Quantcast

Marriage is For White People

weddingIn 2006, The Washington Post published an op-ed essay by writer Joy Jones with the provocative headline “Marriage Is for White People.” The headline didn’t reflect Jones’ views; it repeated what one of her students told her when she taught a career exploration class for a predominantly black group of sixth-graders.

If you look at the statistics on marriage, you’d be inclined to agree. While 62 percent of white adults and 60 percent of Latino adults are married, only 41 percent of black adults are. Even worse, more than 70 percent of African American children are born outside of marriage.

The familial structure in the African American community has been severely damaged. It has gotten to the point that a mother is considered essential in a family, but a father is optional or expendable. I have several friends and family members who are parents and are either divorced or have never been married. It breaks my heart every time one of my single friends shares the good news of her pregnancy with me. While I want to be happy for her, all I can think about is the difficulties she will face as a single parent and the struggles the child will have without a father present.

Life without two parents in the household is tough. My parents divorced when I was young and my mother struggled to raise my sister and me by herself. However, my mother always taught us that marriage was a worthy pursuit even if hers didn’t work out. She proved her point by remarrying when I was a teenager and has been married ever since.

I have since realized that my mother was right. According to a 2002 study sponsored by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, married men and women tend to have lower mortality, less risky behavior, more monitoring of health, more compliance with medical regimens, higher sexual frequency, more satisfaction with their sexual lives, more savings and higher wages.

These facts have encouraged people like Maryann Reid, organizer of Marry Your Baby Daddy Day, to make marriage more common in the black community and throughout America.

“Most of our couples [getting married] are Black, because it is our community that has the highest out of wedlock rate of all groups,” Reid said. “However, the crippling family structure in this country is just not a Black issue, but a national one.”

While it true that the institution of marriage is under severe stress, I can emphatically say that marriage is not for white people. It’s for all people. I represent the 41% of black Americans who are married. My wife and I have enjoyed nearly 12 years of matrimony. And there are many more happily married couples just like us.

Stay Strong,

Popularity: 6% [?]

  • http://awholelotofnothing.net Angie [A Whole Lot of Nothing]

    My first time here. Poignant essay.

  • http://nycitymama.com NYCity Mama

    Great article. Though I would argue that my experience in growing up in my Latino family, where I often witnessed spousal abuse, infidelity, and such made me doubt I ever wanted to get married, ever, enough so that I CHOSE to be a single mom at one point in time, now, older and wiser, I can appreciate the value of marriage, a good marriage. It falls onto us, this generation, to show our children how beautiful marriage can be, not just cause the bible said so, not just because we want to improve on statistics, but because they saw it in their lives through us, or someone just as close.

  • http://nycitymama.com NYCity Mama

    Great article. Though I would argue that my experience in growing up in my Latino family, where I often witnessed spousal abuse, infidelity, and such made me doubt I ever wanted to get married, ever, enough so that I CHOSE to be a single mom at one point in time, now, older and wiser, I can appreciate the value of marriage, a good marriage. It falls onto us, this generation, to show our children how beautiful marriage can be, not just cause the bible said so, not just because we want to improve on statistics, but because they saw it in their lives through us, or someone just as close.

  • http://gliks.blogspot.com Karen MEG

    Great post Mocha Dad. The statistics for marriage in general are sad indeed, and your post is very eye opening.
    I feel very lucky indeed to be in a stable marriage… yeah, it’s work, but it’s worth it… going on 16 years strong.

    Bloghopping, but I found you a little while ago via twitter.. so glad I did:)

  • http://gliks.blogspot.com Karen MEG

    Great post Mocha Dad. The statistics for marriage in general are sad indeed, and your post is very eye opening.
    I feel very lucky indeed to be in a stable marriage… yeah, it’s work, but it’s worth it… going on 16 years strong.

    Bloghopping, but I found you a little while ago via twitter.. so glad I did:)

  • http://sixbelinskis.blogspot.com KathyB!

