Everybody Panic: Why Worrying About the Marriage Crisis Won’t Help Black Women

I’ve been reticent to write yet another relationship column, but a reader recently posed me this observation in at letter after The Root published a second article about black women and dating and the Obama marriage:

It seems as if every single time these articles come out, they report the same tired statistics (44% of black women are unmarried, there are very few “eligible” black men available to date, etc.) and give the same advice (from black men: lower your standards to get a man; from black women: date outside the race and don’t wait for a black man).

Perhaps the articles (in Essence, online, everywhere I look) aren’t trying to suggest that I should lower my standards to attract a man, but they usually come across that way. No other racial or ethnic group is told to be “less picky” as bluntly nor as often. So now, I’m wondering whether some people feel as if black women are supposed to settle for whoever wants us, have lower standards, etc., in part because of the “attractiveness pyramid” that places Asian women on top, white women below, Latina women below that, and black women dead last. Shelby’s comment on the last discussion of the politics of interracial dating on your blog, about realizing that she was being systematically devalued each day, struck a chord with me. I’ve definitely heard the same from other women–the questioning your attractiveness and value, and the way that it chips away at your self-worth.

I’m also wondering about the impact of the articles on others. Will men of all shades assume that we’re so desperate to find love that we’ll accept anything? Will/do people in general blame us for our “failings” (i.e., the inability to get married)?

This letter resonated with me particularly because it points out the maddening factor in almost all of these articles — that black women are the problem. Not that the issue is complex. Not that there are multiple factors at play. Not that it’s simply hard for anyone of any race to find a mate, but that something is fundamentally wrong with black women for doing what most people do — seek a quality mate.

More after the jump.

What is ever more maddening is that for every article about lowering standards there are complaints that black women have no standards. That we lie down with anyone and want hard, thuggish men who are no good. Which one is it people? Are we uppity black American princesses who won’t settle for anything less than an Ivy League baller OR are we low, screw anybody harlots who keep getting knocked up by some dude who’s either been on, is headed to or is currently in prison? Because stereotypes are clashing like mad when it comes to people’s opinions on this.

But I think that what bothers me the most is that these articles fuel the insane panic that many black women already have naturally over their worth and their desire to find a suitable husband. I think I’ve been reading about the black marriage panic for most of my young life and I never quite got it. It didn’t make sense to me why I should marry a guy I have little to nothing in common in just because I needed to “drop my standards.” I tried going with a fellow who picked me once who was well below my standard of who I would normally date and it lead to my nightmare, psychologically abusive starter marriage. Because I didn’t listen to my first mind (the one that said this guy is not all there) AND because I’d bought into the hype (He’s nice and he likes me! I shouldn’t be so picky!), I ended up emotionally devastated and out of more than $10,000 when I barely made $22,000 a year.

Hooked on “Marriage Panic!” did not work for me! And, news flash, ladies. It’s not going to work for you either.

“Marriage Panic” made me lower my market share value — meaning: I thought I was worth less therefore I was “worthless.” And he treated me just as cheaply as I came. Women have to have standards. We’re the one’s who could get pregnant. We’re the ones who could end up in a position of dependence. You can’t expect women to not have SOME standards.

True, some women are unreasonable or unrealistic, but so are some men. So are a lot of people who aren’t black. That’s a human trait, not a pathology.

The other issue that people also seem to be forgetting is that more black women are educated, professionals. More black women go to college and more black women graduate. It sounds like a lot of black women are trying to do the right thing. But instead of praising these women and building them up, all we can do is scream at them as if they are the sole reason why they’re alone. That their “high standards” are the only impediment to their happiness (or their low standards, depending on which stereotype you believe).

Aren’t there some larger, broader issues we’re forgetting?

