Posts Tagged ‘dating

09
Jun
11

The Diamond Apology

As most of you know, I have not written a blog entry in several months now, and those who know me personally have some true insight into why. But there are times when a perfect storm of conversations and youtube clips will lead me to speak on a subject that all of us have been exposed to at one point or another. A lot of men are bold and desperate enough to do it, and because a LOT of women continue to fall for it, men will continue to do it. But before I go into it, I will speak on how the storm came together…….

I was having a conversation this past weekend with a friend of mine in Atlanta, and she was telling me about how a dude proposed to his girlfriend, more or less, at the club (yes, the CLUB). Although she accepted, the fact that a dude proposed at the club (in my opinion) is straight ghetto and lacks class. And being who I am, I decided to joke on it and talk about how dude probably had this song cued up after she said yes. I also talked to her about my Wednesday Wind Down experience when a dude should have aborted mission on site.

Fast forward a few days, and another conversation ensues where a woman hints at the demise of her current relationship. Without asking her for detail, she simply said “there are certain things that can’t be fixed”. I didn’t say anything to her at the time, but my initial thought was “I wonder if a ring would?”. Which brings me to this nice gem on youtube, courtesy of necolebitchie.com:

As you can see, a dude decides to propose to his girlfriend at the club and gets royally shot down. For starters…………. fellas, having ya boy sing a song on your behalf to your girl is a great idea on the surface (especially if you can’t hold a note), but having him sing a song with lyrics in the chorus that hint at you formerly having a lot of women is not necessarily a good idea when proposing (MESSAGE!!).  Second, on both sides, you should have had the “marriage conversation” and leave that conversation knowing in your heart that this is the one for you. In other words, DUDE, you should have known she was going to say yes before you got down on one knee. If you have doubt with her answer, don’t propose…….. PERIOD.

However, that’s not the primary motivation for this blog…………….

If you go back and watch the clip again, you will notice that dude said “I can’t change what I did in the past” and you could read the girl’s lips and she said something to the effect of “you can’t fix this, this isn’t going to fix anything”. Now I applaud her for using her head to make what she felt was the best decision and not buckling to the pressure of accepting the proposal to not embarrass the dude, regardless of if it’s in public or private. It’s a shame for her that a moment she’s been dreaming about since she was a little girl had to come, from a man she knew wasn’t the one for her, in the middle of a packed CLUB. Her words alluded to a broken relationship that was beyond repair. Now dude could have been physically abusive, or dude’s infidelity could have been an issue. But here’s the problem that I have with this brotha’s Hail Mary football play: in most cases, IT WORKS!

Why does it work? Because women continue to fall for it. The story is always the same: man acts foul, isn’t on the up and up, messes up bad with his girl, who decides to or threatens to leave him. Now the man, who has taken his woman for granted, now realizes he’s at risk of losing the only woman in his life who will put up with him, and typical “discussion” is not getting him anywhere. So since conventional conversation has gained him no yards and time’s running out, a man will lay it all on the line and throw the Hail Mary pass of player moves, which I like to call “The Diamond Apology”, formerly known as The CCP (Cookie Control Proposal). This apology simply consists of a man using an engagement ring (the semi-official symbol of commitment) as a means to accomplish two things: get her back, AND shut her up.

It works so often because it gives most women the illusion of a man that’s ready to “make it right” and commit, but that’s not always the case. I recall a story from my early 20′s about a girl I chatted with on BlackPlanet, and she was talking about how she was dating a Euroleague ball player who kept cheating on her (in the US and in Europe) and was verbally abusive. She had one foot out the door, until her man showed up to her NY studio apartment with an apology, a “Performance Improvement Plan”, and a 3 carat diamond ring. Of course she accepted his apology and was now engaged to a man who virtually turned around and got on a plane back to Europe as soon as she said yes. Did they get married? Who knows, since she shut down her BP page as a sign of commitment to him (yeah I know, laughable). But several years later into my 30′s, and dozens of comparable stories later, the ploy still works.

To wrap this up, here are two takeways:

LADIES: Quit falling for this Day 26-ish BS move. As men, simply put, this move is less about our “love” for you and more about our ego. Don’t let your romantic and emotional apathy override your female intuition. You KNOW when a man’s not the one for you; don’t let societal and peer pressure put you in a non-value added situation where you’re a neglected woman with additional jewelry.

