
for critical evaluation and solutions. I hope you will do the same.
Sincerely,
David W. Coleman
Founder
Are Black Women Scaring Off Their Men?
(A Fighting Spirit Is Important, But Not At Home)
Have you met this woman? She has a good job, works hard, and earns a good
salary. She went to college, she got her master's degree; she is intelligent.
She is personable, articulate, well read, interested in everybody and
everything. Yet, she's single. Or maybe you know this one. Active in the
church. Faithful, committed, sings in the choir, serves on the usher board,
and attends every
committee meeting. Loves the Lord and knows the Word. You'd think that
with her command of the Scriptures and the respect of her church members,
she'd have a marriage as solid as a rock. But again, no husband.
Or perhaps you recognize the community activist.
She's a black lady, or, as she prefers, an African American woman, on
the move. She sports A short natural; sometimes cornrow braids, or even
dreadlocks. She's an organizer, a motivator, a dynamo. Her work for her
people speaks for itself--organizing women for a self-help, raising funds
for A community cause, educating others around a new issue in South Africa.
Black folks look up to her, and white folks know she's a force to be reckoned
with. Yet once again, the men leave her alone. What do these women have
in common? They have so much; what is it they lack? Why is it they may
be able to hook a man but can't hold him? The women puzzle over this quandary
themselves. They gather at professional
clubs, at sorority meetings or over coffee at the office and wonder what's
wrong with black men? They hold special prayer vigils and fast and pray
and beg Jesus to send the men back to church. They find the brothers attending
political strategizing sessions or participating in protests but when
it comes time to go home, the brothers go home to someone else. I know
these women because I am all of these women. And after asking over and
over again "What's wrong with these men?", it finally dawned
on me to ask the question, "What's wrong with us women?" What
I have
found, and what many of these women have yet to discover, is that the
skills that make one successful in the church, community or workplace
are not the skills that make one successful in a relationship.
Linear thinking, self-reliance, structured
goals and direct action assist one in getting assignments done, in organizing
church or club activities or in positioning oneself for a raise, but relationship-
building requires different skills. It requires making decisions that
not only gratify you, but satisfy others. It means doing things that will
keep the peace rather than achieve the goal, and sometimes it means creating
the peace in the first place. Maintaining a harmonious relationship will
not always allow you to take the straight line between two points. You
may have to stoop to conquer or yield to win.
In too many cases, when dealing with men,
you will have to sacrifice being right in order to enjoy being loved.
Being acknowledged as the head of the household is an especially important
thing for many black men, since their manhood is so often actively challenged
everywhere else. Many modern women are so independent, so self-sufficient,
so committed to the cause, to the church, to career or their narrow concepts
that their entire personalities project an "I don't need a man"
message. So they end up without one. An interested man may be attracted
but he soon discovers that this sister makes very little space for him
in her life. Going to graduate school is a good goal and an option that
previous generations of blacks have not had. But sometimes the achieving
woman will place her boyfriend so low on her list of priorities that his
interest wanes. Between work, school and homework, she's seldom "there"
for him, for the preliminaries that might develop a commitment to a woman.
She's too busy to prepare him a home-cooked meal or to be a listening
ear for his concerns because she is so occupied with her own. Soon he
uses her only for uncommitted sex since to him she appears unavailable
for anything else. Blind to the part she's playing in the problem, she
ends up thinking, "Men only want one thing." And she decides
she's better off with the degree than the friendship. When she's 45, she
may wish she'd set different priorities while she was younger. It's not
just the busy career girl who can't see the forest
for the trees.
A couple I know were having marital troubles.
During one argument, the husband confronted the wife and asked what she
thought they should do about the marriage, what direction they should
take. She reached for her Bible and turned to Ephesians. "I know
what Paul says and I know what Jesus says about marriage," he told
her, "What do you say about our marriage?" Dumbfounded, she
could not say anything. Like so many of us, she could recite the Scriptures
but could not apply them to everyday living. Before the year was out,
the husband had filed for divorce. Women who focus on civil rights or
community activism have vigorous, fighting spirits and are prepared to
do whatever, whenever, to benefit black people. That's good. That's necessary.
But it needs to be kept in perspective. It's too easy to save the world
and lose your
man.
A fighting spirit is important on the battlefield,
but a gentler spirit is wanted on the home front. Too many women are winning
the battle and losing the home. Sometimes in our determined efforts to
be strong believers and hard workers, we contemporary women downplay,
denigrate or simply forget our more traditional feminine attributes. Men
value women best for the ways we are different from them, not the ways
we are the same. Men appreciate us for our grace and beauty. Men enjoy
our softness and see it as a way to be in touch with their tender side,
a side they dare not show to other men. A hard-working woman is good to
have on your committee. But when a man goes home, he'd prefer a loving
partner to a hard worker.
It's not an easy transition for the modern
black woman to make. It sounds submissive, reactionary, outmoded, and
oppressive. We have fought so hard for so many things, and rightfully
so. We have known so many men who were shaky, jive and untrustworthy.
Yet we must admit that we are shaky, jive and willful in our own ways.
Not having a husband allows us to do whatever we want, when and how we
want to do it. Having one means we have to share the power and certain
points will have to be surrendered. We are terrified of marriage and commitment,
yet dread the prospect of being single and alone. Throwing ourselves into
work seems to fill the void without posing a threat. But like any other
drug, the escape eventually becomes the cage. To make the break, we need
to do less and "be" more. I am learning to "be still and
know," to be trusting. I am learning to stop competing with black
men and to collaborate with them, to temper my assertive and aggressive
energy with softness and serenity. I'm not
preaching a philosophy of "women be seen and not heard." But
I have come to realize that I, and many of my smart and independent sisters
are out of touch with our feminine center and therefore out of touch with
our men.
About a year ago, I was at an oldies-but-goodies
club. As a Washingtonian, love to do the bop and to hand dance styles
that were popular when I was a teen. In those dances, the man has his
set of steps and the woman has hers, but the couple is still two partners
and must move together. On this evening, I was sitting out a record when
a thought came to me. If a man were to say, "I'm going to be in charge
and you're going to follow. I want you to adjust your ways to fit in with
mine" I'd dismiss him as a Neanderthal. With my hand on my hip, I'd
tell him that I have just as much sense as he does and that he can't tell
me what to do. Yet, on the dance floor, I love following a
man's lead. I don't feel inferior because my part is different from his,
and I don't feel I have to prove that I'm just as able to lead as he is.
I simply allow him to take my hand, and I go with the flow.
I am still single. I am over 30 and scared.
I am still a member of my church, have no plans to quit my good government
job and will continue to do what I can for my people. I think that I have
a healthy relationship with a good man. But today, I know that I have
to bring some of that spirit of the dance into my relationship. Dancing
solo, I've mastered that. Now I'm learning how to accept his lead, and
to go with the flow.
Send responses to:
David W. Coleman
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Publisher, Prevail Magazine

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