Black Girl, Black Girl

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When I was in middle school, I went through a phase.
I wore distressed skinny jeans and alternative rock band tees and studded belts and belt chains and low canvas converse of nearly every color in the rainbow. 
I listened to what to some, would be called "white people music."
I didn't know how to control my hair back then, so a ponytail with more of a mane than a tail was the backdrop to the abstract work of art that was my pre-teen face.
Amtrak braces going across jaggedy mountain teeth and two bushels of eyebrows protecting the fortress of chunky black glasses.

I was different.

There were a group of girls at my school that were more popular than the rest. 
They all wore Hollister, Abercrombie, carried Coach wristlets and pranced around in this season's new Ugg boots. And only those.
They were acquaintances, but not friends. 
I thought they didn't like me because I was different.
And then I remember my sixth grade self thinking about all the differences between me and these girls.
And I remember my sixth grade self zeroing in on one specific difference that I had to question more than the rest.
And I remember my sixth grade self asking my mom on the car ride to school,
"Mommy? Do you think they would like me more if I was white?"

 

And my mom didn't know exactly how to respond. 
Part consideration and part hesitation. She didn't know how quite to respond.
Because being one of the few black beings growing up in white suburbia did not exactly provide the best answers to these types of questions.
But you know what she told me? 

The truth.

"Maybe sweetie. Maybe."

I remembered thinking that that was just so unfair, so rude, so ignorant of them.
And then I said, "Oh well. Their loss."

 

But now I'm 17. And social media is desensitizing my generation and granting people cyber courage to say things they would never say in the world outside their front door and attaining opinions that would never be claimed as their own if it weren't for this twisted society we let inside our homes.
Boys, NOT MEN, have become more picky, or excuse me, vocal about their preferences and choices in women lately on social media. And I quote:
"I only like snow bunnies and Latinas."
"I never once said black girls don't look good, I just said white and Spanish girls look better."
"I don't date black girls."
"Brazilian girls are the best then white girls then Spanish girls then dirt and then black girls."
End quote.

 

I am a black girl and I live in a world where the men who look just like my father with the same brown skin as me that I wear proudly tell me that they do not prefer my race of women, that we are at the bottom of the food chain, of the romantic hierarchy, of motherfucking society. 
Black girls in a media picture get painted and depicted as bitter and loud and unattractive and uncivilized and uneducated and bestial and inhuman.
And that is not fair.
To me, my sister or my entire culture.

 

Just because my hair doesn't morph into perfect circular ringlets when wet or my complexion isn't fair enough to get off scotch free from the cops or I'm not mixed with enough nationalities to represent an entire melting pot, you're telling me you can't love me? Or you don't want to, because that's what society is telling you?

 

A surprising number of black males have been the culprits of this bullshit and buffoonery.
"I don't like black girls at all."
Look up from your insensitive tweet on your insensitive  phone in your insensitive hands and tell me what you see in front of you, feeding you, clothing you, loving you? 
Your mother. A black girl.
When black men get murdered without justice across America, who is there, behind you, supporting you, standing up for you, fighting for you?
The black woman.

 

"Everybody has preferences, you have to respect them!"
Oh I'm all for respecting people's preferences but once their preferences lead them to disrespect me, fuck that, I don't know who told you respect was a one way street.
Stop feeding into society and basing the image of your ideal soul mate off of fetishes and novelties.
Stop throwing us into a corner and then turning us against each other with statements such as:
"Lightskin girls are winning"
"Brown skin girls are winning"
"Dark skin girls are winning" 
Light, brown, dark, yellow, chocolate, caramel, copper - it does not matter. 
We are all black girls and we all win together.

 

I do not want this racially infused hatred to be injected into my blood stream so that when I have a baby black girl she is born with insecurities.
I don't want her to come home to me and tell me that she likes a boy but she has to see, because she doesn't know if he likes black females.
I don't want her to come home to me and beg me to try and make her hair curlier or straighter or lighter or softer or longer because she doesn't think people will like her.
I don't want her to come home to me and tell me that she liked Devon but Devon liked Brittany more, and ask me, "Mommy? Do you think he would like me more if I was white?"
I do not want to give her the same answer my mom gave me.
I want to tell her, "No, sweetie, Devon doesn't like you because he's a fuck face who is blind to all the fantastic things that make you phenomenal."
I want to tell her that she can be loved no matter what her race is.
I want to tell her that love is based on the details of her heart and the contents of her mind, not the color of her hands that she will use to flip you bastards off.
I want to tell her, that just because the movies and tv portrays her as loud and uncontrollable, she doesn't have to be the opposite or just like it.
I want to tell her that if a man lumps her in and generalizes her by saying "He dates only black girls," she should dump his ass, because she is not a novelty.
I want to tell her that she doesn't need someone to love her, for her to love herself. 
I want to tell her to empower herself and prove them all wrong. 
I want to tell her to carry herself like royalty, no matter what she is told otherwise. 

 

Because she is a black girl. And that makes her a flawless queen.