FELLAS: When you’re involved with a woman, DO RIGHT BY HER! Think about it: when you want a promotion at work, you have to perform at the next level in order to get promoted, right? Now why wouldn’t you do the same when it comes to the woman you want to be with? If you want to be a woman’s husband, you must perform at that level in order for God to ordain your union and bless you with that opportunity. So that means, love her as Christ loves the church (Ephesians 5:25); don’t abuse her, don’t neglect her, don’t cheat on her, protect and provide for her (and I’m not talking physical protection or financial provision). If you do that, and your woman reciprocates that love to you, then you will avoid the fate of the brotha in the clip, or this poor guy in Houston.

I know a LOT of dudes might be mad at what I’m saying here, and some women too. But if you are, you really need to look in the mirror and determine the root cause of your anger. I’m just the educated messenger.

Feel free to leave comments and let me know what you think, and/or share your experiences.

 

29
Oct
09

Sorry, but you’re still the same to me (or are you?)

Hey everyone, I know it’s been a while since I last wrote. I have had a few things on my mind to talk about, but life took precedence over that and RichBrand had to take a break to get things in order.

Anyway…….. as I approach 30 next year, I know that I have lived a decent life and have seen and experienced my share of things for someone that’s not as social as most people in my network. I’ve met a variety of people in my journey where impressions have been shared and internalized. I am one of the first to accept accountability for how I treat and have treated people over my lifetime. I also own when my impressions weren’t exactly impressive to some people: the days when I was corny, the days when I was a jerk, the moments when I was awkward, and the times when I was offensive.
I bring all of that up because it’s funny how hypocritical we can be when it comes to looking at the positive change in others that we neglect to acknowledge, yet expect for others to see how far we have come. Maybe it’s selfishness, maybe it’s mental and emotional apathy, but either way it’s something that all of us have been guilty of more than once (some more than others).The child you were at 11 is not the young adult you were at 19 nor the adult you are at 30.

I brought this up as a question on my FB page weeks ago asking, between men and women, who has the biggest issue with this. The overwhelming consensus was this: women are less likely to forget how they felt when they met you and when they were around you (especially if it was negative or unfavorable to them). So regardless of what happens from that point on, most women will hold on to that perception of you damn near forever UNLESS something happens in your life that changes their mind about you to their short or long term benefit (i.e. you get some money or fame). If you were the introverted geek at 14, or the obnoxious jerk at 23, or the religious zealot at 26, sorry homie, but that’s who will always be, even if you become the renaissance man at 33. So fellas, if you have thought about dating ladies in your past, I challenge you to think about how you treated them then, because chances are, the effects are irreversible. Just like women fail at changing how a man rolls, we fail just as much at changing a woman’s initial perception of you. (Sidebar: Fellas, your best bet is to date a woman in your past that doesn’t know enough about you from back then to project an outdated perception onto you.)

“Come on Rich, have more faith in us ladies. We’re not all like that. And some men are like that too.”
You’re right, but most women are and it’s more common among women. Given that women are more emotional by nature, that makes it a more likely scenario. Plus, I know one man that most sistas despise, even though he has changed over the years, and sistas still hold him to the perception they had of him from years ago: Kobe Bryant. MESSAGE!!!

Now I’m not saying guys are not like this either, because in some cases we are, but most of our perceptions start in our pants, given that we’re visual creatures. Men are more likely to forgive the first impression he gets from a woman, ESPECIALLY if she is FINE. How many times have you heard this conversation:

1:(Homie/dawg/frat) I don’t know about her. She mad stuck up, she ain’t got no sense.
Dude 2: Yeah, she went to (school) with us and all, but ain’t doing nothing with herself.
Dude 1: Right, and she did a lot of our boys dirty on the low low.
(silence)
Dude 1: BUT would you still hit that though if she came at you?
Dude 2: Hell yeah (homie), she’s fine as hell.

Steve Harvey brought up on his morning show about the things that some men will tolerate to be with the “baddest chick”. I’m sure most of you who are reading this know a dude who’s in a jacked up relationship with some woman who is no good for him, but he will not leave because of his ego in the sense of “I may NEVER get a woman this fine ever again.” Do I think that’s stupid? Yep. Have I done this before myself? I would be lying if I said I didn’t. Most men don’t let go of Shallow Hal until they grow up and realize what truly makes them happy (and also that the women who are “pretty, smart, and nice at the same time” that we slept on back in the day because they didn’t have enough “style” are usually married by 25).