    Black, white or purple I think this is a FANTASTIC post. A committed relationship takes a lot of work, and our society is very disposable today. I’m hoping that all of us, regardless of race, creed or class, take stock and gain a fresh perspective on the merits of commitment.

  • http://sixbelinskis.blogspot.com KathyB!

    Black, white or purple I think this is a FANTASTIC post. A committed relationship takes a lot of work, and our society is very disposable today. I’m hoping that all of us, regardless of race, creed or class, take stock and gain a fresh perspective on the merits of commitment.

  • http://www.mommyalwayswins.com Colleen – Mommy Always Wins

    Huh…great thoughts. I wish I could leave some drunk-ish Bloghopper induced comment, but you done did sober me up!

    Happy blog hopping!

  • http://www.mommyalwayswins.com Colleen – Mommy Always Wins

    Huh…great thoughts. I wish I could leave some drunk-ish Bloghopper induced comment, but you done did sober me up!

    Happy blog hopping!

  • http://www.schaererville.com Ms. Maxwell

    Cheers to you from the Blog Hoppers circle…this is a post that will bring on some deep thoughts for me when I re-read it without my Blog Hoppers Blur going on. I’ll be back! In the meantime, nice to meet you. :-)

  • http://www.schaererville.com Ms. Maxwell

    Cheers to you from the Blog Hoppers circle…this is a post that will bring on some deep thoughts for me when I re-read it without my Blog Hoppers Blur going on. I’ll be back! In the meantime, nice to meet you. :-)

  • http://ciarasramblingsandwhatnot.com ciara

    i had my first child at almost 21 yrs old. i broke up w the father about 2 wks before i was supposed to marry him. i was 4 mos pregnant. even though i gave him a chance to be in our son’s life, he chose not to really be there. my son’s o.k. with it. he does not like his dad. i knew that we would not have worked out, and i didn’t want to get married just because i was pregnant. that almost never works out. i married my 1st husband and it didn’t work out, i’m on my 2nd. this is the last. no matter what happens. there are days when i wish i was single, too. lol

  • http://ciarasramblingsandwhatnot.com ciara

    i had my first child at almost 21 yrs old. i broke up w the father about 2 wks before i was supposed to marry him. i was 4 mos pregnant. even though i gave him a chance to be in our son’s life, he chose not to really be there. my son’s o.k. with it. he does not like his dad. i knew that we would not have worked out, and i didn’t want to get married just because i was pregnant. that almost never works out. i married my 1st husband and it didn’t work out, i’m on my 2nd. this is the last. no matter what happens. there are days when i wish i was single, too. lol

  • http://worldofweasels.blogspot.com WeaselMomma

    That was good. One of the underlying causes, in my mind, is our society as a whole has stopped teaching our children personal responsibility. We teach them through school, peers, example and social media an “its all about me” attitude and do whatever feels good. This is not conclusive to the partnership, teamwork and sacrifices for another that is marriage. It’s why the divorce rate is so high, baby daddys say ‘not my problem’ and women who don’t think beyond “I’ll do this my way, I don’t need no man” instead of thinking about what is best for the child.

  • http://worldofweasels.blogspot.com WeaselMomma

    That was good. One of the underlying causes, in my mind, is our society as a whole has stopped teaching our children personal responsibility. We teach them through school, peers, example and social media an “its all about me” attitude and do whatever feels good. This is not conclusive to the partnership, teamwork and sacrifices for another that is marriage. It’s why the divorce rate is so high, baby daddys say ‘not my problem’ and women who don’t think beyond “I’ll do this my way, I don’t need no man” instead of thinking about what is best for the child.

