(ThyBlackMan.com) I spent time watching a trailer for the film “Dark Girls,” directed by Bill Duke and D. Channsin Berry. Oddly enough, the clip was sent to me by a friend of mine who has spent her life being praised for being “light skinned-ed” and having the long, flowing hair of a black Marilyn Monroe. She eventually married a tall, dark man, leading me to wonder if she feels any guilt for receiving preferential treatment over something that should never have mattered at all.
Like most people reading this article, I grew up hearing jokes about darker-skinned African Americans. “Nappy” hair was an even greater curse. The further south you go, the more light skin carries a premium, to the point that it seems to matter more than anything else. The little light-skinned girl with long hair is (in the worst cases) the family princess, the smartest child in the group, the one who can do no wrong. Unfortunately, there are some light-skinned girls who hate the pedestal as much as everyone else, and grow up fearful of the resentment they might receive from those who feel that they’re receiving preferential treatment – my mother was one of those people.
As the father of three beautiful dark-skinned young women, the “Dark Girls” documentary definitely got my attention. The last thing I’d want is for any of my kids to feel that they are somehow less attractive because of their complexion. I am glad to say that not only do they seem clearly unaffected, but I’d argue that there is an entire generation that doesn’t put nearly as much of a premium on light skin as my generation or that of my parents. At the same time, there is progress to be made when it comes to educating ourselves and each other on the serious psychological damage caused by even simple remarks about skin color or hair texture.
When it comes to understanding black women’s hair, we’ve got a long way to go, especially black men. Film maker Janks Morton, while shooting at my house recently, told me the story of a 12-year old girl he saw at a swimming pool. The little girl sat for hours on the side of the pool, with her feet in the water. When she was asked why she wouldn’t jump in, she responded that she’d just gotten her hair done and didn’t want to mess it up.
We were both amazed at how this young woman’s ability to enjoy the swimming pool like the other kids had been ripped away because she felt compelled to maintain a Eurocentric standard of beauty. I never cease to be amazed at the trouble that many black women go through to maintain their perms: It’s expensive, time-consuming, stressful and ultimately unhealthy. I even had a friend with a health condition tell me that she was hesitant to start her exercise program because the sweat would ruin her perm – out of frustration, I then felt compelled to let her know that I’d be glad to pay to get her hair done for her funeral.
With that said, perhaps all of us should take a step back and think carefully about what it means to be beautiful. While progress is certainly being made against the backward nature of being color struck, further adjustment in our thinking might be necessary. At the very least, we can monitor our own language when making reference to those who possess a style of beauty that we might not necessarily understand. Jokes about dark skin or nappy hair need to go out the window, along with the ignorant thinking that accompanies them. Additionally, the standards of beauty communicated to our children must be carefully considered to ensure that we don’t lead our daughters to believe that they are nothing if they can’t afford to get their hair done.
Rather than simply focusing on being beautiful women, I’d rather my daughters learn the value of being beautiful people. But it’s also up to men to learn to appreciate multiple styles of beauty as well. Black women shouldn’t be killing themselves to impress us or trying to impress each other.
The trailer for “Dark Girls” is below:
[bliptv AYLMqCwC]
Staff Writer; Dr. Boyce Watkins
Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition. For more information, please visit http://BoyceWatkins.com.
Self hate is not very encouraging. It is better to just be yourself and learn to accept the way things are. You can change and grow and be responsible in any circumstances looking on the positive side. The way I look at it, I know it will make a difference. Just like this new fake Ultrasound design from fake ababy. It will bring out the fun.
Self hate is hard. Don’t be hard on yourself. Try to think positive in all circumstances and be humble all the time. Accept and be willing to change when necessary. Please like this comment The new fake sonogram videos from fakeababy it is such the funniest stuff and gift I have seen.
Dr Watkins,
To have a doctorate, you surprise me as to how brainwashed you are. Black is the color of my car tires, not my skin. It is not a denial of heritage, it is an acknowledgement of fact. Read my article on this site entitled I DONT KNOW ANY BLACK PEOPLE
Both my birth and extended families are multi-hued. This has taught me an appreciation for the diverse kinds of beauty that can be found in our race. My father was dark and my mother was very light. I am a fair-skinned black woman with auburn hair. Of my 5 siblings, one brother is also light-skinned, my sister is caramel-colored, one brother is dark-skinned, the youngest brother has a copper complexion just like the one brother who’s deceased. I was fortunate to have parents who didn’t buy into the nonsense about dark skin being bad. Whatever negativity we experienced came from outside our family. One cousin of mine has told me about how she was made to feel bad about being dark from her father’s side. She told me this when she was a grown woman, and I told her I had always thought she was a pretty child. When she gave me heartfelt thanks, it really touched me. That’s because I could imagine the pain she experienced when people who were supposed to build her self-esteem tore it down instead. The negativity about dark skin comes from internalizing Eurocentric beauty standards. What I find uplifting, though, is that I see a large number of dark-skinned women who are comfortable in their own skin and didn’t let others define them. My own daughter has a copper-brown complexion she got from her father, and she has always thanked me for giving her a healthy self-respect for her own beauty. It would have been no different if she had had a white complexion or an ebony one. It wouldn’t have been a false pride I instilled but the kind of self-respect that recognizes the right of others to the same thing.
