T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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783.1 | | LJOHUB::CRITZ | John Ellis to ride RAAM '91 | Wed Apr 24 1991 09:56 | 3 |
| What was this episode about?
Scott
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783.2 | I saw it, here's what I remember | KAHALA::CAMPBELL_K | Attainable Love | Wed Apr 24 1991 11:40 | 14 |
| I saw the episode. It was about successful black career women in
the DC area, who are discovering there is a shortage of black single
men with comparable careers. They profiled one woman in particular,
and also interviewed a small group of her friends. Apparently, black
women are more likely to achieve, while black men their age are not,
and many of them are blue collar workers or in prison. Some of the
women are marrying interracially or marrying "down" to black men who
make less money than they, and who work at less comparable careers.
There were also experts that they interviewed, but I really was having
trouble staying awake, and missed some. These women were beautiful and
classy ladies! It was very interesting, and something I was not aware
of at all, but apparently this is a fast-growing trend.
Kim
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783.3 | *I'm* not surprised! Its been bad for years now! | ASDG::FOSTER | | Wed Apr 24 1991 11:49 | 14 |
|
Whaddaya think I've been bitching about for the past 4 years!
Actually, here in New England there is supposedly a plethora of
eligible black professional men. However, since they are so in demand,
they have a range of women from all walks of life to choose from. Many
of them are enjoying playing the field! Others have no interest in a
partnership with a professional woman but prefer an "arm-trophy", a
good-looking fashionable woman who spends her time admiring him instead of
developing her own talents. And then... some of these men are not the
most socially developed of God's creatures, having spent too many of
their formulative years in labs or with computers.
I guess I'm picky. I'm definitely single.
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783.4 | | CALS::MACKIN | Rebel without a home | Wed Apr 24 1991 12:31 | 9 |
| A good frind of mine (black female) seems to have been in a position
very similar to 'ren's.
She was from Chicago and *hated* New England because, as she put it,
there was no diversity here. In Boston it's essentially all WASPs and
their ilk. She found that finding a steady boyfriend (with similar
tastes) was extremely difficult. One could say impossible, but that
sounds like hyperbole. She finally took the opportunity to go back to
Chicago a year or two ago and is, as I understand it, very happy there.
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783.6 | I said more than I meant to. | ASDG::FOSTER | | Wed Apr 24 1991 14:33 | 42 |
|
Lisa, I really have to disagree.
The problems in the black community around male-female relations are
acute to extreme, and well documented inside the community. One of the
large contributing factors is the tendency to espouse the American
societal norm in choosing a partner, i.e. to marry a man of equal or
better social, financial and or professional standing.
In America, several factors, including discrimination and reverse
discrimination are skewing the numbers of black men and women who
advance into professional careers. Black women fill double quotas, and
are therefore more "marketable" in professional fields. Black men, on
the other hand are having a hard time getting off the streets and into
colleges and professional jobs. One fourth of America's black men in
their teens and twenties have been in jail. And that's a higher number
than the number of black men who have been in college. Top off the fact
that the number one cause of death for black teenaged males is
homocide, and that a lot of black men do not make it past age 27, and
you have a SERIOUS problem. A shortage of black men in general, and a
discrepancy in "marryable" men, by societal standards.
A lot is being written about more and more black women who are looking
at the alternatives: marrying non-black men, which many of us have no
interest in, marrying younger men, marrying men from different social
strati, marrying men with less buying power. But these differences
often bring stress to a marriage in and of themselves. Black people are
frequently very conservative, and often work very hard to follow
societal norms. Sometimes far more than the white people who made the
rules to begin with, the same white people who have helped create such
a sense of inferiority within the black race that the tendency to follow as
many of the "white" rules as possible is a looming reality.
Better stated, because we aren't white, we often go overboard in trying
to prove our respectability, and our ability to follow white rules.
Obviously, this topic is kinda personal for me. Society bombards me and
my black women friends with rules about what the "right marriage
partner" will be like... just black. But that doesn't fit the
demographics of the black population. Simply put, the dichotomy creates
a LOT of problems.
|
783.7 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | so wired I could broadcast... | Wed Apr 24 1991 14:37 | 7 |
| A black friend told me of her search in singles/dating places (like
Together and Lunchdates - you know - "club" type situations where they
match you up), where the entire place had only 7-20 black males to
offer EACH. Period. That sounds like a dearth to me.
-Jody
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783.9 | similar situations... | TLE::DBANG::carroll | get used to it! | Wed Apr 24 1991 14:45 | 31 |
| 'ren, I think that the problems for black women might be similar in some ways
to the problems for Lesbians.
First off, there is the big issue of simple percentages. In your daily life,
most of the people you meet are not black...and are not Lesbians. This
is especially true for those of us in high-tech - for blacks, it is because,
as 'ren says, so few black men are in professional jobs - for Lesbians it is
because so few women are in technical positions. You can try to compensate
by filling your social circles with people of the right stripe - get involved
with the Black or Lesbian communities - but then you end up with the "small
world" syndrome. Everyone has dated everyone else, everyone knows everyone
else, and it seems like everyone I might be interested in is "taken". It
sometimes feels like I have met every Lesbian in the Boston area and already
eliminated her as a potential partner - does this happen in the black communities
too?
Also, women of all stripes are bombarded with expectations about who they
will marry, that are set by the white male majority. Even as we realize
that we are not *part* of that majority, and therefore the rules don't mean
much, they still affect us. It is hard to just throw of a lifetime of societal
pressure. Things like the expectation that you won't marry accross class-
boundaries, etc...