Like myself, we are all a work in progress and our goal should be to improve and self-upgrade whenever possible. We all have misjudged people based on where they were at the time, and where we were at the time. Remember folks, this is 2009, not 1989, 1996, or 2007. By nature, we all evolve and (for the most part) grow and continue to learn more about ourselves and about others. Everyone wants to feel prideful about who they are, what they are about, what they have overcome, and where they are going. Think about where your Creator has brought you from, what you have been brought through, the trials and tribulations of your life, and that feeling of pride and confidence you have as a result. Now imagine if those in the ballpark of your circle only see you as that nappy headed nerd who didn’t wear deodorant in middle school, or the campus player that tried to sleep with every cheerleader during senior year in high school, or the unapologetic DrewRat from freshman year at Howard, or the overnight celebrity that pledged a frat. Is that you now? Of course not. Why do you bitch and complain when people lock you in to 1999 when you do the same.

Personally, if I did that, I wouldn’t have some of the blessings and support I have now. For example, the same woman who cussed me out 5 years ago over email is the same woman who prayed for my recovery from my recent surgery. Granted, I didn’t forget that vicious email, but at the same time I have also acknowledged the God in her that she showed to me through her thoughts and words. There comes a time when we have to update our perceptions of ourselves and of other people, otherwise our personal growth is stunted. Think about that the next time you roll to that next class reunion or homecoming.

06
May
09

The Leverage Factor (and the women who use it)

One of the things that’s a common trait in most women is that, from the time that they are young, there are 2 days that they dream of: the day they’re proposed to, and the day they actually walk down the aisle. They spend countless hours planning both of these BEFORE they even get the guy they want to have this experience with. They know all of the specs on the ring they want to get – for example, a girl I dated told me straight up she wants a Princess Cut m platinum engagement ring with a certified non-blood 3 karat, VS1 minimum clarity diamond on top, lined with another carat of baguettes on the side……. and it has to come from Tiffany’s – and they know what dress they want, what size they need to get down to fit into it, and they know the exact venue of the wedding, who they want on the guestlist, which one of their exes they WON’T tell about it, and the architecture of the first home she will live in with her husband.

One woman who embodied this mentality was Jacklyn from VH1′s reality show “Tough Love”. She had this goal to be married by 25, and all of the aforementioned stuff was already planned, so all she needed was the guy. Her problem was that her aggressive timeline and forwardness with her intentions scared a lot of men off, including her ex boyfriend Greg, whom she left to attend the “boot camp”.
(now we get into the meat of this blog)

While Jacklyn was at camp, she met this wonderful guy named Brock who she felt was someone who was willing to “step up to the plate” and build a relationship with her. The host Steven, however, threw Jacklyn for a loop when he set up a gathering at the house where Brock was there, along with her ex Greg, who was flown in for the show. Steven did this as a test to see if Jacklyn could let go of the past and move on. Brock showed during the party that he was more aggressive in his pursuit of Jacklyn, which made Greg feel, and look, a little salty on the show.

There’s a saying that (paraphrasing) “the most beautiful woman in world is your ex on another man’s arm”. I guess Greg took that to heart with a huge sense of urgency. Once Jacklyn returned home, Greg was at the airport waiting for her with a ring in tow. Despite what Jacklyn said on the show (more or less that she moved on and wants to build with Brock), she accepted the proposal and decided to kick Brock to the curb. Unfortunately for Greg, the ring wasn’t enough to keep Jacklyn around as she ended up leaving him a few months after because he didn’t have any act right.

What you just read is an example of what a handful of women have done since God knows when: in order to get something they want out of the man they’re with, they will use another man as leverage to get it, ESPECIALLY if what they want is an official commitment (in other words, put a ring on it like Beyonce). Most men, whether they know it or not, admit it or not, have been used in this way by women. Think about movies like “Two Can Play that Game” and its sequel “Three Can Play that Game”. The former was about a woman establishing control of the relationship by using tactics (including the leverage of another man) to exude power. The sequel was about a woman using similar tactics in order to get her man to propose (which he ended up doing).

“So Rich, what’s your point?”