And that’s when the other boy chimed in, speaking as if the words left a nasty taste in his mouth: “Marriage is for white people.” (Washington Post)

While it is true that 41 percent of black women aren’t married, 43 percent of black men AREN’T MARRIED EITHER! And the complaint usually isn’t that there aren’t enough black men. The complaint is that there aren’t enough black men on the same level as that tide of college educated black female professionals. Level doesn’t necessarily mean money or education, but most men and women marry people who have similar backgrounds and desires to their own. So black women are the ones who are supposed to devalue themselves?

I say, IGNORE THE ARTICLES. IGNORE the marriage panic. Why? Because worrying about it is NOT HELPING. It is not getting you a husband. It is not making you feel good about yourself. This is part of the problem. I gave up worrying about the marriage panic once I realized that I was a good catch. I was a good wife to my horrible husband and I was a good girlfriend to the past guys I dated. I realized that I just needed to keep my eyes open (and my mind alert), so when the next guy comes along I will be the best person I am and not act as if it is the end of the world if I can’t get a man to love me.

Yes, you should have an open mind. Yes, you should let your heart guide you, but your head better be close behind. You need to know your worth and you are worth more that whatever bullshit is being sold to you right now. Every woman has worth. Every man has worth. Being open-minded about who you date and who you love doesn’t mean being empty-headed.

If you are desperate to find a mate, you just have to do it the same way it’s always been done — network your ass off. Join clubs and organizations. Go to events and things you like. Make lots of friends. Be nice to your co-workers. After all, they might know (or be related to) someone who is perfect for you. Love the person who best loves you based on solid and sound judgment. Never negotiate your heart or your bed out of fear. You have to ignore the stereotypes and negativity about your beauty or your personality. You have to make a quality assessment, a real, informative assessment of yourself, and you can’t use the measuring sticks of naysayers and doubters.

Think about what you like, love and don’t like about yourself. Focus on working on you. Finding your happiness. Fixing the things about yourself you think you need to improve and learn to love the things about yourself that are intrinsically loveable. Be happy. Be at peace. Don’t be desperate or angry or sad. None of this will help you. Those things are symptoms of the Marriage Panic.

And you can’t let it win.


59 responses to “Everybody Panic: Why Worrying About the Marriage Crisis Won’t Help Black Women”

  1. dana111 Avatar

    Awesome… I agree with EVERY word you typed. Recently, I have gotten over the "woe is me, I am black and unlovable" crap and actually began to love my life and the me that’s living it. Everything else will fall in its place in due time. Thanks a bunch

  2. Thank you for writing this. I am so tired of hearing about these "scare black women" articles. Why are people so focused on marriage anyway? Just enjoy life, if the right man or woman comes along then great but if they don’t, then so what? Keep on enjoying life.

  3. Lisa J Avatar

    A-freaking-men!

  4. dukedraven Avatar
    dukedraven

    Sometimes you were just in the wrong place at wrong time. I lived in New Jersey for 33 years and most of my relationships were crappy. When I moved to Colorado, things turned around for me. Then I came to North Carolina in 11/07 due to an illness, and I’ve hardly been out anywhere. I instinctively know that women around here are not my type and I’m planning to move elsewhere to start over again. BTW, a lot of black women are attracted to jailbirds. When my step-sister was young, she was educated and hot and could have gotten a successful husband. Instead, she married a long-term criminal. So cliche.

  5. dukedraven Avatar
    dukedraven

    I agree, sisters. You don’t need a man. Just play every Tom, Dick and Harry and enjoy life. You go girls! Hee, hee

  6. ellebelle Avatar
    ellebelle

    Yes!

  7. I have written many articles on exactly this issue. The media can create hysteria where there is none. Don’t believe the hype. Don’t look at the negative images. There is hope. You will just not see it splashed across CNN. I am a happily married black women who knows lots of other happily married black women. I did not lower my standards. I did not accept anything I didn’t want. I have always been aware of my worth and stupid media sterotypes can never convince me otherwise. Yes, there are many more educated black women than there are black men. That doesn’t mean you have to settle for men who want nothing from life except a free ride. Your advice is sopt on. Be positive, be open. He may not appear in the package that you expect but you have to look at character and spirit more than clothes and wallet.