Will Kim just decide to stick with her current weight loss
company, Quick – Trim, or will she try for a more
high profile deal and a bigger paycheck. No known side effects] waiting for claims sheet to confirm.
It affects how we feel, our happiness and our wellbeing – our whole outlook on life.
Race is a loaded term, meaning its meaning is strongly a socio-cultural construct. Skin color is related to the amount of melanin in skin. What would be the biological advantage of this? People whose ancestors lived, or are presently living, between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn are exposed to a lot more UV radiation. Hence having more melanin in the skin helps protect them from this UV radiation. People whose ancestors lived, or are presently living, above or below the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn are exposed to a lot less UV radiation where the length of the day is much shorter for six months of the year. Less melanin in their skin. This helps to absorb the lower amount of UV radiation to create Vitamin D. Think science, not racial myths! Mythopoeic thought is at its root non-rational. It encourages in-group thinking and the idea that a particular in-group is better than all other groups.
Another divide and conquer tactic. Black people look at too much TV
I really do not understand where these self doubting black women came from or from what era..i am dark, like to be called black American and was born in the south..i have never ever felted bad about being black..i was called inky and to this day I have no problems with that..i remember when in grade school a light skinned girl was bragging about her hair, I was proud because mine was longer finer and curly..i was also smarter and cuter..i have cousins who are so black they look like the velvet pictures their skin is beautiful, I have some cousins who where considered high yellow and they had nappy hair and all negroid features..was I proud of who I was yes and to this day I am still just as proud..i have biracial grandchildren and guess what they asked about color and I say you’re black and guess what from light to dark they all think they are beautiful..i guess it is how you rasie them..oh yeah hair is not a thing to worry about..you can grow or buy some hair you can’t buy beauty..
Take a look at this racist list regarding People Magazine for the sexiest man alive, Denzel is the only African-American on the list, they even named Nick Nolte, please lol!:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People_%28magazine%29#Sexiest_Man_Alive
Take a look at this racist list regarding People Magazine for the sexiest meçan alive, Denzel is the only African-American on the list, they even named Nick Nolte, please lol!:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People_%28magazine%29#Sexiest_Man_Alive
I believe that we cannot deny that the mainstream brainwashed everybody to make us think that the most beautiful woman is a blond. When I was 12, the White boys in my class decided to create a kind of contest when they had to say who they would like to marry in our school if they could. The cuttest guy (who happened to be white) named me. All his white friends laughed! Why? Because they were brainwashed at an early age already that black women are not beautiful. These boys needed also to denigrate me because I was the best student so they were also already brainwashed that we cannot be smart and if they see that one of us actually is smart, they have to undermine us.
I experienced what this writer wrote in this beautiful article https://thyblackman.com/2011/06/02/kymberly-keeton-my-blackness-will-always-be-beautiful/ when I went to Africa. They make me feel like a Queen and I felt home. Honestly, I regret that I had to spend my youth here and I hate being in an environment with a bunch of lies in the media. White people don’t age well anyway so I don’t believe in this White supremacy beauty!!! Black people have beautiful skin and we should not envy anyone! Name us for instance a White actor who is almost 60 like Denzel and who looks as good as him. Nobody even with plastic surgery!!!
Ummm.. The “ramses” guy, has some serious issues with black women. His mini book of a comment, is very, very telling. Woe unto the black woman that gives him the time of day. Also, black people in fact DO have a problem with dark skinned women in particular…dark skinned Black men especially, have a problem with dark skinned, kinky haired black women. The things that I’m hearing and seeing said and done towards dark skinned black women nowadays is frightening.
