T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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556.1 | "my feelings" | CRISPY::BAKERT | Too HOT to handle,too COOL to be BLUE | Thu Jan 31 1991 10:10 | 34 |
|
This is what I feel about any mixed relations....there is far tooo much
racialism in this world..I hope that the poem makes it clear as to what
and why I think the things I do !
-< "Colours" >-
The People fight before they talk
The people see colours
The people see barriers, that arn't really there
The imagination controls
People say they hate, without really knowing
Because of the Race, because of their skin
People don't have faith anymore
They act with revenge that they've never known
They act as if it were a sin
If only everyone was blind
If only the sounds of their voices the same
Would be different if colours were not seen
I think so!
Tracie Baker.
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556.2 | unremarkable differences | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Thu Jan 31 1991 10:16 | 12 |
| > Have we adjusted to this situation
I don't know about "we" but I've adjusted to this situation. One
of the things that I think delays making this adjustment is making
a big deal about it. The best thing one can do is to not even notice
at a conscious level that a couple is bi racial. It's not an important
difference so it should become unremarkable. Unremarkable in the sense
that noone feels the need to remark on it. As long as people do remark
on it it highlights the difference and causes people to consider that
it is a difference worth considering when it really shouldn't be.
Alfred
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556.3 | I have three beautiful, sort-of black step-daughters | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Thu Jan 31 1991 12:47 | 45 |
| My wife and I are white. Her first husband was black, and they had
three daughters during their twelve years of marriage. We are raising
the girls; their father has failed to pay about $50,000 in child
support during the last seven years; he has them visit about three
weeks per year. Now the girls are 12, 12, and 15, and my wife and I
will end up splitting the roughly $100,000 we'll spend on their college
education during the few years... despite the divorce decree which
makes their father responsible. I resent this man for his failure to
contribute financially, particularly since the girls are good loyal
daughters who remain faithful to Daddy. I haven't received a hug since
he put in an injunction with the girls, a few weeks after we married
six years ago. To a significant extent, my resentment carries over to
black males in general; they ARE generally less responsible with child
support than none-too-responsible white absentee fathers (this according
to the then-head of the Mass. agency attempting to enforce child
support, himself a black male). The girls' father has his share of
problems, however, including a personality which renders him largely
unemployable. I've come to accept him and his behavior as a fact of
life.
Another aspect of this is raising black (sort of) daughters in a white
culture. Mom and I are pretty conventionally white, and their father
has few black cultural attributes (whatever those are). I've spent some
time in the BLACKNOTES conference, attempting to understand what this
black-in-white-context upbringing implies, but didn't learn very much
that I thought useful. The punchline is similar to th stance of the
earlier replies to this note: my wife and I are ignoring race. We live
in a liberal community (Brookline, MA) where the girls encounter little
racism; each of the apartments in our three-decker (which we own) is
integrated, as is the single-family next door, as is the neighborhood
generally. The girls' friends are almost uniformly white, but only
because that's who is in their classes at school. A few years ago the
twins proudly announced to me that they were going to host the very
first INTEGRATED birthday party. I was taken aback, since ALL their
birthday parties have been racially integrated. They went on to explain
that they were the first to invite BOYS (they knew I'd appreciate their
non-sexist approach :).
At this point, race isn't much of an issue. I predict that it will
become much more so, as the girls begin dating (the fifteen-year-old is
on the verge, but has to shed a few dozen pounds and rewrite her
personality first -- it's amazing what you can inherit :( ).
FWIW - Hoyt
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556.4 | "Not All are Bad" | LEZAH::WATKINS | | Thu Jan 31 1991 13:40 | 15 |
|
re:.3
What do you mean sort of black? Are they or not? Birth wise the do
have black in them you or no one else can change that. No matter what
way you raise them they will always be mixed children.
Black men are not less responsible. There are bad apples in all race
one is not better then the other. There is a way to get him to pay for
the girls. Even though he does not pay support he is there father and
the girls love him don't try to disencourge them. They will in time
decide what they have in there father. If you embark this it may hurt
you in the long run and you don't want to do that. Just give them all
the love you can.
V. Marie
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556.5 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Jan 31 1991 13:54 | 9 |
| It took me many many years to realize that there were people in the world who
had a problem with my relationship with Janice because we "weren't the same
race." It was mindboggling when I finally realized they were SERIOUS. I still
don't get it.
Someday the basenote's question will be completely meaningless and
incomprehensible. I live for that day.
-- Charles
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556.6 | | SOLANA::BROWN_RO | Greater Satan metropolitan area | Thu Jan 31 1991 18:13 | 26 |
| re:0
Have we adjusted to this situation? Depends on the "we" I suppose....
I recently noticed that there are more images of mixed couples in the
media, which may gradually change the overall public perception that
it is O.K. There is now a sitcom on FOX, that shows a white woman
married to a black man, with their kids from prior marriages brought
together in one family. Music videos, in particular, and for better or
for worse, probably have greater impact than any t.v. on the young,
and they are showing many multi-racial and multi-cultural situations.
I see more black and white teenage kids hanging out together; I think
this is a good sign.
My personal experience is that I, white man, dated a black woman for
a year, and never caught any flak for it, except for the occasional
curious look. I live in Los Angeles, which is such a broad melting
pot, and major immigration center, that one can see every possible
combination, and probably a few that haven't been thought of yet %^).
So, I think things are getting better, overall. People are people,
after all.
-roger
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556.7 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Feb 01 1991 03:36 | 15 |
| My sister has had a similar experience to that described earlier,
or maybe worse, and she and her ex-husband are both white and both
English.
From what I have seen a different cultural background is *much*
more important than a different race, but then there is often a
correlation between race and cultural background.
If your partner believes that parental approval should be taken to
the extent of arranged marriages or is completely irrelevant, if your
partner believes that by reason of sex or caste they are your
(superior/equal/inferior), if your partner believes in completely
different moral values, if your partner believes your children should
be brought up in religion X, attitude to (and trust with) money - these
are much more important than race.
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