  8. Such a difficult subject.The majority of my black female friends are single, while the majority of my female friends of other races in the same age group are married. Nothing wrong with my black friends – actually they are quite exceptional in terms of personality and education and sometimes looks. Certainly they are no different from my friends of other races who are married. It is very hard for them not to feel panic. I remember my own panic when I was single. I was a dating fool. I was determined to find a partner but I just kept meeting unavailable and unsuitable men. Sows ears that I kept trying to fashion into silk purses.Then I met a really nice British guy while on a long term temp assignment at a bank on Wall Street. We became good friends and he developed a crush on me which I rejected because I was busy dating Mr. Wrong and trying to make him Mr. Right. Then one day it dawned on me that he WAS my dream guy – he was bright, kind, emotionally available, had integrity and goals that were non-materialistic – and so I accepted his romantic interest. That was 9 years ago and was the best decision I ever made in my life. Before him I never knew it was possible to be so completely at home with another human being. He is my best friend, the love of my life and every day I thank God for him.

  9. Danielle Belton Avatar
    Danielle Belton

    @ fly girlExcellent points. I think part of the reason why I’m also not really worried is what you wrote. I actually know many married black women. I realize that this is the exception and not the rule, but my reality IS filled with happily married black women and other women of color. Both my parents have been married for over 36 years. My best friend is married with two beautiful children. I’m able to meet reasonably nice guys and while I have had a mixed dating history, the fact that I feel attractive and people have been attracted to me really makes me just roll my eyes at the stats. I’m honestly not that worried about it. But then I’ve always been very career orientated and figured that if I worked on myself dating opportunities would open up.

  10. Kidsistah Avatar
    Kidsistah

    Danielle, thanks for a great article. I think what a lot of women fail to do is realize that happiness starts with self and that looking for a man to create your happiness is the wrong approach. I was lucky enough to have learned that young, but sometimes media stereotypes, dire statistical trends and even comparing your situation to the people around you can get you caught up in the hype. So it’s cool that you addressed the issue here (even if it is another relationship post). We dig those too. Snark on!

  11. I don’t believe there is a reason to panic. I don’t believe it is all the fault of black women with standards that are too high to make any man husband material. But, I do believe that the conversations I have had among African, African-American women and West-Indian have been quite similar. There is a focus on height, education and money. These are all important, but the same women then complain that they cannot find ANYONE. Now, that is untrue. I know the statistics of available black men and I still believe it to be untrue. Women have to stop complaining and really begin a journey to find the man that complements their true needs, desires and personalities. Height, education and money will, of course, also be considered in your assessment. But, these criteria are not where the conversation of a long-term relationship should either begin or end.Also, ladies, if you have been single for a while and your friend attempts to get this message across to you, listen, or stop complaining.

  12. ABoogie Avatar

    It’s not marriage I worry about. It’s motherhood. I’m traditional in the sense that I’m not going to have a child out of wedlock. Furthermore, I don’t want to have my first child in the ‘at risk,’ period of being 35+. I don’t want to be worried about college tuition when I should be concentrating on retirement (ie having a child 40ish). This does cause me to have a bit of ‘marriage’ panic. I don’t intend to lower my standards, but I can’t lie in that it causes me distress to think that my dream of having a husband, 2.5 children, and a dog named FIDO, is beyond my control. So…in the meantime I’ll continue to date, ‘focus on career’ (because I don’t have the alternative to focus on family), and ‘have fun and live life.’