To be honest, I think this issue is over-exaggerated, especially from the female perspective. For instance, my ex tried to jump on the dark skin women are not considered beautiful bandwagon a few years ago, but I was not buying it. I asked her “black men don’t consider you beautiful. With all the brothers you tell me approach you on the daily, you’re not considered beautiful?” As usual she gets quiet. I told her that she needed to stop buying into this narrative, that’s being played in the media, that was fueled a few years back by Essence magazine concerning black men going to brazil. Her personal experience was not full of rejection. Majority of her experience was being sought after by brothers. You know what her problem actually was? She didn’t know how to pick quality ones. Most of the dudes she chose to be with were weak dudes. I was actually the first to demand from her accountability. And yes she was chocolate too. If a black man rejects a black woman in favor of someone hispanic, it will not be because of her skin tone @Zainab. It will more than likely be because of how well she treats him. I’ve seen dark skin and light skin females treat people, and talk to people like shit. So maybe the backlash that these women are getting is not necessarily a beauty thing but a behavior issue. Furthermore, it’s not a rule that says someone has to like you. Just the notion that you feel like someone should feel you’re beautiful just because is asinine in itself. I feel that I am a good looking brother but I know that I am not every black woman’s cup pf tea. When a black woman says that she prefers light skin brothers do I feel bad? No. Dark skin brothers weren’t praised like that until Morris Chestnut came on the scene. I didn’t see any stories back then about dark skin brothers getting love like that. If dark skin women really want to be loved and cherish, they need to stay out of the media first and foremost, and actually accept when a black man tries to show them some love whether he be light or dark. Mack said it best: was he interested in her solely by the skin tone, or are you just assuming that? They say beauty is skin deep. That’s a nice way of saying that you should accept someone who you’re not really physically attracted to. I don’t buy that for one second. I feel you need balance. I need an attractive woman inside and out. I’ve seen some light skin females who look real good. Seen some not so hot. Seen some dark skin females who look real good. Seen some not so hot. I’m not responsible for what someone’s gene pool spawned them to be. My animal nature will dictate what’s appealing to my eye and then I go from there. Men like what appeals to their eye. And if dark skin women and their light counterparts really want to be attractive to black men, maybe they shouldn’t spend so much time trying to look like Becky. When we see a white girl with locks, it looks comical right? Why should it not be comical when black women do it. I remember when Jada Pinkett had that low haircut. Boy she was the truth. Natural and beautiful. Now she don’t seem as hot to me as she used to. I’ve heard stories of dark skin mothers literally calling their light skin daughters ugly. I’ve heard storied of light skin mothers calling their dark skin daughters ugly. Black women are the biggest haters of each other when it comes to beauty, not men. Do not put this at the doorstep of brothers. Sometimes brothers will look pass your less than stellar physical attributes if you have a radiant personality on the inside. Do black women do this? No. Unless he has money. Some of the most attractive women out here are buying into this fallacy that no one wants them, just solely on the basis that they are black. These are not the facts on the ground. If you have a friend, and she’s not as attractive as you are, then chances are her suitors will be different from yours. Which means her experience will be different. My ex tried this ruse on me but I wasn’t falling for it. Her friends she had were whack, and because they didn’t get the suitors she had, because she was more attractive, they complained about not getting brothers attention using excuses that “black men want foreign, mixed chicks now.” My ex started buying into this nonsense and internalizing, even though her dark skin mate would tell her how beautiful she was all the time. My ex started borrowing the bitterness from her friends and transferred it to our relationship. That’s why I will not be with a woman who has single friends like that. They are a bad influence and fellas know what I’m talking about. If your woman has a lot of female friends, or just one female friend who she’s subservient to, that female will have more control over your woman than you do. Trust me. Atlanta has beautiful light skin, brown skin, and dark skin females. You think it’s because of their skin tone they are not successful with men? Think again. To be honest, I don’t care how attractive you are, if I have to constantly make you feel beautiful and constantly have to boost your self esteem, I’m not wasting my time. You could be Angela Bassett or Lisa Raye. That is a tiresome effort. That is black woman’s number one problem in a nutshell: a lot of them can be attention whores. You can’t ever be everyone’s cup of tea. All you need to do is be appealing to one guy who cherishes you unconditionally. That’s it. But when you constantly in the club looking for that high (attention) then it’s very hard for you to accept who you are because your main goal is to have every guy want you, which is stupidity, when you can have one Man honor all of you, not just your physical attributes. The club is a highly sexually charged atmosphere. A woman with self respect should never want to be in this environment. If that’s fun to her then she can stay there as far as I’m concerned. Like they say “looking for love in all the wrong places.” Dark skin and light skin are so not the issue. Black women, who I didn’t realize were so easily manipulated by what they see in the media (but apparently are), are allowing themselves to be played. Every time they see a magazine saying something about lights skin, or dark skin, or black men going overseas, they allow themselves to be psychically traumatized. When it’s not the issue at all. If you’re not attractive inside out, chances are you won’t have a man. That simple. You can be unattractive physically but personality wise beautiful and get a Man. But you gotta have one or the other or both. You can’t be lacking in both departments. And the truth of the matter is that extremely attractive black females tend to be arrogant and cocky, something that turns real men off. Confidence and class I love in a Woman. Swag and arrogance is the biggest turn off to me as a Man. Look at hos black women tore down Gabby Douglass in the Olympics. It was so bad, that they covered the topic on ESPN’s First Take and Skip Bayless didn’t understand it. There were a lot of white people who embraced this girl, as an American, as one of their own while so-called “sistas” made fun of her on hair. Well the girl went to stay with whites so she could further her dream which meant she didn’t have a lot of money to begin with. I don’t remember seeing them sending her any care packages over there though showing her support. This girl was 16. Like I said, the biggest haters to black women are black women, either themselves or others. The media is not responsible for your concept of self. You are. And I’ve seen females with perms to the females with locks practice this arrogance. Hell the females who I see bringing the arrogance the most is the so-called “conscious” black females.