Here it is ladies……….. if you have to resort to such tactics to get what you want out of your man, YOU’RE WITH THE WRONG DAMN MAN!!! If you’re not truly simpatico with your man, everything will align and you have nothing to worry about. You won’t have to resort to games for your goals to be fulfilled within your relationship because you will both be in it with the same goal in mind, which should be to build a relationship that’s headed toward MARRIAGE, not the hottest proposal or the sickest wedding day. It’s like playing a pick up game of basketball; you can have the sickest moves and the tightest dunks, but if you go away losing the game it don’t mean a damn thing. In other words, you can have the most romantic wedding proposal just like the Case video, you can have the most beautiful, shiny ring to put your girlfriends to shame, and you can have the sickest destination wedding in Turks and Caicos; you can have a man who does all of the right things for you, but NONE of that matters if your marriage fails because you’re not with the RIGHT MAN. And what you could end up doing is miss out on the right man by using another man as leverage as part of your game to reach your goal.

As I mentioned before, most men have been used in this light. To add a personal touch, I will man up and say this has happened to me on more than one occasion. However, the lesson you learn is to ask the right questions from the jump and don’t be afraid of the answers you might receive in return; get it out the way, establish expectations and boundaries, and it will lessen the BS you might encounter later on down the line. It’s not out of pocket (regardless of what women may tell you) to ask about a woman’s history early on in the “getting to know” process (not on the first date, but early on). If she is less than 100 days out of a relationship, PROCEED WITH CAUTION, regardless of the reason why they broke up. Chances are that feelings have not been totally cut off, and in the event the woman does try to use you as leverage, 60-90 days is the typical amount of time most men take to do what he needs to do to get the proposal together.

I’m a brotha who knows his worth and understands his options, hence why I have a ZERO tolerance policy for these type of women in my life. Maybe it’s the Gemini in me, but using a man as leverage is straight up disrespect, shows the pisspoor-ness of your true character and is subject to an automatic and non-negotiable exfoliation from my life. I believe that I’m a good man (as I’m sure most brothas who are reading this also believe about themselves as well), and, even though I’m an imperfect work in progress, I’m good enough for ANY la woman that comes into my life. With that mentality, I have too much pride to keep those type of women in my life; it’s not cool.

Just like I as a man am responsible for (how I treat) the women in my life, whether I date them or not, women have the same mandate. At the same time, who cares if you get what you want in the end, right ladies?

17
Feb
09

Ask RichBrand: Handling a successful woman.

As part of my return to blogging on occasion, I’m once again introducing another segment to my blog called “Ask RichBrand”, where people can email me with any questions or topics that they want me to discuss and/or elaborate on.  Please feel free to send all commentary related to this to rich1906@gmail.com. Please, no SPAM or BS is allowed and you will be blocked from sending me stuff. Also, your questions will be anonymous and your name will not be used in a post.

A few weeks ago, I got the following question emailed to me from a friend of mine:

Can a man handle a woman who’s more successful and not have any insecurities?

For thoes who are not familiar with the dating game in Black America, this question is about MONEY. Knowing the source from which this question comes from, I know she is a successful woman who’s doing her thing, and apparently she’s having trouble with finding a man who can accept making less money than her.

Before I go into answering the question, let me set a point of reference. Now granted, there are a LOT of men out there who have this thing where they feel they have to make more money than their women, and alot of women all but require that their man make more money than them. IMHO, along with society, the biggest pimp on Planet Earth is to blame for this: Dear Ol’ Mama. When we’re growing up, it’s mom that’s telling young ladies to find a man that will take care of you, and/or that is equally yolked to you in education, finances, and values. As young men we are told that we have to place ourselves in a position where we are successful and can provide for our families. Now, you have some moms who say this with all genuine intentions, and I definitely respect that. But for most, the message received is “LADIES, no matter how much you got, make sure you get a man that got as much as you or more, and FELLAS, women don’t marry down, so get all you can get so that a woman will respect you.”

