Saturday, June 19, 2010

I'm Single, and I'm Over It.


Alright, ya’ll; I get it. I’m black, I’m educated, I’m single. Thanks for bringing it to the forefront of my attention all of the time. Thank you for the constant reminders that the running theme of my existence should be loneliness, and big ups for the ubiquitous insinuation that my likelihood for marriage is steadily declining with each deafening tick of my biological clock. Oh, and shout out to Nightline for arranging a line-up of entertainers to tell me what I can do to rid myself of this heinous disease… I can’t forget about you.

Now that I have quite possibly placed myself into the "angry black sista” category, let me clarify the reasons as to why I feel that my anger is justified. For the past few months (years?), black women have been forced under the harsh magnifying glass of society and inspected for every pitfall and shortcoming that may or may not be contributing to their ability to marry. It has become so pervasive that I can rarely login to Facebook without someone posting a link to an article that promises tips on acquiring the proverbial keys to the heart of a potential love interest. Never mind the fact that this interest may not be what you need (at all)… but hey, it’s a prospect so you should be happy. With each article written, each forum hosted, and each comment issued by heralded “love doctors,” I personally feel that a shot is taken at the appreciation that I have for the person that I have had to evolve into, who just so happens to be a single woman. For some reason, I am being given reasons to believe that it is largely unacceptable to be single past a certain age, and I almost got caught up in the matrix (note the “almost”). The barrage of attacks launched at single blacks largely detracts from the strength of a person who can sustain themselves, by themselves, in a world that provides every opportunity for them to falter. It has also occurred to me that each debate does not do a thing to provide solutions to a seemingly disastrous problem, but rather provides a myriad of opportunities to stir up dissension and bitter blame games with the losing parties being both black men and women. Can we say community fail?

I am by no means claiming that the desire for love and marriage is wrong. But, I would like to encourage the possibility of seeing the beauty that inherently lies within each person, regardless of race or sex. Perhaps the key issue is that we’ve neglected to make this observation for so long that it has obscured our ability to recognize how magnificent we are as individual units… with the constant pressure to attend every First Friday event in the city to increase the possibility of being noticed, it’s easy to lose sight of how good we are single. Until Mr(s). Right finds their way to you, use this time to cultivate your brand. That’s right: find a hobby. No one wants to be around someone who constantly drones about how much they resent their lives. Work on becoming whole first and recognize that a spouse is primarily a complement, and secondarily an instrument in your completion… I’m just sayin’.

With all this being said… I’m single, and I’m over it. That doesn’t mean that I am giving up the game of finding love, but it does mean that I am choosing not to listen to everyone else’s speculation as to how I can change this minor facet of my life. It means that I will no longer allow anyone to iterate that a lack of suitors equates to loneliness, and that a supposed drought of unmarriageable gentlemen is an inevitable sentence to die alone. It really means that I have not read Steve Harvey’s “Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man,” and clearly have no intention of doing so. Living single so far hasn’t been that bad, and I have discovered that there are much worse things that can happen to a person. In the vast, gray expanse of single life, create lists. Check them twice. Be specific, but also be reasonable. You might even want to pray over them. Seek, but be prepared for what you will find. And lastly, turn off the TV and log off the internet. There is a whole world out there just waiting to celebrate the beautiful, black single that you are.
PEACE

Sunday, November 8, 2009

A Personal Post on Priorities.


Today I saw a baby dropped on it's head under my watch. In those few seconds, everything bothering me from the past week just didn't matter. Not the fact that I'm still not in grad school, nor the realization that I've gained 20 lbs. since being out of college. From there, the most urgent thing was assuring myself that this baby was okay. Thankfully, she was fine. But that period of time in which her wellbeing was uncertain was unsettling to say the least. It made me realize that a lot of things that I have been stressin' about are so infinitesimal in comparison to the big picture. The big picture being this: life is precious. Health is precious. Strength is precious. Praise the Lord, He has given me all of these things. So what if I don't get my master's? What if I never lose the weight? Surely, I pray that these things will come to be. But ultimately, God's Will is sovereign... intentionally and with good reason he withholds things from me. The world beats on me and yet I can still say that God is good and His love is worth having. Don't get it twisted, this isn't coming from someone who appreciates or participates in "church culture." I find the overchurched inauthentic and ineffective on several levels. But sometimes God has to shake you up a bit to get your attention, even if it's at the expense of a small child. Had she not been okay, had the baby incurred some form of damage, her life would have drastically changed at the age of six months. God has blessed me with 24 years of blessings... if something were to happen to me tomorrow, I've lived. But since, as of 3:41 pm on November 8, 2009, life is in my possession, I am choosing to entrust my volition to His Will. It's the best thing that I can do, and it makes the most sense. Time to move some things, and some people, around... yes.
PEACE

