Archive for January, 2010

Video: Making Whiteness Visible, Pt. 1-5

// January 25th, 2010 // No Comments » // Social Injustice

Mirrors of Privilege: Making Whiteness Visible is a brilliant documentary and a must-see for all people who are interested in justice, spiritual growth and community making. It features the experiences of white women and men who have worked to gain insight into what it means to challenge notions of racism and white supremacy in the United States.

To watch the following playlist on Youtube, click here!

PART ONE:

PART TWO:

PART THREE:

PART FOUR:

PART FIVE:

Maybe We Need a Secret Signal

// January 24th, 2010 // 2 Comments » // Love and Happiness

In the past few months I have learned that You Tube is a hot bed for conversations, I mean rants, about people’s opinions about Interracial Relationships and biracial children. Who knew? I don’t think I realized how many people wanted to get their views out there or were even thinking about it. You Tube gives people the opportunity to put it out there, but not have a real conversation about what they are saying. It feels weird to know so many people sit around and talk about the different shades of color my family members are and how my family is either going to save the human race from ourselves, or tear down our society. It really hasn’t been THAT deep for us, and we are who they are talking about.

I find myself getting hammered in online conversations about what I don’t know about raising my children or about my relationships. Someone is always trying to school me. I don’t know and cannot teach my children anything about racism. They explain how I have created humans that will be confused about their identity forever. They explain to me that my husband has turned his back on his race, is a “Sell out”. And then the constant stereotypes of- He must beat and/or cheat on me. I hate my own race. I cannot attract a white man, so I date black. Our families disowned us. He is either is a ‘wanna be white’, or I am a ‘wanna be black’. We live in the inner city “ghetto”. Our relationship is dysfunctional. We are poor. We are uneducated.

That is funny. These people who know so much and feel it is there job to school me do not have as much experience in this as i do. I have been dating outside my race for over 25 years, since I was 15 years old. (Oh, lawd, that makes me sound old) I have 7 biracial children and have lived in the deep south so several years. I know a lot about being in an interracial relationship, I know a lot about raising biracial children, I know a lot of other IR couples and children. I will not learn something new from you. But, if you listen, you may learn something from me.

On to the hand signal part…

For the last 25 years I have belonged to a secret club that is for interracial couples, especially black men/white women. When ever I am out in public with my husband or family, and we see another couple or family that looks like us, there is an immediate acknowledgement that we see each other. A nod, a smile, a wave. When I found out a co-worker had a biracial child or was in an IR marriage, we instantly bonded. I have made friends with complete strangers walking past them on the street. I have made wonderful friendship online. My husband and I often comment, after going somewhere, how many other IR couples were there.

We want to see families that look like ours. We want to talk with people that share our experiences. Personally, all the negative stares and ugly comments are cancelled out by the community we have joined and the friends we have made.

I live in a large city that does have diversity. I understand many people do not. But, the Internet is now the new place to meet and talk to people you may not be able to find in your neighborhood. This is the reason behind the Interracial Family Organization. We do not always need to talk about race relations, but we have an opportunity to talk and listen to people that mirror our lives. People who do not buy into the stereotypes or judge people by what they see.

When we see another IR couple, maybe we should have a secret handshake or hand signal. Maybe we should stop and let them know how beautiful their family is. Maybe they do not feel they have a community of their own. Send a nice message on their Facebook/MySpace/You Tube/blog page, and let them know they belong to the club. Invite them here to the IFO website.

This club really has millions of members. There are no dues. But, we should have the rule that we each have a responsibility to reach out to others and share the love.

UrbanStone.co.uk

// January 22nd, 2010 // No Comments » // In the News

Since I recently realized that many of our readers are actually from the UK {yes, I totally stalk our site stats}, I jumped at the opportunity to pass along a wonderful resource to our friends in the UK which allows comparison of pricing on things like kitchen appliances, electronics, clothing, computers, and more. This is the perfect time of year to begin planning for the holiday season… to start considering gifts, making early purchases, etc. What better way to ensure that you’re getting the biggest bang for your buck than to actually be able to compare shopping prices?!

You can search through over 6 million products at UrbanStone.co.uk in order to find what you are looking for in a price you can live with by comparison shopping! Great prices are not the only thing you’ll find there – you can also find customer reviews which will help you decide which shopping deals are the greatest value for virtually any product! I personally have been needing a laptop, but jumping to buy the first thing I see would be irresponsible with a family as large as mine. With five children, every one of my purchases has to be carefully decided upon. UrbanStone.co.uk allows consumers to make the best buying decisions possible while also minding their personal budget. You can’t get much better than that!

This is a sponsored post. All opinions are mine.

The Responsibilty of Creating a Human

// January 11th, 2010 // No Comments » // Family Indifference

We often talk about how hard it is to do things in our life. The struggle to find and keep a job that allows the bills to be paid. How much energy and time it take to clean, cook, or do laundry. How hard it is to deal with people who have difficult personalities.  How difficult it is to balance our lives with work, family, friends, and still find time for ourselves.

We feel successful if we have received a promotion at work. We feel successful if we buy a new house or a new car. We measure our success by how many vacations we have taken, how many important people we have met, or how many toys we have.

We talk about all of our responsibilities. Becoming the best we can be at our jobs, maintaining a household, caring for family members, working on our relationships. But those are not the most important responsibilities you have.