  13. Great article!I am so very tired of all the articles and blog posts bemoaning the lonely Black woman. For a period I was in a "OMG nobody is ever gonna love me & imma end up an old maid!" phase when many of my friends were beginning to get married. And now? Many of those same friends have either divorced or separated and now tell me they wish they would have not jumped on the first guy who gave them a second look.I really love & appreciate you brought up the education factor. Folks like to talk about how so many Black women are educated & their high standards, but they’ve forgotten the bigger piece of the puzzle. I think Black women in my generation were taught by our mamas & daddys that we should go get our education so that we could take care of ourselves. We played by the rules, and now we get told that we’re too uppity or whatever. Blah at all that.

  14. Mwanga Avatar

    Sometimes what seems like ‘lowering your standards’ to some women might be considered ‘taking a realistic self-assessment’ to the rest of the world. Just because you play for the Cleveland Cavaliers doesn’t mean you should hold out for LeBron James’ contract. And I just don’t see how playing the victim role is going to help.

  15. "I think Black women in my generation were taught by our mamas & daddys that we should go get our education so that we could take care of ourselves. We played by the rules, and now we get told that we’re too uppity or whatever. Blah at all that."CHURCH!!!!!!!!!!!

  16. I absolutely loved this article. I listened to the magazines and movies that advised me to lower my standards and I wasn’t happy. That’s definitely not the way to find a man. The line "I thought I was worth less therefore I was "worthless."’, means so much to me. Women have to be more confident in themselves. Only through confidence and complete self respect will women be able to find The One.

  17. I think like everything else associated with the Black experience, this "panic" in itself is another one in the long line of divisiveness. It’s just another one f those pathologies associated with years of indoctrination in my own opinion. Let’s be honest: this is not a phenomenon women of other races associate themselves with, no?

  18. I’m glad I’m a lesbian. ๐Ÿ™‚

  19. Monica Avatar

    You said it Snob.

  20. Dawn Danielle Avatar
    Dawn Danielle

    PREACH! Well said, I never feed into that crap. It’s damaging.

  21. polticallyincorrect Avatar
    polticallyincorrect

    These marriage articles never really interview real people. How many of these unmarried people want to be married? How many are gay? The desperate black women sure keep Essence and Steve Harvey in business

  22. Right on! I love this article. You’re so right!

  23. I think we all know that the contradicting stereotypes are just bad advice mixed with bitterness from rejected men. Since I was little, I’ve always heard how I was lazy, but stealing other people’s jobs.

  24. shermyb Avatar

    Thank you for adding some sense to this debate!!!!!!!!!!

  25. LMAOi just knew this blog would have mad posts in it.

  26. rikyrah Avatar

    This is on point. I’m hearing and feeling you.

  27. Great post, Danielle!

  28. Juliet Okafor wrote:There is a focus on height, education and money. These are all important, but the same women then complain that they cannot find ANYONE.YES! YES! YES! Thank you so much for saying this! It’s not about lowering one’s standards, it’s about changing one’s TYPE of standards.

  29. BluTopaz Avatar
    BluTopaz

    The one thing that is often overlooked in these discussions is that Black men are never told to raise their standards of themselves, but they are allowed to be very discerning when it comes to Black women. I have had guys tell me about their children with assorted women, and when they find out I don’t have any kids they were like ‘that’s perfect. It’s so rare to find a Black women your age with no kids, btw what’s your #, …etc. The hypocrisy is astounding. And the part that kills me about it is our statistics re: home lives can be dire with the oow families, 44% BW unmarried, and the high rates of AIDS among us (presumably from mostly Black men). So where the hell do these imaginary high standards come from except to write another one of these ridiculous articles? Like you mentioned Danielle, which is it-are we a bunch of oversexed hoodrats or siddity lonely women. Folks are forever labeling all Black women and I don’t accept it. For me it’s not just a matter of education (there are some ignant educated men and women out here), but a man has to have good moral standards. There’s nothing wrong with that, and I refuse to feel guilty because I don’t accept the ex-con who lives with his mother and he waits for her to come home and cook (don’t care how fine he is), or the Ivy League educated man who does not share some of the same interests that I do, just thinking i’m cute is not enough for a relationship. I knew a young White woman who refused to marry her boyfriend unless he passed the bar exam, which I think is excessive. But not wanting to hook up with a loser is understandable, apparently for everyone except Black women-smh.