A lot of this derives from outdated values that originate from the days when the man was the sole provider for the family (i.e. brought home the bacon) and the woman stayed home and primarily took care of the house and the kids. This was also a time when hand-me-downs was the rule, and not the exception, and there were not a lot of white collar opportunities for African-Americans in this country (let alone these same opportunities for women). But as time has evolved, women as a whole have become a more integral part of the white collar workforce, making their own, and having their own, and less likely to run to college to get their MRS. However, you still have some that hold on to those values of only entertaining men that will take care of them financially. I know gorgeous women personally who are lawyers, doctors, consultants, managers who make well into 6 figures annually with their base salary, let alone bonuses, where I will have this conversation with them:

Me: So tell me, why are you single?

Her: Because there aren’t any good men out there who are on my level.

Me: So what is your level?

Her: Well, you know I’m a (insert career), so I can’t find a man who can handle that and what I’m trying to do.

Me: So what if a man approached you, who wasn’t intimidated by all of that, but made half of what you made, would you….

Her: Oh no no no, like I said, he has to be on my level, preferably above. I can’t deal with no broke man. Any man who don’t make (blank) is broke to me and ain’t ready for me.

(Sidebar: If I was having this conversation with a woman who make alot of money and isn’t as attractive or even attractive at all, I would refer her to my “Stay in your Lane” blog from ’04, LOL)

To not drag this on too much longer, I will separate this by gender, and I will start with US, the BROTHAS:

The biggest thing that you have to realize is that, in the end, it’s your career and your degree(s) that define only PART of you. With most women, it gets you in the door, but with a good woman it’s not enough to keep you in the house. If you don’t develop yourself as much on the inside as much as you develop your resume, then all of your accomplishments mean nothing. You have to be secure in yourself to realize your own worth as a man before a woman can realize it. Once you understand who you are, then you shouldn’t have any issue with the accomplishments of the woman in your life. You could be a Java programmer and she could be a doctor. But if she shows through her actions and her words that she loves you FOR you, as is, BROTHA BE HAPPY. I grew up around enough examples in my family where the woman made more money than the man. However, all of these couples approached their marriages as partnerships (WE mentality) and they shared all that they had together, because they realized that they were one unit now, no longer separate entities. And despite all of that, the women still let the men in their lives be men. Making less money is not a knock on your manhood, especially when none of that will matter when you meet Jesus at the gate because all of that will be left down here. So if you got a good woman in your life, be like Bobby McFerrin, “Don’t Worry, Be Happy”.

Now LADIES, don’t get it twisted. The burden of a man’s security in a relationship is not solely built on him taking the “MAN UP” approach. You need to do some things on your end as well, along with some self-assessment of what it is that you look for in a man. Let’s be real about it, if you are a successful lawyer who makes $150k a year, and a good man approaches you that makes around $70-80k a year, and you dismiss him because he don’t make enough money to supplement your lifestyle, you’s a DUMBASS (and trust me, I have dealt with and KNOW a lot of women who make this mistake daily and wonder why they’re single). I ran into a lot of women like y’all during the year I was in Atlanta (and if I elaborate further I will step on the toes of a later blog about independent women, so I digress). Here’s a rhetorical question I want to pose to any single woman reading this:

If money and the opinion of your girlfriends and co-workers wasn’t a factor, what type of man do you think God would bless you with?

You have to understand that you can’t always give in to the pressure of society and the pressure of your family either. Just because your mom and dad were lawyers and doctors doesn’t mean you have to be one and/or marry one. Just because your homegirl copped herself an investment banker doesn’t mean you have to get one too (now, I’m not saying date the bagger at WalMart, but hopefully you’re educated enough to understand what I’m trying to say). Contentment and happiness trumps all, and if you care more about what a man has than how he treats you, then you need Jesus. Trust and believe there are a lot of good, well off, hard working men out here who will not be intimidated by the PhD, MD, or JD behind your name, and who won’t embarass you at your work holiday party or at your BLSA function.  

In the end, the security of a relationship is a two-way street, and is not solely on the man or the woman to be the gatekeeper. It takes two to act as one, and if you take that approach, shouldn’t have any problems.

25
Nov
08

Random thoughts of Dating (10/31/08)

As I sit here on another friday night of solitude, I’m thinking about some of the convos I have had over the last couple of weeks and a few of the observations I made at homecoming a couple of weeks back. So informally, I’m going to say what’s on my mind:

- I always question if I could see someone from my past (high school, college, grad school) that I could go back and date right now. I ran into a few couples recently; people where I knew both of them from before. And the first question I asked them was “Did you two know each other in undergrad?” and the answer is always no. I can think on all of the gorgeous, talented, and dynamic women that I went to school with, and not a single one could I go out with at this moment in a romantic sense, cold turkey, without getting to know them all over again.