Excellent article.
@ Zainab: You said “the person I was interested in started dating a hispanic girl (because of her skin tone)”. I wonder if that was the real reason they dated this other person; or are you assuming her skin tone is the reason.
I think people who grew up dark skinned and were made fun of tend to desire lighter skinned women. The funny thing is light-skinned people who were teased a lot growing up tend to prefer dark-skinned mates. Maybe its an acceptance thing.
Oh what: y’all didn’t think lightskinned people got teased too? I was called everything such as white boy, honky, banana bread mix, yellow cake mix, etc by darker complected people. So the teasing comes from both sides. Its worst for the girls. They got punched in the face by darker chicks, called high yellow bitches by the dudes, stuck up, and every other name but a child of God.
I think its more of an issue for women than men. We just want someone fine we can exist with in peace.
I stumbled upon this website while looking for a way to explain to my nephews why my SO has black skin (she looks like the lady in the pic). The only thing that I could think of then was because God made her beautiful like that. Cheesy, but I believe I’ll stand by that answer. The lady in the pic, is extremely attractive, and wouldn’t be the same otherwise. I think people should just smile and take care of the brown, white, pasty, or black skin they were given and beauty will radiate.
Message to Zainab:
Do not let anybody make you feel that you are less than. I strongly suggest to you to read this article:
https://thyblackman.com/2011/06/02/kymberly-keeton-my-blackness-will-always-be-beautiful/
I consider it like the international anthem for black beauty!!!
I’m glad I found this website, I’m not happy knowing that the reason I found it was because I was googling “dark skinned women” because the person I was interested in started dating a hispanic girl (because of her skin tone) Prior to meeting my crush I never really thought of myself in terms of color. I was very unconscious of how dark skinned I was (compared to my family) When people see me with my mother or my two brothers they sometimes used to ask if I was adopted because of how fair they are. I take after my dad. My brothers used to ask me why I’m so dark and I’d reply because I was black what did they expect, but it was always a joke we shared. They never made me feel inferior because of my skin and they never got better treatment (that was always be for being the only girl in the family) regardless started being conscious of my skin tone when I began interacting with people outside. Surprisingly the black community is more racist when it comes to skin tones than the white community and that’s what’s hurtful about the whole situation. I was always proud of my skin tone, I’ve always considered myself beautiful and people have always told me I was, I never considered using bleach until a few months when this guy told me I was really good looking for a dark skinned black girl ( I don’t think he meant it as an insult, but it did to my confidence what calling me hideous would have. that’s not because I think being called dark is demeaning, but because he didn’t understand that I was dark skinned beautiful.)
Because of this self hatred that blacks have for our race, we have suffered dired consequences in the areas of spirituality,sociability, and economics.
Spirituality- one can say that we are some-what angry with GOD in how HE made us.
New King James Version (NKJV)
Romans 9:20
20 But indeed, O man, who are you to reply against God? Will the thing formed say to him who formed it, “Why have you made me like this?”
Sociability-we can apply the term colorism to this endeavor.Which is discrimination based on skin color within the black community itself.
Economics- Because of this self hatred endeavor, we as blacks do not trust each other and we are prone to patronize whites’ establishments and buy and sell and ignore the establishments in our own communities. As a result, economics suffer horrendously in the black community and produce no growth.
Dr. Boykins, your dark-skinned daughters cannot help but be affected…if you have managed to raise them in a way that they are completely uneffected by the color of their skin, you need to write a book and teach me how you did that! I have several articles on the topic in my blog, “In Search of Utopia.” Please check them out at http://meeshe011.blogspot.com