  30. Lite Bread Avatar
    Lite Bread

    Beautiful Snob,Beautiful Snob,WOW! Like, WOW. My dating pyramid is TOTALLY INVERSE of the one described, lol. (Reality is, it’s only that upside-down top slice. Maybe, big maybe, Latino. But I don’t want to air my total obsessions in public, lol). Asian chicks?! Gawd Help me! Bunch of skinny, stuck up (can I swear here?). I just DIE when you see ’em, with size 00 jeans sprayed on and that Boob implant rockin’ sizer 40DD’s on that Asian 85 pound frame. LOL! Yeah, that’s you all right. Racist?! God-Damn RIGHT! I’m a BIG, BIG BIG fan of Sir Mix a lot and "Baby Got BACK". ‘Cause it always makes THIS whiteboy shout.I AM certifiable. I think. 12 Monkeys. (Do crazy people, like, KNOW they are crazy?)

  31. Lady M Avatar

    Great article, Snob.

  32. RainaHavock Avatar
    RainaHavock

    Great post Snob! I never fell for the whole marriage panic because I know alot of black women who are married. Now personally I’m not looking for a husband right now since I little on the young side. but still the guys I date are all intelligent nerds and we’re still friends even after the relationship ends.

  33. robert Avatar

    good write up and is the lady in that picture single ???

  34. I’ve always said that there are plenty of Good Black Men out there (*raises hand*) its just that the Bad Negros have better press agents.

  35. clrssrn1129 Avatar
    clrssrn1129

    Amen and amen, my Sista!!! You have given me new hope in our black loveliness and strength. I really needed this article to validate where I am. I have always believed I was worth more; but I did not live that belief until recently. Thank you for bringing that belief back into my life. You are an awesome woman. Stay blessed!

  36. Hmm. I’m conflicted here.a)My parents are the WORST example of marriage. My father treats my mother like shite and has for the last 40 years. Both sides of my family have horrible marriage problems. All my uncles and I do mean ALL of them are cheaters. I have 10 uncles. Seeing my familial examples, I have no use for marriage. I can do bad by myself to quote Tyler Perry. 2)Yet, it would be nice to have some sort of relationship. I have to be strong in everything because I have no one on whom to lean when times are hard. People don’t realize how hard it is to be a black woman. Your hair isn’t long enough, your skin isn’t light enough, your booty isn’t big enough. No one wants a black woman. That’s why so many of us are alone.

  37. violet Avatar

    As the questions started to be asked the first thing that popped into my mind was solidarity. Yep! what do all of these groups ahead of us have? Even black men. Black women still do not know how to stick together and look out for our own welfare. There are tons and tons of organizations to help fatherless Black men, imprisoned Black men, uneducated Black men, stereotyped Black men, etc, etc! Staffed by Black women! I don’t know how many times I’ve heard Black women state how hard, difficult, troubled, dangerous, it is for Black men. Oooh, how victimized they are!! How is it so better for us?!?Asian women, Hispanic women have highly regarded and respected Initiation rites for their girls and women. They honor and highlight their natural beauty.I see the bonds starting now, with blogs and sites such as these. but we still don’t get it! WE-NEED-TO-STICK-TOGETHER!!! And empower each other and ourselves with NO exceptions!!! I knew that Essence magazine was in trouble when Black men became jealous of it, and we stupidly did not see or acknowledge that and so they started publishing more and more black male input! There are even Black men consistently on the covers! And for pity’s sake, the magazine ENDS with a black male having the last word! Lord have mercy!

