*leans in*
"How come she can't date an older man, but you can?"
Defensively the girl responded "that's different, we're only five years apart."
"Yea, but I'm twenty-one." STOP!
That would make her sixteen. STOP!
What the hayle is a sixteen year old girl, doing with a twenty-one year old man? Nevermind the fact that as a twenty three year old woman, who was once twenty-one and thus dated twenty-one year old men, I found them to be nothing more than fifteen year old boys on steroids. However, the law says otherwise. I sat in my seat giving ALL kinds of mental side-eyes o__O ... O__O ... O__o Just judgmental! Until I remembered, I was once a seventeen, sixteen, fifteen...(o__O, yeah you get my point) year old girl who thought I was super grown. I was the girl who thought I was mature enough to talk to a man that was five years my senior, just like the girl across the aisle from me.
Too often we focus on the role of the
At sixteen years old, I'm sure she can recite every lyric from Lil Wayne's "Every Girl." I'm sure she's sat hours in front a mirror perfecting that hypnotizing hip roll done in Beyonce's "Single Ladies" video. At sixteen years old, I'm sure she's leaned on her girls for support, while she grinded her ass into the pelvis of a sixteen year old boy, at her high school dance. More importantly, I'm sure this didn't start when she turned sixteen. See, from an early age, particularly in the music we listen to, black girls are cultured by an image that paints them as deviant and oversexualized.
Yet, the focus of this media that has been debated by black political scholars, music artists and even congressional panels, often leaves out the effect that this music has on young black girls. The conversations often dwell on how this music perpetuates misogyny, thus its affect on males. Ironically, like the music and the media in general, these conversations rely upon the existence of black girls while rendering them to the position of spectator.
As an adult I can sing every lyric to Lil Kim's Hardcore LP. Ask me how many of those lyrics I learned AFTER I was an adult and the answer is... not one. I learned them, in 1996, when the album first came out. I was ten years old singing "Big Momma Thang." o__O
"I used to be scared of the d***, now I throw lips to tha sh**, handle it like a real b****."
What did I know about that!?! NOTHING. Yet I thought it was appropriate to sit in my room with my headphones on and listen to it. Nevertheless, these lyrics in all their vulgar glory, speak to the interaction of black girls with society. These lyrics speak to the right of passage for black girls that comes at the expense of being recognized and accepted by our male counterparts.
A sixteen year old, dating a twenty-one year old, has undeniably traded her innocence for acceptance.
Good Points Made. I have to say that I don't really put much blame on music. Women and young girls seek out older men because they APPEAR to be able to take care of them better. Its a natural thing to want a maturer mate. As you said, boys "our age" seemed so immature and annoying. We wanted that mature fellow who was also so charming he could get our pants off with one look.
ReplyDeleteI was 18 and with a 27 year old. We dated 3 years. Im sure he liked that I was firm and easily controllable. I liked that he knew more *ahem* than boys my age.
I don't feel I was influenced by music. I tire of us blaming "vulgar tv/music/videos" for our so called oversexualized teens. I mean, they are oversexualized..but thats cause their hormones are going out of control. Thats just the way we are as humans. At that young ripe and fertile age we want to be appealing to our potential mate. Underdressing and being overly sexual is akin to a peacock strutting his feathers. *shrugs*.
Its human nature whether we like it or not
GREAT POST
I dig this...very on point!
ReplyDelete"I don't feel I was influenced by music. I tire of us blaming "vulgar tv/music/videos" for our so called oversexualized teens. I mean, they are oversexualized..but thats cause their hormones are going out of control."
ReplyDeleteI agree...to a certain extent. It wasn't my intent to simplify the matter by blaming music. However, I think the oversexual teen gravitates towards those forms of media. I also think that there is a difference between blaming these forms of media and simply acknowledging that tv/music/vidos are a reflection of our culture. People like to blame the music, but they don't want to delve into societal factors that encourage misogyny and oversexualization.
@Brittany...of course the media influences our youth. Rap videos and rappers lifestyles create unrealistic ideals of how to act and be and what is sexy and hot. I just think that our youth are misogynistic because this world in general is misogynistic. That mess predates the Bible. The oversexualization IMO is just human nature. Sure back in the day it was more taboo to be "out there" like that or a roller, but that was across the board. "Our" (Black) culture isn't more oversexualized than anothers culture (ie white culture/dominant culture). In fact, they may be worse off.
ReplyDelete@true2me
ReplyDeleteI think we're essentially saying the same thing.
"Nevertheless, it's easy to place blame upon the young black girl, and not on the society that rears her."
I agree that "our" culture isn't more sexualized, because it is just a reflection of larger society. But I also don't believe that absolves it of any blame. Societal norms are learned, a person doesn't come into the world, being a misogynist or hypersexualized, we have to acknowledge that that particular rearing comes from somewhere.
@K to the... THANKS! I didn't mean to overlook your post. I appreciate it :-)
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