They are insignificant compared to the responsibility of creating and raising  human beings, your children.

There is the actual physical work that goes into conceiving, giving birth, and the years of sleepless nights, running after toddlers, helping with science projects, being the chauffeur, and crying many tears. But, that is still the easy part.

Making a human is basic. Shaping a human into a beautiful adult person, inside and out, takes more than Spiderman sippy cups and the coolest new cell phone. You have to teach compassion. You have to model for them what to expect from a love partner. You need to help them find their talents. You have to help them work through their insecurities.

You have to be the person that you want them to be.

There is no one specific recipe to get a perfect outcome. Each child is very different. Different things motivate or interest them. Or not. You work with what you have and as a parent, you must be creative and flexible. They don’t usually learn life lessons through stories of your mistakes. They have to learn hands on.  You give them all the tools, then you step back and say a little prayer.

This morning I sat down with my 14 and 15 year old daughters to have the “Big Talk.” They are the youngest of seven, so I have the script perfected. No butterflies this time. I breezed through the basic of STDs, pregnancy, and contraceptives. They know these things. The had classes in school. But, I did want them to hear it all from me.

Then I went into the second half of the talk. I told them to slow down, think carefully, and be well informed before making life choices. I told them about planning your life and finding a partner that brings out the best in them. I told them I wish for them to have the same type of relationship as their father and I do. I needed them to feel empowered as a female to make their life turn out exactly how they dreamed. I encouraged them to use their young years to go on adventures, meet people, and have stories to tell their own children later. I want them to become strong, inside and out beautiful, compassionate, intelligent, non-dysfunctional women.

Now THAT is responsibility. No job I will ever do will be as important.

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// January 10th, 2010 // No Comments » // Blended Living

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This Week’s Twitter Chats

// January 3rd, 2010 // No Comments » // Blended Living

White Women are Weak and Docile?

// January 2nd, 2010 // 10 Comments » // Social Injustice

Many have heard the stereotype imposed on white women in interracial relationships. You know the one… white women are meek and mild.  They do whatever a man (or more specifically, a black man) wants. They don’t talk back. They cook and clean and know how to make their man happy no matter how he treats her. HA! As a strong, intelligent, and independent white woman with many similar pigmentally challenged friends of the female persuasion, I can say this is a CROCK! However, when it is espoused by some* black men (usually to black women) it is presented as some sort of attribute, a complement even. LOL So, I often wonder, why is it put out there? What is the purpose of the stereotype?

I have black women friends that tell me that they have heard this stereotype told to them many times by some* black men who date white women. The men, I am told, often say this in context of “explaining” why they date white women (like there needs to be an explanation). In promoting this stereotype, they often also stereotype black women as unusually demanding, loud, unsupportive, etc. So, when we look at this, it is actually a huge dose of sexism levied at women in general. I have never spoken personally to a man that pushes this theory, but I would like to, because I would expose it for what it is, flawed and filled with ignorance. Does this mean that there are no white women that are weak-willed? No. I find that when women are insecure about themselves, they may have a tendency to be more tolerant. Does it mean that there are no black women that can be loud and inflexible? No. However, you find this in reverse as well. Why do black men, who have felt the sting of negative stereotypes themselves, feel compelled to advance them against their women, white and black alike? Additionally, for this article I am not even addressing the same types of things, but magnified, said about Asian women.

So, back to my question regarding the purpose of the stereotype. I am not a black man that promotes this thought, so I can’t really know why it is done. However, I’m going to throw out a few theories for your consideration.

  1. Black men that support the stereotypes may feel that they need to explain why they would date outside of their race. They have to find something wrong with black women, to justify them being with a white woman. If this is the case, it appears it would come from a place of insecurity about their decision to date white women. I don’t think I would want to be with a man that is feeling these type of conflicting emotions over being with me.
  2. This stereotype may be used to manipulate black women by targeting their need/want to be in a relationship with a black man. Possibly there is the thought that if these black men keep talking about their choice of white women because they are more docile, this will encourage black women to behave in the same way.

One of the main detriments of this stereotype, in my opinion, is that it pits women against women. White women in interracial relationships know that some of the more piercing looks of disapproval regarding their relationship often will come from black women. Can you blame them? I know if I was constantly told that the men that I wanted a relationship with were not with me because they thought white women were “better” I wouldn’t react in a positive manner either. Additionally, possibly because of that hurt and anger, some black women turn the stereotype around from a (false) positive to a negative. Thus, the white woman whom the black man says is sweet/docile regardless of what is done to her, then by black women become labeled as doormats and “can’t handle their business,” spineless, etc, while the black men that are with them, become labeled weak because they “can’t handle a REAL woman.” Ohhhhhh, it gets ugly, doesn’t it?

These stereotypes need to come to an end. They need to be challenged. They are detrimental. White women, it is not a complement. Black women, do you really believe this mess? Black men, if you are dating only white women because you “think” there is something flawed about black women, you need to check yourself. Women, remember when we were young and we vowed to our girlfriends not to let boys divide us? Well, that was good then and is still good now.

*emphasis made to note that this writer is only referring to black men that engage in this stereotype and is fully aware that this does not pertain to most black men and should not be interpreted as such.

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