  38. Snob – loved the post. I have been married for over 12 years to a wonderful man who is just right for me. Dated all types of folks and races but started the marriage panic syndrome at 30. Reading all those crazy articles and statistics. Unfortunately, that crap is still out there. Be yourself, learn to be by yourself and love yourself. When the time is right for you and for your mate it will happen. But please let go of the crazies. I know two friends who have dated the same person for over 15 years!!! and are not happy – meaning they want marraige their partner did not and they have now convinced themselves that they never really wanted it. The men they are with are both great guys but that type of relationship is just as abusive as being in a physically abusive one. It’s all about love and focusing on what works for you and being comfortable enough to embrace it.

  39. SouthlandDiva Avatar
    SouthlandDiva

    I love how often women are encouraged to settle if they don’t want to end up single and lonely. For the record, being single does not equal being lonely, miserable, unlovable, weird…pick a unflattering adjective and insert here ( ). It amazes me how the two are so often conflated! Clearly singlehood is the just desserts of over-educated, gainfully employed, home-owing women who dare assert any agency or discrimination in their personal lives. I mean how dare such a woman ignore the "….pssst….. hey baby whatz yo phone number, can I call you?" from some random man on the street!I am not going to continue this rant here…… but thanks for discussion. peace

  40. bizzychik Avatar
    bizzychik

    I totally agree with your post, Snob.I am a 34 year old black woman. I am an attractive woman. I am employed full time and am also a full time student. I don’t have any children because I prefer not to procreate outside of marriage. I also don’t feel that I am financially stable enough to support a child as a single parent in the style that I wish to. I had recently felt myself caving in to the pressure to just settle with anybody, but my past experiences are enough to steer me away from that path.I went through a similar experience as you did with your first marriage, only something kept telling me not to marry him, and thank God I listened. I now believe that I was blocking my blessings by staying with him as long as I did. I currently have a restraining order on him and if he lives to see 50, I will be shocked. Fill in the blanks.I have had to endure such comments as "You’re too picky", "You’re never gonna find anybody" or "You should just have a baby". Meanwhile, the last time one of my friends tried to "set me up" with her boyfriend’s brother it was a disaster. The highlight of that experience was when I commented on a remark that he made and said "I’m intrigued by that". His reply was "I don’t know who the f*** you talking about, but my name is Fred". I didn’t laugh in the brother’s face, but I wanted to SO bad. But I’m supposed to give THAT a chance. And not, he was not joking, just not comprehending.The sad thing about it was that the brother was intimidated by me from the get go. Kept telling his brother "She don’t like me, she ain’t interested" when I was totally willing to give him a chance. When I told him I was a Psych major, he was all negative right away. He informed me that that was a ten year program (like I didn’t know) and then stated that there must be "something wrong" with me because I was not married and didn’t have kids.Needless to say, "Intrigued" and I did take it any further. LOL!This is the type of man I run across on a daily basis.And people wonder why I’m single.So I will continue to network and pursue the interests that I have a passion for, and I am confident that I will meet a man who shares those interests. And to the naysayers I say do you, and I’ll do me. But I’ll be damned if I end up with someone like that. I have tried and I’m here to tell you it does not work! !*gets off soapbox*

  41. plumple Avatar

    black snob, this response to the washingtonpost was brilliance, to say the least.

  42. Gregory A. Butler Avatar
    Gregory A. Butler

    Aren’t terms like "Quality men" or "educated men" mere euphemisms for "men who make a lot of money"?If that’s the case, why not be honest about that?As far as this curious idea that a woman who is a "college educated professional" (which in a lot of cases translates into "secretary" or "public school teacher") should only marry a college educated man?I’m a union carpenter, and I work with a lot of white guys who’s wives have college degrees – if it works for their race, why not for ours?But, if the real issue is money, then you might have a problem – because there aren’t that many African American hedge fund managers!