  • http://safebeauty.blogspot.com Lynn

    I wonder what the statistics were when The Cosby Show was still on air. They aren’t putting strong black family heads on the television anymore. The President and his family are looking so foreign to the rest of mainstream America. I love watching CNN and seeing the anchors be “tickled pink” to see the president whisper to his wife or hold her hand or do something endearing to his daughters. I think to myself “Y’all need to stop watching MTV videos and thinking that all black men are walking around rapping and cursing out their women after they slap them and then inevitably impregnate them”. We as a culture also have to reclaim our attitudes toward each other also and not let them dictate to us our actions. Just because we don’t see a norm, doesn’t mean that God didn’t imbed the need for love, support, comfort from another human being. So the thought of some saying “I can never duplicate something good because I have never seen it” is not really true when you think about it. As babies we are all born good, we just have to search for it more when we are older and strive to remain just so. Amen to the marriage is for everyone line, Amen! It’s not easy, but it’s so worth it.

    My best, Lynn
    I talk too much! ;o)

  • http://safebeauty.blogspot.com Lynn

    I wonder what the statistics were when The Cosby Show was still on air. They aren’t putting strong black family heads on the television anymore. The President and his family are looking so foreign to the rest of mainstream America. I love watching CNN and seeing the anchors be “tickled pink” to see the president whisper to his wife or hold her hand or do something endearing to his daughters. I think to myself “Y’all need to stop watching MTV videos and thinking that all black men are walking around rapping and cursing out their women after they slap them and then inevitably impregnate them”. We as a culture also have to reclaim our attitudes toward each other also and not let them dictate to us our actions. Just because we don’t see a norm, doesn’t mean that God didn’t imbed the need for love, support, comfort from another human being. So the thought of some saying “I can never duplicate something good because I have never seen it” is not really true when you think about it. As babies we are all born good, we just have to search for it more when we are older and strive to remain just so. Amen to the marriage is for everyone line, Amen! It’s not easy, but it’s so worth it.

    My best, Lynn
    I talk too much! ;o)

  • Jason

    I have to say, being married has been great for me :) There are too many kids growing up without knowing the benefits of a happily married(the key here is happily) family. We’ve grown selfish and impatient as a society. It makes lasting relationships difficult.

  • Jason

    I have to say, being married has been great for me :) There are too many kids growing up without knowing the benefits of a happily married(the key here is happily) family. We’ve grown selfish and impatient as a society. It makes lasting relationships difficult.

  • http://www.hankandnelia.com Nelia

    (Jokingly) I knew I married Hank for a reason.

    (Seriously) I recently posted an article published by the Washington Post just days ago (http://www.hankandnelia.com/files/unwed_mothers.html) that discussed the upward trend of women of all races opting to have children without a husband and the “upward” was specifically attributed to older (as compared to teenagers) women in their 20s and 30s.

    I’d be interested in your opinion about how these choices impact men. One opinion I’ve heard (and it’s a controversial opinion), there doesn’t seem to be much backlash. More often than not, I haven’t seen men protesting against their roles as providers being supplanted. Men don’t seem motivated to pursue the fulfillment of fatherhood beyond dropping the initial seed.

    One could argue that the younger generation hasn’t had the example of fatherhood to know that it’s worthy of pursuit. But what of the older generation?

  • http://www.hankandnelia.com Nelia

    (Jokingly) I knew I married Hank for a reason.

    (Seriously) I recently posted an article published by the Washington Post just days ago (http://www.hankandnelia.com/files/unwed_mothers.html) that discussed the upward trend of women of all races opting to have children without a husband and the “upward” was specifically attributed to older (as compared to teenagers) women in their 20s and 30s.

    I’d be interested in your opinion about how these choices impact men. One opinion I’ve heard (and it’s a controversial opinion), there doesn’t seem to be much backlash. More often than not, I haven’t seen men protesting against their roles as providers being supplanted. Men don’t seem motivated to pursue the fulfillment of fatherhood beyond dropping the initial seed.

    One could argue that the younger generation hasn’t had the example of fatherhood to know that it’s worthy of pursuit. But what of the older generation?

