**From a blog that I visit wanted to share w/ SOL**
It seems that many black women like to pretend to love themselves online but have been in toxic environments throughout their lives where black women were abandoned, demeaned, dishonored and disrespected. Many black women have not seen black women being valued apart from their usefulness as rescuers, enablers and mules. This has impacted the development of self-love among many black girls that has translated into adulthood.
We love to say that black children mean a lot to us but the majority of black women I have spoken to about their family planning have justified repeated patterns of unplanned children. There are scores of black women who make decisions to have more children without having any plans to improve their standard of living and without requiring marriage from the men who are sleeping in their beds and eating their food in their house.
We love to say that blacks don't condone abortion as birth control but there are twice as many abortions of black fetuses than there are live births of black babies. Are all of those abortions due to rape pregnancy or incest pregnancy? I honestly don't believe that they are.
We love to say that we're pro-family but at least 70% of black children are growing up in broken homes and we pretend that homes are not "broken" when children are fatherless.
We love to say that we aren't as promiscuous as white women (which is hardly a standard of measure that we should be mentioning) but many black women do not seem to know how to depict womanhood without fetishizing and objectifying themselves. The "black whore" complex is in full effect in the way that many black women choose to present their sexual definitions and we don't want to talk about it.
We love to say that we don't need a man but in all of the all-black residential areas that I have been in, the ones without large numbers of responsible black fathers supervising their sons seem to be the most toxic and most dangerous for black women and their daughters.
We love to say that we want collective advancement but we often get hostile when we are challenged to dismantle dysfunctional class conditioning and address emotional woundedness.
What will it take for us to be courageous with our stance for moral maturity?
**Discuss**
It seems that many black women like to pretend to love themselves online but have been in toxic environments throughout their lives where black women were abandoned, demeaned, dishonored and disrespected. Many black women have not seen black women being valued apart from their usefulness as rescuers, enablers and mules. This has impacted the development of self-love among many black girls that has translated into adulthood.
We love to say that black children mean a lot to us but the majority of black women I have spoken to about their family planning have justified repeated patterns of unplanned children. There are scores of black women who make decisions to have more children without having any plans to improve their standard of living and without requiring marriage from the men who are sleeping in their beds and eating their food in their house.
We love to say that blacks don't condone abortion as birth control but there are twice as many abortions of black fetuses than there are live births of black babies. Are all of those abortions due to rape pregnancy or incest pregnancy? I honestly don't believe that they are.
We love to say that we're pro-family but at least 70% of black children are growing up in broken homes and we pretend that homes are not "broken" when children are fatherless.
We love to say that we aren't as promiscuous as white women (which is hardly a standard of measure that we should be mentioning) but many black women do not seem to know how to depict womanhood without fetishizing and objectifying themselves. The "black whore" complex is in full effect in the way that many black women choose to present their sexual definitions and we don't want to talk about it.
We love to say that we don't need a man but in all of the all-black residential areas that I have been in, the ones without large numbers of responsible black fathers supervising their sons seem to be the most toxic and most dangerous for black women and their daughters.
We love to say that we want collective advancement but we often get hostile when we are challenged to dismantle dysfunctional class conditioning and address emotional woundedness.
What will it take for us to be courageous with our stance for moral maturity?
**Discuss**