  43. @ GregoryI can’t speak for every woman on the board since you’re generalizing, but for me college educated is a four year degree and an intellectual curiosity. And professional is I’m a journalist/writer. I would gladly date another journalist even though we are notoriously broke people because some of the most wonderful conversations I have ever had have been with my fellow writers. I’m attracted to intellect, period. If you follow politics, if you have self-awareness, if you like the arts, if you like history, if you enjoy reading I tend to like you. The last crush I had on a man was a construction/dock worker at department store because he actually read the paper more than I did, was a frustrated writer and rather, for lack of a better term, manly, but, unfortunately for me, the guy was gay. So, so gay. My point was women (and men) like to date people who have similar backgrounds and interest to there’s. I always felt "college educated" was short-hand for "I went to college, you went to college. Maybe you’re not a complete moron." But that’s what the term means for me. I would date a man who didn’t go to college, but I really need someone who can hold a conversation and not give me the side-eye if I drop a ten cent word or deride me for being some studious which has been my past experience with dating guys who didn’t go to college — the over all resentment towards someone who has had a very different life from their own. Meeting another college educated person doesn’t guarantee I’ll avoid that situation (as I’ve dealt with resentment from guys on everything from having come from a two-parent home to having parents who supported me to being from the suburbs to how I talk to being lighter than them — that one was a head scratcher, etc.)But that was what I meant and I don’t think I’m the only one. As I wrote, some people are superficial, but I do believe that is not the whole nature of the beast.

  44. jiovanni Avatar
    jiovanni

    I couldn’t have said it better myself. I love your blog. ๐Ÿ™‚

  45. Damn Danielle, you echo/mirroring my life experiences to a "tee".Wonder why some folks (read: AA men) don’t get it?

  46. ScipioAfricanus Avatar
    ScipioAfricanus

    I was going to go in on you for the first few paragraphs you wrote. Alot of that part read like a bad faith interpretation of the history of these kinds of articles, debates, and the overall ipoints they’ve tended to make.But your main and final conclusion at teh end of the article – that people should ignore this whole crap in general and just be smart about finding the people you think will make you happy – is completely correct and I co-sign it completely.

  47. starrie Avatar

    i find it curious that black women are supposedly so unloveable, can’t find a man to marry them, we’re the lowest on the totem pole…and yet there seems to be endless articles stating this…my philosophy has always been to not waste my time on things/people i don’t like..apparently that is not the philosphy of the folks that continue to rehash these articles…why is that?

  48. SistaOpinion Avatar
    SistaOpinion

    Wow…I’m supposed to be working and yet I’ve come across another post I need to add my AMEN to. :)I too never really bought into the whole black women marriage panic…and I’ve been hearing about the challenges in black male-female relationships since I was an undergrad in the 80s. At my college it was well known that the few black men there never dated black women on campus: If she was on campus, she wasn’t black; if she was black, she was someplace else (often NOT college, hint hint). My first college boyfriend happened to be from the Middle East and you can imagine how popular THAT made me. *smh*With the exception of my cousin, who’s divorced, all the black mothers I know who are around my age and younger are married. Most of them are married to black men; some of them are (gasp!) stay-at-home moms. My parents have been married — to each other — for 45 years.As for me: Again, I never really bought into the marriage panic, but once I hit 40 and realized that everybody’s life is imperfect and there are good and bad consequences to every choice we make, I REALLY quit buying into it. I also never had this huge need to bear children; I figure there are many ways I can have children in my life if I really want them. Honestly, I actually like my life without children…but it would be nice to have a man alongside me for the ride. At this point, though, he’d have to be something really special…and I don’t mean that in a material sense AT ALL. I’m one of those glass-half-full folks: I’m going to keep on making my life the best it can be and staying open to possibility.