  • http://scholastic-scribe.blogspot.com Melissa B.

    Either my social group is going against the tide, or they’re the most progressive bunch you’ll ever meet. We’re friends with 4 black couples, all of them married, all of them church-going, all of them employed, all of them encouraging their kids to reach for the stars. I wonder how much of this poll is a stereotype?

    BTW, make sure to stop by my Silly Sunday Sweepstakes today…I’ve got a Big Fish Tale to tell!

  • http://scholastic-scribe.blogspot.com Melissa B.

    Either my social group is going against the tide, or they’re the most progressive bunch you’ll ever meet. We’re friends with 4 black couples, all of them married, all of them church-going, all of them employed, all of them encouraging their kids to reach for the stars. I wonder how much of this poll is a stereotype?

    BTW, make sure to stop by my Silly Sunday Sweepstakes today…I’ve got a Big Fish Tale to tell!

  • http://liayf.blogspot.com James

    Great positive post Mocha Dad. A solid marriage gives the little ones a great advantage as they grow up.

  • http://liayf.blogspot.com James

    Great positive post Mocha Dad. A solid marriage gives the little ones a great advantage as they grow up.

  • http://blackfamilyblog.com Lester Spence

    Folks are missing the point. This is a global phenomenon. It only hits black people first here because we’re the miner’s canary. As women have more economic options, as men’s economic options diminish even as their relationship options increase, this is going to continue. It isn’t about culture, it isn’t about people not seeing good role models. This is a consequence of globalization and is a lot bigger than us.

    I called my blog blackfamilyblog, rather than say Black married blog, not because black and married with kids was taken (lol), but because we’ve got to get to a place where instead of telling people what they need to do (get married!!), we need to take people where they are and give them the resources they need to make their choices work. The ONLY reason why kids of two parents tend to do better in the US is because our safety net sucks. Other industrialized nations don’t have this issue.

  • http://blackfamilyblog.com Lester Spence

    Folks are missing the point. This is a global phenomenon. It only hits black people first here because we’re the miner’s canary. As women have more economic options, as men’s economic options diminish even as their relationship options increase, this is going to continue. It isn’t about culture, it isn’t about people not seeing good role models. This is a consequence of globalization and is a lot bigger than us.

    I called my blog blackfamilyblog, rather than say Black married blog, not because black and married with kids was taken (lol), but because we’ve got to get to a place where instead of telling people what they need to do (get married!!), we need to take people where they are and give them the resources they need to make their choices work. The ONLY reason why kids of two parents tend to do better in the US is because our safety net sucks. Other industrialized nations don’t have this issue.

  • http://www.hankandnelia.com Nelia

    Lester : Would you be willing to explain your take on the causal relationship between the increase in globalization and the increase in children being born out of wedlock?

    I didn’t get it.

  • http://www.hankandnelia.com Nelia

    Lester : Would you be willing to explain your take on the causal relationship between the increase in globalization and the increase in children being born out of wedlock?

    I didn’t get it.

  • http://www.ICompleteMeBlog.com Felicia – I Complete Me

    Very interesting post. I am happily married and have to admit I didn’t see a lot of black marriages growing up. I never wanted to be married but wanted companionship. I felt that marriage was too serious and sacred to play with. Now that I am married I am happy and loving it and hope that I can show my kids (and those around me) that marriage is a good and positive experience.

  • http://www.ICompleteMeBlog.com Felicia – I Complete Me

    Very interesting post. I am happily married and have to admit I didn’t see a lot of black marriages growing up. I never wanted to be married but wanted companionship. I felt that marriage was too serious and sacred to play with. Now that I am married I am happy and loving it and hope that I can show my kids (and those around me) that marriage is a good and positive experience.

  • http://blackwomenblowthetrumpet.blogspot.com BlackWomenBlowTheTrumpet

    Hello there,

    I honestly would like to see more black women expanding their marital options outside of all-black constructs and postponing pregnancy until AFTER a solid marriage has been established.

