This discussion seemed to go nowhere for me. I was clear about my opinions and spoke about them often in my little group.
I did not post anything when reports came out saying single black women with more than 1 child were more likely to have children from multiple fathers. What the?! To a simple mind this information says, black women are out there having sex out of wedlock and producing all kinds of fatherless babies. There is no regard to the obvious lack of information, specifically how said woman came to be a single mother (death, divorce, taxes) or if she remarried and had more children but the marriage ended (again death, divorce and taxes).
I took the high road and discussed marriage instead. After all, most conservative minds would agree that it is the best environment for raising a child.
Then I get online and people are going on and on about black women losing their hair.
A recent study (click here for the abstract) published in the Archives of Dermatology makes the conclusion that continuous use of hairstyles that cause traction (pull on yo damn roots) will eventually result in hair loss on the top of your head, or in scientific terms central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia.
I'll be damned! You don't say? Obviously all the blogs and forums (or is the plural fora? Hmmm)- here, here and here - online and black women talking about hair have not said this for years! And NO, you don't get those little pus filled bumps if you have diabetes, we all get them when the hair is too tight.
And for all the naysayers who said we were being too sensitive about the billboard, and then about abortion (including the recent claim that black women are hookers) and now we're bald, what do you think now? Are we still being too sensitive? In the words of Lenese Herbert on the Facebook page of ForHarriet.com,
The MSM doesn't love or care about us at ALL. So, I regard this reporting as the type of "interest" and "concern" that makes me paint invisible lamb's blood/cross myself/light a bazillion candles/clutch my four-leaf clover/pray to all the saints in Heaven to prevent "the sickness" from seeping. Beware Trojan Horses; something else is afoot here; trust.
I'm keeping alert and I hope you are too.
I just wish that for once these studies would speak to a few black women and see what their sense of the situation, any situation is. We've been yelling online and even though Dr. Kyei is a black woman, hers is one voice that is geared to a particular audience, not the entire African American community or the African woman in the diaspora in general.
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