For those reading, think of people from your past, and I’m sure you can back me up on this. But just to put a question out there, could you date someone you know/used to know from your past?

- Women are less lenient with platonic prison than men are, because men have a stronger likelihood to end up in there than a woman in a man’s.For women, first impressions are HUGE; if you were not her type when she met you, chances are you will never be her type, even if years down the road you become her type as she will always remember the moment you met when you weren’t. But one thing is true, that it usually takes a life changing experience for someone to be released out of platonic prison. For a man, most likely it’s a change in his financial situation for a woman to pardon him (or it could be his looks or, depending on the female, his letters), and for a man to pardon a woman, her looks change for the better (her skin clears up, she loses 50-150 pounds, etc) or she becomes single (but then again, if that’s the case, was she ever in platonic prison or were you just holding out, LOL).

Is my assessment off base, or did I hit the nail on the head when it comes to women?

25
Nov
08

Are Women Scaring Off Their Men??: Article, Response, Rebuttal (12/3/07)

This was an article sent to me over a year ago, but a classmate of mine copied me on some banter that took place when it was sent to her last week. Here’s the article:

Are Women Scaring Off Their Men

The Washington Post
By: Joy Jones

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 he r 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 m any 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 mi gh t 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 ou r g race 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 i n ch arge 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!

Then, one of the ladies copied on the email wrote the following response to the article:

Why do women always have to change? Perhaps the issue is with some men and their inability to have a partner who is equal to them?

My mother worked just as hard as my dad did, although, as a male he made more money, they both had equal educations, they both were equally in charge in the household. Guess what? When he came home from a hard days work, he had her support and when she came home from a hard days work she had his until the day he died. My sister is a federal agent for ICE as is her husband, my brother in law Chris-Even though my sister has a Masters and I am not sure if my BIL does, they make the same amount of money since they are at the same level in the government. They both work hard and have three children (twins infants and a toddler). Again, both of them support each other and love each other.

These are two examples of working relationships that I have wherein there is equality in the workload and equality in the relationship and there is love. I don’t care if this article was written by a WOMAN, it doesn’t mean it is correct or that I will agree with her.

Here’s MY rebuttal to her comments:

It seems as if (female) doesn’t get the point of this article. The article is not saying that there aren’t women like the ones you mention below. The article is saying that the women you know are in the minority in today’s world. It’s not about the income that comes in to the household, or how many degrees are posted on the wall for the man or the woman, it’s about the establishment of an equal and healthy partnership between man and wife in the black community. A real man has no problem with a woman that’s equal to him, but the conundrum arises when black women begin to disconnect with the black man in terms of his needs (see Tyler Perry’s character in “Why Did I get Married?” as an example), which is what drives some brothas to the Becky’s and Rosalia’s and Kim Ju Wong’s of the world.

(to steer away for a second)
Now, I understand the struggles that black women have in the corporate world, but what you don’t realize that in 2007, you have it MUCH easier than we do in terms of opportunities, the problem is that voluntary family decisions by women (and not sexism) is the main reason there are more black men in middle management and higher than there are black women. Below there, black women have higher numbers than black men. So the next time you see a woman on the cover of Black Enterprise who’s in ssenior management, chances are she either doesn’t have children or had them in her mid to late 30′s. Since some women are so afraid of the biological clock, they will plateau their career in sacrifice to have a family. Nothing wrong with that, just stating fact…….. but back to the lecture at hand.

The article does not talk about assimilation, it’s about adaptation. Think about it, you act one way around your people than you do at work or at church, correct? Why can’t you take that same adaptation attitude and use it in the home as well. If you really love your husband, black women would do that. Now if you see the marriage as more of a professional partnership, then you could take your professional attitude and use it in the home, but assuming that you actually marry a man because you love HIM (not his degree or his assets, but HIM), then there’s a level of consensual submission (agreed upon by SOLELY the two of you with no input from your ugly single friends, which is why they’re single themselves) that has to take place. The roles must be defined. Two people shouldn’t handle the household budget, two people shouldn’t be in charge of home improvement, etc etc.