    It was sad to hear a black boy who was fatherless telling a reporter that “marriage is for white people” because in his environment NO ONE is married… NO ONE!! It is just terribly sad.

    Two weeks ago, I wrote a post about how many black women discount the need for paternal nuture for their children to the detriment of the children… it sure got quiet at my blog for a few days….

  • http://blackfamilyblog.com Lester Spence

    i wrote a long version but deleted it. too academic.

    here’s the deal. the rate that we’re tripping on is a ratio between the rate of single mothers having kids, and the rate of married mothers having kids.

    there are two ways for the ratio to get worse. one is for an absolute increase in single mothers having kids.

    the other is for married women to stop having kids, or to have fewer kids.

    globalization influences both sides here.

    as firms move across the world selling, making, and distributing products, they reduce both the safety net and job security, even as they expect workers to work harder. my grandfather pretty much had the same job all his life. my dad worked in the same spot for over 30 years in the same plant.

    no one can say that anymore.

    so married folk are having fewer kids because they are expected to work more, and don’t have the job security they used to. on top of that there is no safety net. and the woman works. as a result instead of having three kids, many families are having two. i’ve got five kids and i’m like a dinosaur! lol

    another consequence of globalization is depressed (male working class) wages and employment. can’t get a plant job good enough to make middle class loot with a high school education. in cities like detroit the unemployment rate is around 20%. this of course increases crime. both these trends reduce the availability and viability of male partners. women aren’t going to stop having sex, and they are still interested in having kids, so they do so not looking to these men for support.

    there’s more stuff going on i haven’t touched. where i teach there are around 7 black women for every 1 black man (student wise). globalization creates more opportunities for female mobility. and this influences childbirth decisions as well.

    these are large scale political and economic forces i’m talking about, rather than cultural dynamics. i don’t believe that black people “don’t like marriage” or are somehow culturally backwards because of slavery or some other reason. i believe that the entire nation is going to look like black people do marriage wise because of the shifts in the economy that are just now starting to influence them.

  • http://blackwomenblowthetrumpet.blogspot.com BlackWomenBlowTheTrumpet

    Hello there,

    I honestly would like to see more black women expanding their marital options outside of all-black constructs and postponing pregnancy until AFTER a solid marriage has been established.

    It was sad to hear a black boy who was fatherless telling a reporter that “marriage is for white people” because in his environment NO ONE is married… NO ONE!! It is just terribly sad.

    Two weeks ago, I wrote a post about how many black women discount the need for paternal nuture for their children to the detriment of the children… it sure got quiet at my blog for a few days….

  • http://blackfamilyblog.com Lester Spence

    i wrote a long version but deleted it. too academic.

    here’s the deal. the rate that we’re tripping on is a ratio between the rate of single mothers having kids, and the rate of married mothers having kids.

    there are two ways for the ratio to get worse. one is for an absolute increase in single mothers having kids.

    the other is for married women to stop having kids, or to have fewer kids.

    globalization influences both sides here.

    as firms move across the world selling, making, and distributing products, they reduce both the safety net and job security, even as they expect workers to work harder. my grandfather pretty much had the same job all his life. my dad worked in the same spot for over 30 years in the same plant.

    no one can say that anymore.

    so married folk are having fewer kids because they are expected to work more, and don’t have the job security they used to. on top of that there is no safety net. and the woman works. as a result instead of having three kids, many families are having two. i’ve got five kids and i’m like a dinosaur! lol

    another consequence of globalization is depressed (male working class) wages and employment. can’t get a plant job good enough to make middle class loot with a high school education. in cities like detroit the unemployment rate is around 20%. this of course increases crime. both these trends reduce the availability and viability of male partners. women aren’t going to stop having sex, and they are still interested in having kids, so they do so not looking to these men for support.

    there’s more stuff going on i haven’t touched. where i teach there are around 7 black women for every 1 black man (student wise). globalization creates more opportunities for female mobility. and this influences childbirth decisions as well.

    these are large scale political and economic forces i’m talking about, rather than cultural dynamics. i don’t believe that black people “don’t like marriage” or are somehow culturally backwards because of slavery or some other reason. i believe that the entire nation is going to look like black people do marriage wise because of the shifts in the economy that are just now starting to influence them.