Imagine life for a black lesbian... :-)
D!
[PS: Not to say all aspects of the situation are the same - there are big
diferences like the fact that all Lesbians are "potentials" for all other
Lesbians, whereas the only potentials for straight black women are *men*,
and also the conservative element you mentioned.]
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783.10 | | KAHALA::CAMPBELL_K | Attainable Love | Wed Apr 24 1991 14:48 | 10 |
| Sure it's slim pickens out there for me (white) but at least there's
pickens. I can relate to Lisa in that I am pickier than before, and
that there probably is a limited amount of men that fit the
requirements I want, but there are plenty of men to weed through who
are of the same level financially, and in class. From what I gather
the problem that black professional women have is much different. They
have a very limited number of professional men of the same level and
race to even choose from.
Kim
|
783.11 | Actually, I'm only one voice in the crowd... | ASDG::FOSTER | | Wed Apr 24 1991 15:46 | 38 |
| Just so people don't understand, from my first response, I can really
see where Lisa was coming from. There really ARE black professional men
here! Unlike in many other areas. If there are going to be black
professional technical people anywhere, makes sense they'd be in the
technical meccas of America, like Rte 128. That's why it seems so crazy
that there are still problems finding mates. Here in New England,
compatibility plays a bigger part of the problem than it does in other
areas where the women are even more desperate! :-) When I responded to
Lisa's note, I just wanted to set the record straight about the
national trend. I didn't watch the show. Most of my friends did. I
didn't see any reason to watch something I had heard before.
As to Jody's comment, I researched lunch dates and found the exact same
thing, but I want the reason to be clear. It is NOT because the men
don't exist. Its because they have no need to pay upwards from
$300-$3000 to find women.
Don't get me wrong. NUPE::HAMPTON is certainly a gorgeous professional
black man. They exist. Hamp's married though. (Darn!)
The majority of my male friends are black. I firmly believe that if any
of them REALLY wanted to be married, they would be. Several of them
admit that they're having too much fun playing the field to be
bothered. Others are terrified of commitment, even if they aren't
"swingers". And some, like me, just haven't found Ms. Right. But the
RANGE of women they date is very wide in terms of education, age,
background, etc. Meanwhile, my female black friends are all trying to
meet black professional men, with a range of interests to suit our
personalities. And we're professional. The non-professional women also
want a man who's made it, who's successful, who's financially "able".
If all the women are looking at the same pool of men, those men have
some fun choices ahead. And a lot of us women are going to get LEFT
OUT. Combine that with the fact that there are many men who prefer not
to date their professional peers, and that tells you WHICH OF US will
get left out...
And now I've really said enough.
|
783.12 | | WLDKAT::GALLUP | living in the gap btwn past & future | Thu Apr 25 1991 10:33 | 39 |
|
I wish I'd read Lisa's note....
Anyway.... It seems here that black women seem to have a preference
for dating/marrying black men. Yet, in my experiences, I've found that
many black men actually have a preference for dating white women
(especially blondes).
Perhaps this has something to do with why there is a lack of
"available" black men?
I really feel the need to say that it's not easy for "white women" to
find men that they are compatible with either. I get really tired when
I hear from people over and over again "you could have anyone that you
wanted!" It's simply not true, there is NOT an "overabundance." And
even if there was, a decent percentage of the "white males" out there
who are available are, basically, not worth my time. I feel that many
"white males" have an attitude that they were brought up with that I
just don't prefer.
It's not easy....for ANYONE....especially those of us that have been in
the workplace for awhile, who are "grown up."
I think society has engrained into our heads too often that race/colour
of skin MATTERs. Frankly, I don't think that it does. For me,
attraction comes from the inside and the colour of someone skin is
irrelevant to that attraction. (I also don't find a person's standing
in society to be relevant either, but again, that's personal
preference).
No one has it easy finding someone......I think, though, that the
people who put more and more restrictions on the physical attributes of
the person they want to be with......are probably the more apt to be
alone later in life. I feel that if a person creates the atmosphere
they expect to life in, then they must accept the consequences of that
atmosphere (and the aloneness as well, if that is a result).
kathy
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783.13 | | HOYDEN::BURKHOLDER | 1 in 10 | Thu Apr 25 1991 11:29 | 21 |
| I'll add a few comments to the discussion of finding someone. After
years of looking I've decided I'm wasting my time trying to find
someone. My coupled friends remind me that I'll probably meet that
special someone when I stop looking. The friends also suggest that
I keep focusing my energy on me and my growth.
I don't like when my friends remind me of this but deep inside I
believe them. I do know that putting awareness on my desire to find
someone is tiresome and unproductive. Besides, I can't find someone
the same way I foud a new job, or a house, or a car, or all the other
things I'm good at finding.
After many frustrating years I've come to the conclusion I do not know
how to find someone.
I have a button that says, "It's more important to BE the right person
than to FIND the right person."
I hate it! :-)
Nancy
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783.14 | | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Wed May 01 1991 09:18 | 22 |
|
re. 13
Nancy,
I kind of believe in fate/destiny. (Can't you tell, I'm Chinese ;-))
I think your friends are right. I think people meet their partners
in the least likely situations (when they are not actively looking).
Somehow I think people act differently (sometimes not very naturally)
when they have their antennas up.
I think as we "age", our inner selves become more important than
our looks to attract. Some people have this happy, healthy aura
around them and I think that's what a lot of people find attractive.
The way I see it is - life is so short, just enjoy ourselves,
with or without a partner. Partnership is not always rosy,
once in a while, I wish I were single again.
Eva
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