 

Comments

AJay

This is amazing! Good luck with the scholarship! :D

kaitlynmcnab

Thank you so much! :)

mstokes16

So this is currently my favorite thing. You are gifted with words, and even more so with strength, KEEP WRITING, AND KEEP FIGHTING! Good luck with the scholarship!

kaitlynmcnab

This means so much to me, you have NO clue. Thank you for your words, they made my day! ♡

ammber_alert

Daaaaamn! Girl!!!! You was on point!!!! Made all the point too!!! Right oooon!

ammber_alert

I did the same flawless one BUT i would VOTE for you! KEEP writting!

kaitlynmcnab

Thank you SO much! :) Good luck to you too, love!

MachiMotion

This hit me in the gut! Its so beautiful! thank you, like really thank you a lot.

kaitlynmcnab

No, thank YOU! I'm so glad the poem read to you that way, thank you thank you thank you! :)

SuperWoman20

Beautiful!! You go girl. I'm not trying to be insentive but I believe that black women have always been the stronger between the two. For black men-boys to say such stupid stuff is Unbelievable. Willie Lynch would be so proud and then hang them after laughing. Instead of them tweeting stupid shit they should have a discussion about how the world views them and how their own lives matter so little to this world. If you can't or won't defend your own women, who will?White and hispanic people kill them off and get away with it scott free. But they seem to have a problem with black women. SMH. This is one battle they will lose. You are flawless.

kaitlynmcnab

Yes, this is all about the empowerment of the black woman! Thank you for your words, I'm so glad the poem struck you as hard as it did :)

Teaonline

I'm so glad you posed the youtube vidoe! The way I read it, is totally different compared to the way you read it! Good luck with your scholarship! Laughed at the dog barking !

kaitlynmcnab

That's so awesome to hear, thank you! I do spoken word and am really really passionate about this poem :) I hope you could hear that as I read it.

Melissa_Isaac

This is amazing. 

kaitlynmcnab

Thank you so much :)

Sarah Thiik

This poem deserves more respect than what it's given

kaitlynmcnab

That means so much more to me than you know. Thank you❤️

Mochalove

You go girl, I'm so proud there are so many Black girls owning and having pride in themselves :* Keep it up.

kaitlynmcnab

Thank you so much! Black girls ROCK, don't they? (;

kroach2

Dude. This was awesome. I'm going to read it again.

kaitlynmcnab

This made me so happy! Hahah, thank you so much, read it as many times as you like (:

Miss Mattie

This seriously gave me chills! While I can't relate to the views specifically (I'm borderline translucent I'm so pale), I love the empowerment that you are showing! Personally, I cringe when I hear guys talking about their "preferences" and girls about their "imperfections" (which are really just physical characteristics to be embraced). Sometimes, I'll call them out on it. Society is messed up. I truly enjoyed your personal take on how society is flawed; the people are not. AWESOME job!

kaitlynmcnab

If you can relate as a black girl, fantastic! If you can relate simply as a girl, even better❤️ Thank you SO much for your words and I hope you feel empowered too after reading it(:

Kaci

Gorgeous. Beautiful and intense and so damn true. 

And, god, this line: 'fuck that, I don't know who told you respect was a one way street.' I love that line. I am studying to be a social worker and I very strongly and frequently advocate for social justice and just the other day I was told by my own mother, and I quote here to the best of my recolection, that I "need to respect other people's opinions more" and that I often "act like it's 'my way or the highway.'" For context, we were talking about my grandpa's homophobia and my uncle's racism, specifically the fact that he thinks the protestors in Fergusen are lazy and 'all need to get jobs.'  And I'm like What. The. FUCK. are you talking about? I tried to get across to her that I will never respect disrespect and that issues like human worth and dignity are facts, not opinions, but if you want to call them that then you're damn straight that it's 'my way or the highway.' I'm afraid I couldn't get her to understand that. She hates confrontation, especially within the family, and desperately wants me to ignore people, family members expecially, when they say or do someting homophobic/racist/sexist/etc. It's a futile wish.

So, I'm obviously still mad about this conversation, but anyway, this line just stood out to me and reminded me of that and I just love you for it. You said it perfectly: Respect is not a one-way street. And I'm not going to respect you if you don't resepct not just me but everyone else. You have to give respect to earn it.

This was an amazing poem. Thank you for sharing :) And you are such a strong woman. Thank you for sharing your strength, as well.

kaitlynmcnab

It makes me so happy that you can relate. Thank you so much and thank you for sharing a little piece of your story too!

MelaninOnFleek

I'm new here and Tumblr brought me here but I am so proud of you for pointing out those quotes of ignorance. It is so real. And everything you said is so true about you not wanting her to come home and have her say that she wants to straighten her hair or make it longer to make others like her.  I used to do that but now I want to cut it all off for myself. I'm beautiful with or without it. My sister, though, is in middle school and she's so desperate to do her hair in the salon because she thinks it doesn't look as good but it's this rich black with curls like waves and I used to envy her hair. Your poem is inspiring

kaitlynmcnab

Maybe it's a phase all us black girls have to go through... but hopefully in the future they see things the way we're seeing things. Thank you so much for your words :)

kikirothrock

I love how you say exactly how you feel! I've never understood racism, its just melanin. All women ar beautiful!

kaitlynmcnab

Exactly, it's just pigmentation, haha! Thank you so much!

break_thevision

I really hope you win this. This poem is so biting and sharp, one would be a fool to say otherwise. 

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