Now have you thought about the adaptations that a man has to make in a relationship? You don’t think a man loses a level of power and independence, especially if he’s single himself? The need for change is not exclusive to just women. When a man’s ready to get married and make you his wife, he went through some changes in himself to get to that point, and (if he’s a good man) accept the responsibility of marriage and knows he has to make sacrifices. So this shows me that when you read the article, you were thinking about yourself, probably telling yourself “that woman’s full of ish, that ain’t me. What the hell she talking ’bout? Why do I have to change? Why can’t a nigga just love me for me and man up?” As black men, we have to soften our tone, and display deference to people all day long (unless we’re entrepreneurs). We sometimes lose power, have to display humility, be humble when we’re right, be contrite when we’re wrong. Do we want to deal with the same crap when we walk through the door to our home? HELL NAW. I’ve been putting with Ronald Crysozenski’s crap all damn day, I’m not trying to put up with your nagging behind at 7pm when I walk through the door.

Now that you have a cornerstone for how I feel about it, any thoughts?

25
Nov
08

Bringing “Company” to Yardfest (10/16/06)

Hopefully this one is short, but this one’s strictly for the ladies. From having this talk offline with some women, I was very surprised by the response that I received.

I was talking to a female friend of mine who’s dating a man outside of her race for the first time. He invited her out of town for a weekend (a quick getaway of sorts) and she said she couldn’t go because that’s the same weekend as homecoming. They began to talk about alternative dates for the getaway. Before she knew it, she asked him to accompany her to homecoming.

She asked me how would I feel if I saw a woman that I was trying to get at all throughout undergrad show up to the yard with a man of another race on her arm. My response would be somewhere in between “awwww no wonder, she don’t like black men” to “that’s some bull…., how the hell?”. From there I moved into talking about how black women are hypocritical about interracial dating, for which my notion is that most think black men date white women because they’re weak and ain’t ish, however black women date outside the race because of lack of options and the brothas that got at them ain’t ish.

Of course she tried to retort, but to no avail to me. From there I asked her a question, and it’s the same question I want to pose to any woman that’s reading this………

Let’s say you’re at Yardfest, and that handsome brotha you remember from undergrad shows up to the yard with a new companion. What would be the lesser of two evils for you in terms of the companion: a white woman, or ANOTHER MAN?

You make the call ladies……………..

25
Nov
08

Why is WE Single? (repost from Myspace 9/30/2005)

In a rare free moment I had as a 1st year MBA student, I wrote this blog after I got out of my car before my evening classes:

Over the last couple of days I have listened to colleagues in my program talk about how it’s ironic that there are so many single people in our program (for those that haven’t kept up with me, I’m doing my MBA at Howard right now), read an article in the school paper about how times have changed and women come to Howard and get a degree as a plan A versus the old plan A where they would go for their MRS. versus their MPH, and yesterday I listened for a few minutes to the Michael Baisden show on the topic “why beautiful black women can’t find a man”.

The show yesterday was definitely interesting, and it brought some things to light. A LOT of women were calling in , bitching and complaining about how beautiful they were and how, for some reason, a lot of men don’t approach them. IMHO, there are a few reasons why that could be. But the main reason why some of these “fine” women are having trouble are one of two things. Either they have un-manageable baggage that no decent man will want to undertake, or the absolute reality that some women won’t come to grips with: YOU ARE NOT FINE.

Another reality that was brought out yesterday was something that a lot of men (no matter what race, status, or home training) think: there’s no reason that a woman who’s pretty, smart, nice, can cook, has interdependence, exercise a commitment environment versus a control environment with her man (unlike Jackie Christie), and is God-fearing (first and foremost) should NOT be single, for any reason at all. The first thing that goes through our heads is “if she’s single, there must be something wrong. What the hell’s wrong with her?” Granted there are a lot of women in DC, who I happened to find attractive, that happen to be single, hiding behind any “rock” they can find. Ladies, there’s nothing wrong with saying “the right man for me hasn’t found me yet”. That’s real simple, and that shouldn’t offend anybody. We all know that a woman’s more likely to compromise her career for long term romance and/or a family than a man is, so when I hear a woman say she’s too busy with her career or for school, I and most men think that’s BULLSHIT. And there’s not one woman who can give enough of a justification to prove me wrong (sorry you can’t, I’ve seen enough to know otherwise).