Untitled



Misunderstandings and preparations for the heart break

Are all that seem to flood my mind these days

In your absence I’ve bridged levees with art and silence and incompetent replicas

But nothing drowns out the blinding honest that your comfort lies with and in and around

Someone else

So I wait and I pray and I try

To comprehend that perhaps we’re not meant to be

And that’s when the oceans flow

A muscle accustomed to pumping sheer interest in you births a bitter acquiescence to the acknowledgement of its demise

Misdirected vows of loyalty yield solitaire diamonds and solitaire existence

A joker in love’s losing game.

PEACE,

Jess

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Of Life and Tightropes: He Regresado.


Life is a balancing act. At 24 years of age, I'm finding that the way that I have perceived myself has been largely linear and deceptive. It wasn't until recently that I was forced to examine all of the different roles that I play and the extent to which I am playing them well... and have discovered that in a lot of ways, I am lacking in every area (insert sad face here). On any given day, I wear the daughter hat, the sister hat, the friend hat, the best friend hat, the employee hat, the Christian hat, the friendship mediator hat, the black woman hat, the single black woman hat, and of course my least favorite: the frustrated artist/misguided/anxious quarter-life crisis recoveree hat. In real life, I don't even like to wear hats; I think that my head is too big. But proverbially speaking, hats are all that I wear... and each one could be worn a bit more efficiently. I am, in no means, a perfectionist. I can realize that there are some things that will never live up to my standards, so I accept them at what I consider to be their highest maximum potential and let things be what they are. But are there ways that I can let my mom know on a deeper and more genuine level how much I love her? Could I call my brother more? Could I hang out with my friends more? Are there more proficient ways of keeping my friends from not speaking to one another (and moreso, finding a way to hang with both parties without seeming "two faced")? Am I doing my job in excellence? Am I purveying my race and relationship status in a way that does not show me off to be a charity case or perpetual desperator (not in the dictionary, don't look it up)? Most importantly, am I doing what I should to provide myself with more clarity in terms of what I want to be doing with my life? The ideal answer to all of these questions is "Sure, of course." But perhaps I should be asking, if I improve in all of these areas... how will it affect my wellbeing... mental, spiritual, physical, emotional, etc. I know tons of people (particularly women) who stretch themselves to the point that there is nothing left for them. Or at least they feel that nothing is left for them. Since I'm trying to get away from this whole "deep but not profound" blog thing... I guess I will let the questioning end here. The answers will come eventually.

Prayerfully. Until Wheneva,

Jess

Posthumous Crushes...

Are these OK? Maybe not... but recently I purchased a book that features five screenplays written by Langston Hughes and I think I got a brief schoolgirl crush. Not to mention that he was a looker back in the day... but, I digress.

I love you, Langston...

PEACE

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Just a Thought...


You know, with all of the terrible music coming out these days, I can't help but to think that one of two things is happening:

1) It's the end time.

AND/OR

2) All of these rappers are covert psychologists.

Reason 1 is viable because in the last days, Earth is to be plagued with unfathomable terrors that the world has never known... if this rap garbage isn't a plague, I don't know what is.

Reason 2 is viable because I'm convinced that a good percentage of these rappers may have solid educations and are recording whatever comes to their minds in an attempt to see how our culture responds to it. In my mind, I can see Ron Browz, B-Hamp, and whoever created "Stanky Leg" sitting at a round table and poring over statistics about society and its reaction to mindless lyrical rhetoric. From there, they purge a gauntlet of foolishness that's so ignant it's genius. After gauging the public's reaction via SoundScan and radio spins, they take those stats and use them to pen scholarly articles. This may be far-fetched, but I'm praying there's some sense to it as I don't know what other grounds I can justify this on.

B-Hamp: So, Dr. Browz, how should we celebrate our publication?
Ron: Pop champagne, HOOOOOOOOH

Food for thought... PEACE

Song of the Day



Ursula Rucker's "Lonely Can Be Sweet." I love this woman. She always seems to have words for the way that I feel at the moment.

Sweet... PEACE