  • http://blackfamilyblog.com Lester Spence

    (in hindsight, i guess the response i ended up writing was STILL long and academic. lol)

  • http://blackfamilyblog.com Lester Spence

    (in hindsight, i guess the response i ended up writing was STILL long and academic. lol)

  • http://www.africanamericanmom.blogspot.com African American Mom

    Wooo….this title caught me off guard. I married my baby daddy, but not everyone should. I guess that means women need to be a bit more selective in who they bed with.

  • http://www.africanamericanmom.blogspot.com African American Mom

    Wooo….this title caught me off guard. I married my baby daddy, but not everyone should. I guess that means women need to be a bit more selective in who they bed with.

  • http://parentingpink.com Parenting Pink

    This is a great piece on a subject that needs to be talked about. I commend you for talking about it and for your 12 year marriage. My husband and I have been married 11 years (ya, I’m white, but still – it’s an accomplishment regardless of race nowadays!) and I’d like to see other people, regardless of race, able to build a strong marriage too :-) Guess I’m forever the optimist! LOL

  • http://parentingpink.com Parenting Pink

    This is a great piece on a subject that needs to be talked about. I commend you for talking about it and for your 12 year marriage. My husband and I have been married 11 years (ya, I’m white, but still – it’s an accomplishment regardless of race nowadays!) and I’d like to see other people, regardless of race, able to build a strong marriage too :-) Guess I’m forever the optimist! LOL

  • http://www.losangelista.com Los Angelista

    In a place like LA it can sometimes feel like nobody is married. Some folks I know have created a married women’s support group and it has turned into it being mostly black women attending our weekly gatherings. We talk about ALOT about how to support each other because we feel like black married people are definitely an endangered species.

  • http://www.losangelista.com Los Angelista

    In a place like LA it can sometimes feel like nobody is married. Some folks I know have created a married women’s support group and it has turned into it being mostly black women attending our weekly gatherings. We talk about ALOT about how to support each other because we feel like black married people are definitely an endangered species.

  • http://www.momfiles.com Sheliza

    Great post! I am one of those happily married people just like you 15 years and growing. I agree with marriage before children. My husband grew up being raised by grandmother. Mom and dad never married or parented for that matter. It is up to us to teach our children to break this percentage and raise it higher.

  • http://www.momfiles.com Sheliza

    Great post! I am one of those happily married people just like you 15 years and growing. I agree with marriage before children. My husband grew up being raised by grandmother. Mom and dad never married or parented for that matter. It is up to us to teach our children to break this percentage and raise it higher.

  • http://www.themarryblogger.com themarryblogger

    MochaDad – Thanks so much for the read. The numbers are startling. That is for sure.

    I might be on the ‘vanilla latte’ side of things, but unmarried moms hit close to home in our family. My Beautiful Wife™ has two step sisters both unmarried with children either on the way, or here already. Its a difficult road for sure.

    Lots of prayers for single moms, that they may be great mothers, and that good men would find their ways into the kids lives. Plus prayers for married couples as well (congrats to you on 12 years!), we know that there are struggles for ‘full on’ families to ‘stay strong’ as well.

  • http://www.themarryblogger.com themarryblogger

    MochaDad – Thanks so much for the read. The numbers are startling. That is for sure.

    I might be on the ‘vanilla latte’ side of things, but unmarried moms hit close to home in our family. My Beautiful Wife™ has two step sisters both unmarried with children either on the way, or here already. Its a difficult road for sure.