  49. Enrique Bravo Avatar
    Enrique Bravo

    Good article. Several points come to mind.1- Part of the mix causing among those black women having trouble on the marriage market is like part of the mix elsewhere- they are at the second tier of (a) physical attractiveness, and/or (b) youth.. The qualifier is of course a suitable pool of black men matching increasing evels of femal education and affluence. That is ONE primary consideration. But lost in a lot of the commentary is (a) & (b) above. Let’s be candid. Overall, attractive black women, measured in terms of height, body shape and general youthfulness have many fewer problems attracting men and potential marriage partners. Same condition among white women. Note "attractive black women" does not mean "white looking." To the contrary, tall, shapely, youthful, dark-skinned types have Always been at a premium with black men. Kelly Rowland is one example. Another premium dark-skinned type is the athletic lookers- tall. curvaceous but non-obese women like tennis star Serena Williams. I’ll speak plainly from a brotha’s perspective. It is a total myth that "light-skinned" women are the be all and end all of beauty for black men. That has never been the case. I repeat- tall, shapely, youthful, dark-skinned types have Always been at a premium with the brothas. Women who don;t meet this physical standard naturally are not in as much demand. Same lament is heard among white women as to the tall, shapely, youthful types commanding the lion’s share of the attention. Much of the ferment in the alleged "crisis" is driven by these "second tier" women. Is it fair? No but that’s SOME of the reality that’s rarely talked about.2– Age is another factor in the mix. Let’s be frank. late 30 something and 40 something black women will not be in as much demand as younger women. The exception, comparatively speaking, are those with Tier I looks, who have less trouble on the market. Is that fair? No, but it a reality on the street? Yes.3– Now there is also another factor besides mere physical looks as well in the mix- relationship baggage, including children. 70% of black births are nowout of wedlock. Let’s be blunt. A woman with a string of kids and "baby daddy’s" in the background is less attractive a marriage partner than someone without that baggage. By lowering their standards and acquiring such baggage, black women are lowering their market value, and lowering the value of the overall "brand" called black womanhood.4–As for media generated "crisis" talk- yes indeed we should consider it to be unjustified media hype, and critically examine and deconstruct it.5- So what’s the solution? We all know the solutions but the blunt speaking and hard, long-term work needed is not at all popular. Thousands will turn out and pay millions of dollars in aggregate to see and/or hear foul-mouthed, crotch grabbing musicians, but they will not spend a fraction of that on say an intense tutoring program to bring the education of black kids up to par- like the Asians do with their after-school cram academies. Nor will they support churches who try to speak bluntly about the most productive behavior (keeping ones’s legs closed for example) and attempt to enforce standards of productive conduct. In fact, such churhces are likely to LOSE members as folks drift away to hear less "judgmental" talk. We whine and complain about terrible conditions, but will not do what is necessary.The ultimate irony is that black women essentially have a lock on the black male market. White women overall are not looking for "Tyrone" with his pants half-way down, just outta jail, baby daddy in hiding.. Some pour their fury on the black celebrities that marry "outside" but that is wasted effort. Such celebrities are trivial in number, compared to the black population. Overall, interracial marriages are something like less than 10% among blacks. These are chump change numbers, as are the white skanks and chubbettes appearing on "Maury" to find out which black man test out to be dey ‘baby daddy.’ This is trivia, set up by and exploited by the media for its "freak spectacle" appeal and undercurrentsof racism.Black women have a lock on the market, but they are not exercising their power. Most black men essentially have nowhere else to go. Note I did not say all but most. But black women keep lowering the brand by giving in to the slackers, punks and playas. The competition is killing black women. As a former "playa" who exploited that competition, I’ll be blunt. As long as black men can find yet another willing leg-opener then the striving decent black women will be in trouble. The solution is not to lower standards. It is to raise standards across the board, and refuse to "give it up" until black men measure up. This does not mean looking for Obamas, but small things like only giving attention to black men who show coonsistent signs of progress- working hard in school maintaining a job, even low level employment until things get better, church attendance, etc etc,, the little indicators that draw snickers among the "sophiscated" set, but that add up to major pluses over time. Naturally this is not a popular approach but it is the only one that will yield long-term success. When wll negroes do what has to be done?

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