🖤 1. Demanding Grace While Denying Ours Black women are often expected to extend endless empathy, understanding, and forgiveness—especially to Black
🖤 1. Demanding Grace While Denying Ours
Black women are often expected to extend endless empathy, understanding, and forgiveness—especially to Black men navigating racism, trauma, or systemic stress. But when Black women express pain, need support, or set boundaries, they are met with mockery, blame, or silence. This imbalance reflects the very systems that require Black women to nurture others while being denied care themselves.
2. Using Patriarchal Control in Intimate Relationships
Though they didn’t create systemic oppression in the US, some men make liberal use of it to dominate in the home: controlling money, movement, appearance, or spiritual beliefs under the guise of “being the man.”
3. Erasing Black Women’s Leadership
In movements, churches, or organizations, Black women’s labor is demanded but their leadership is denied. Ideas are stolen, brilliance is minimized, and their organizing is repackaged with male faces out front.
4. Blaming Victims to Avoid Accountability
When abuse or harm is revealed, some men use oppressive narratives—“She’s bitter,” “She’s lying,” “She just wants attention”—to discredit Survivors, echoing the very tactics used by white supremacist institutions.
5. Using Education and Status to Undermine
Some men use academic language, job titles, or social standing to discredit or talk down to Black women—even when those women are speaking from lived experience. It mirrors the elitism and gatekeeping found in institutions that were never built for us.
6. Mocking Dark Skin, Natural Hair, or African Features
Colonial beauty standards are upheld when men degrade or joke about features common among Black women, causing deep wounds and reinforcing white supremacist ideals.
7. Demanding Loyalty, With No Safety in Return
Black women are often told to support, uplift, or “ride for” Black men—but when we ask for the same protection, we are told to wait, be quiet, or stop being divisive.
8. Misusing Faith or Spiritual Language
Religious or ancestral authority is sometimes misused to demand submission or silence from Black women, echoing systems that have historically used God and tradition to control women.
9. Controlling Reproductive Choices
Men may shame or coerce women around pregnancy, contraception, or parenting decisions—mirroring systems that have historically policed Black women’s bodies and fertility.
10. Labeling Boundaries as Betrayal
When a Black woman enforces a boundary, she’s called “disloyal” or accused of abandoning Black men—twisting our survival instincts into acts of treason.
11. Requiring Our Pain to Be Quiet for Unity’s Sake
Perhaps most painfully, Black women are asked to suppress their suffering so that others—especially men—can appear strong, righteous, or unblemished. But unity built on silencing isn’t unity. It’s erasure.
🖤 12. Harming Black Women and Children—Including Assault and Femicide
While oppressive systems normalize violence, some men reproduce that violence in their own homes and communities. Black women and girls are disproportionately harmed by partners, family members, or acquaintances—many of whom then hide behind a legacy of collective trauma to avoid accountability. Femicide, assault, and abuse are real—and silence kills.