Another point I want to make is that a lot of us do get caught up in looks and are more likely to make concessions for a woman’s interior shortcomings just because she’s “fine” (why do you think so many of these celebrities we drool over have issues?) and women do the same with men that either have obtained a certain status or made you cum real hard (tell me I’m lying). Now, from personal experience, I have learned that women have issues, regardless of their level of aesthetic pleasure. I have dated some “aight” looking women who had insecurities about dating me. I’ve dated the light skinned, light eyed “Cali looking” chick (my most current dating endeavor) and even though she meant well, that woman was CRAZZZZZZY, DERRRRANGED. I said all that to say that women are women are women are women, which means that looks don’t dictate if a person’s sane or not.

Bottom line of this blog is to say there’s no official patent on why a lot of beautiful women are single, or even why I am single either. You could blame the rise of DL brothas, the lack of educated black men, the rise of DL SISTAS as well, or the unrealistic expectations of men and women. This could get argued about for hours, but bottom line is that WE should not give up hope on each other, learn to be honest and have genuine dialogue with each other about our intentions and what we want to do, and stop making excuses for our faulty romantic lives and have the ability to move on to bigger and better.

I know what I wrote sounds (to me) like rambling, but what do you think on this subject?

25
Nov
08

NIGGAS who Cry Wolf (2005)

I originally posted this on myspace back in 2005, and consider it one that needs to be posted again in the Greatest hits category. So enjoy:
NO, I did not stutter in the subject heading. However, in the interest of time (since I have papers and finals to prepare for), I’m going to make my best attempt to keep this short. Some of my lady friends have asked for me to write this since they heard the theory. You asked for it, and here it goes…..

As one of the good men that are “still left”, I’m sick and tired of being sick and tired of having to suffer for the mistakes that NIGGAS (not black brothers, but NIGGAS) make when it comes to how we treat our black women. Not everyday, but enough times, I always have to hear “he cheated on me”, “he’s verbally abusive to me”, “he doesn’t pay me any attention”, “we’ve been dating for 9 months but he won’t commit”, “we’ve been together for 4-5 years and he hasn’t talked about marriage”, but the common denominator is “I didn’t think it would be like this when I first met him”.

Granted, a couple of those complaints are about brothers who are, more or less, afraid of commitment for fear of losing freedom or getting hurt. However, those first 3, a good man wouldn’t do that to his woman. PERIOD (damn I think the rest of this blog is about to sound like a song written for Joe). But this all goes down to one thing (in my opinion): there are a lot of NIGGAS out there who are crying ‘wolf’ about being a good man, when in truth they are the wolf in sheep’s clothing themselves.

For those who don’t remember the story, allow me to recap: there was a kid in the village who wanted to get some attention, and at the same time play a joke on his village. So he would run into the village yelling ‘WOLF, WOLF’. Everyone would come ready to take the wolf out, but in truth there was no wolf to kill. A few times he did that, and after a while he lost his credibility. Then one day, the wolf actually showed up. He went into the village yelling the wolf was coming again, but since no one believed him, they weren’t prepared and the wolf came in and did his thug thizzle on the village.

NOW, bringing the analogy home: A lot of women have been lied to by NIGGAS out there saying “oooh baby, I can treat you right, I can be the right man for you, I can do this, I can do that, you will never have to want for anyone else again, etc etc”. But a few weeks (or months) later, brotha man will do wrong by you (however way he does that). But of course a woman thinks “oh, it was just that dude, I’ll have better luck next time”. But “just that dude” turns into 2, 3, 6, 7 of them. Then after a while, when a woman’s fed the same game, she thinks it’s bullshit, and her instant classical conditioning puts her in a position where she thinks that all (black) men are like the X amount of dudes that have done her dirty. As a result, their minds are so jaded that when they meet a guy like me, all they see is those dudes that did them dirty. So, with some women, I get deaded from jump, and when I ask what their issue is (other than the typical lies women give to men that translate into not being interested), they cite the examples above.

For the real brotha that would do right by his woman and wouldn’t do this to the women he deals with, thank you for being real, listening to your parents, and contributing to decreasing the trend of bitter black women who leave black men for other races or for OTHER women.

Now, for the NIGGAS who don’t fall into the category that me and some of my boys and frat bros fall into: QUIT FUCKING SHIT UP FOR US.




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