    Lots of prayers for single moms, that they may be great mothers, and that good men would find their ways into the kids lives. Plus prayers for married couples as well (congrats to you on 12 years!), we know that there are struggles for ‘full on’ families to ‘stay strong’ as well.

  • http://oursweetnsourlife.blogspot.com/ Sweet N Sour

    I see the effects of divorce on my own daughter. While I did all I could to save my first marriage, it ended up being a blessing for me, but she is still paying the price and that breaks my heart. My ex (this was a clue!) asked me right before we got married if we ever divorced could we remain friends (we had been together for 9 years!). He was already looking at it like it was something he could get out of if someone better came along. So, that’s what he did…well in his point of view anyway!

    I am now happily remarried and we have 3 children together plus my daughter from my first marriage that my husband treats and loves as his own. The sad part is, while I know my daughter loves him and will appreciate all he does for her when she is grown, right now there is “something missing”, and it upsets her sometimes that her siblings get to live with both their mom and dad.

    My husband and I have the same views on marriage. It is a lifelong commitment. You take the good with the bad. You work through things. Marriage is hard work.

    I think in our society as a whole the view of marriage is not as it should be. I don’t think people really think about the effects of divorce or single parent households on the children. I was a single mom, and it was tough, and I had a strong support system. Nothing can replace a home with both parents. However, sometimes it is for the best that parents go there separate ways. It’s not fair to the children to witness a loveless marriage or live in a war zone.

    Very provocative and educational post. Thanks so much for sharing.

  • http://oursweetnsourlife.blogspot.com/ Sweet N Sour

    I see the effects of divorce on my own daughter. While I did all I could to save my first marriage, it ended up being a blessing for me, but she is still paying the price and that breaks my heart. My ex (this was a clue!) asked me right before we got married if we ever divorced could we remain friends (we had been together for 9 years!). He was already looking at it like it was something he could get out of if someone better came along. So, that’s what he did…well in his point of view anyway!

    I am now happily remarried and we have 3 children together plus my daughter from my first marriage that my husband treats and loves as his own. The sad part is, while I know my daughter loves him and will appreciate all he does for her when she is grown, right now there is “something missing”, and it upsets her sometimes that her siblings get to live with both their mom and dad.

    My husband and I have the same views on marriage. It is a lifelong commitment. You take the good with the bad. You work through things. Marriage is hard work.

    I think in our society as a whole the view of marriage is not as it should be. I don’t think people really think about the effects of divorce or single parent households on the children. I was a single mom, and it was tough, and I had a strong support system. Nothing can replace a home with both parents. However, sometimes it is for the best that parents go there separate ways. It’s not fair to the children to witness a loveless marriage or live in a war zone.

    Very provocative and educational post. Thanks so much for sharing.

  • http://www.hankandnelia.com Nelia

    Lester : I’m certain my educational background allows me to, at the very least, access your “academic” response.

    While I understand your arguments regarding the impact of globalization, I haven’t been convinced that (a) community mores play a secondary role and (b) these community mores are principally influenced by the increasing integration of national economies. However, your arguments have more validity within the context of conscious “family” decision-making based solely upon financial considerations. Unfortunately, many of our youth in predominantly African-American communities are not conscious of their options, never mind a final decision.

    We do agree that more resources should be dedicated reactively, but I also believe that we’ve not dedicated adequate resources to address this “lack of consciousness” proactively.

    Thanks for taking the time to respond.

    Parenting Pink : Absolutely it is! Congratulations!

    Sweet N Sour : Do you think the issue is our collective modern view of marriage or a lack of a discipline approach specific to child rearing? It seems whenever I travel abroad to Europe, Americans are seen as sanctimonious with regards to the institution of marriage, but indiscriminate when it comes to maintaining the commitment of marriage. I haven’t any statistics, but it seems more couples in Europe are comfortable without documentation formalizing their marriage and I wonder if their children suffer for it.

Previous post:

Next post: