Friday, April 24, 2015
Saturday, April 4, 2015
Sunday, January 18, 2015
We Dream
Too
By Rachel
Miller-Bradshaw
![]() |
www.michonnemicheaux.com |
I was an 11-year-old girl
caught up in the matrix. Self-conscious about my looks and deeply
melanin-infused skin. My appreciation for my beauty came soon when my
sixth-grade teacher Ms. Price teacher — on our first day of class — pulled out
a book on Ancient Egypt and told all the African-American and Dominican kids in
the class that we would learn about our real history.
I spent a lot of my young
years as a dreamer—obsessed with cartoons and writing poetry. I liked dolls but
I never played house. I never envisioned myself as Molly the homemaker. I
witnessed dysfunction in my home for many years, which eventually made the
difficult transition to a single-mother home. I didn’t know what a stable,
healthy, two-parent home looked like—something I rarely saw in Harlem, where I
lived as a child.
During my formative years, I
recognized that my self-esteem and would have been more solid if I had a loving
father around to dote on me. The large numbers of fatherless homes in our
community hurts the progress of Black folks in America. From its inception
during slavery, the Black Family in America morphed into a traumatic and
unstable structure.
This MLK season, I dream of an
American society in which little Black girls and Black boys don’t suffer
abandonment issues because they lack the loving and positive presence of both
their parents. I want them to grow up to be more psychologically sound than the
generations before, devoid of family baggage. In a trying world, family must be
our safe haven—a foundation to prepare and to protect us.
My dream requires a serious
national discussion, more fatherhood/single motherhood organizations, and an
effort by our entire American society to restore the importance of two-parent
households. As adults, we must work to provide better environments for our
children than the ones that we knew.
I hold great hope for the future because
many of us do our best to better the family experience for our young people—a
powerful contribution to the future of our nation.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Why
Systemic Racism in the Police Department is a call to focus on Black Families
By Rachel Miller-Bradshaw
![]() |
Crewof42.com |
As people of
color in this country it is really time for us to construct an organized
national agenda. The deaths of Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Sean Bell and other black males by the hands of police officers coming to the light, it appears that the national agenda might be systemic racism within the police department towards black males in
particular. I don’t think this should
be our national agenda.
I’m pushing for
getting the Black Family together and here’s why. I was shocked when I heard that half a
million dollars was raised in a crowd funding campaign for Officer Darren
Wilson. Now that is organization
and a community coming together to protect and support one of its own. Strong families are the premise of strong
communities. Where is the Black
community’s organized initiative to support the Brown Family, the Martin
Family, and the Garner etc.? What's the strategy to push our national cause to Congress?
We always
look to see what Reverend Al Sharpton or Jesse Jackson is going to do while the youth, myself included, take
to social media, which really produces no results.
I was listening
to Troi “Star” Torain’s show “Stop the Police” a few days ago and he factually
stated that there is no “Black Community”.
“If we do not own the local bank, credit union or supermarket in the
neighborhood, we just live there.” I wish
we would really get this. I think this
is why the police and other institutions feel they can treat us the way
they do.
I look at all of
the young men protesting in Ferguson and I can’t help but feel like their
fathers should be guiding them on more effective ways to deal with how they are
treated by the police and their overall feelings of disenfranchisement in
American society. But most of these
young men most likely don’t have their fathers in their lives, which continue a
pattern of instability, misplaced anger, and lack of guidance. This is why stores and churches, some black owned, are being destroyed in Ferguson. We have to understand that we are going back to these same communities to live.
I am not trying
to steer attention away from the many black males that are killed or mistreated
by the police but I am merely saying that the Black community in America has a
lot of other problems to honestly face. This is the time to tackle all aggressively! I definitely believe that Hip Hop music needs a total lyrical overhaul. Many artists out now like Rick Ross, Lil Wayne and Nikki Minaj lyrics do nothing to motivate our people to be modern day freedom fighters and innovators.
Looting, social media, and protesting is not the way to enact change! We've done this many times before. It's not working for us. I am totally a grassroots philosopher starting with family structure. I believe black mothers and fathers together in stable households must raise our young men and women to be positive leaders and upstanding citizens. My documentary "On My Own" made me realize that fathers and traditional families are so important to our community's future and our movement to attain equal human rights in America.
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Why Step Fathers Must Bond with their Step Sons
By Rachel
Miller-Bradshaw
![]() |
www.mafaro.co.uk |
A colleague of
mines was telling me about his 15 year old nephew who now lives in a group
home. He told me that his nephew’s
father isn’t around but his sister did remarry years ago and has since given
birth to two more children. He told me
how his nephew’s stepfather would administer strict and aggressive discipline
when he misbehaved but failed to spend time with him to develop a loving
relationship.
Then my
colleague gave his own assessment of his sister’s current family dynamic. He said to me, “I told my sister when my
nephew was younger to make sure that her husband was bonding with his stepson
to establish a genuine relationship between the two. She didn’t make sure it happened.”
Lately I have been
hearing a lot of stories of boys still rebelling in their households even if there
is a father figure there. What I am specifically addressing is boys who grow up
in homes where there mother has remarried.
What then happens is a battle between a grown man, and a boy, that
believes he is the man of the house, and it’s all-out war. This leaves the mothers in a comprised
position.
The age of the
boy when the stepfather marries their mother is a major factor on how the
stepson-stepfather relationship in a lot of instances will blossom. If the boy is really young and doesn’t really
know his father and the step father asserts himself and takes on the role from
day one this could fill any psychological abandonment issues or unfamiliarity
that the child has. The step father and
mother are the adults in the situation and have to do all they can to ensure
that the child feels loved and acknowledged by his new stepfather and also
develops the respect for the new “father” figure that is now in the household. If the boy’s father is co-parenting with the
mother, a discussion needs to be had where all three adults establish positions
and the real father and mother must let their son know that you have a bonus
father that you must respect and listen to also.
I will say this. Mothers must allow their husbands to parent
their sons from previous relationships.
The bigger picture is that boys needs fathers to raise them so the
mothers must take a step back if they want their boys to get the full lessons
on being disciplined, being effective, and manhood that the stepfather inherits
teaching to the boys in the household.
Stepfathers must
also understand that they have a responsibility to step up and raise their
stepson putting the same effort as they do with their biological children. It’s very important that the stepdads of the
world know their duty. A substantial
percentage of families are comprised of children from previous
relationships. Since the traditional
family is believed to be one of the factors that socialize boys, stepfathers
must fully embrace that stepsons despite biologically belonging are their
responsibility and fall under their parenting.
Their progress in life falls just as much on them as the biological
parents.
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
Why Boys Need Men in Their Lives to Keep Them in Line
By Rachel Miller-Bradshaw
![]() |
The Good Men Project |
I have a serious
situation going on in my family right now.
One of my nephews is acting out in the worst way. At first we all attributed it to him being a
teenager and his hormones are raging. We
figured it is a teenager’s job to put their parents through hell. But then my nephew began to get really
disrespectful and full of rage. This of
course pushed my sister to point of feeling like he couldn’t live with in her
home anymore.
We are close
knit family full of women with my mother being the matriarch. During a trip to the beach recently my
nephew, usually a guarded young man, expressed that he feels like part of him
is missing since his father isn’t in his life.
He honestly admitted that he knows that this is the cause for most of
his behavior. I explained to him that no
matter what he feels about his father’s absence that he should always love his
mother because she loves him and provides him all he needs and even sometimes
desires.
But there is one
thing that is missing and my sister can’t provide it… the discipline, brawn,
and effectiveness of a constant male figure in his like. As women we pretend like we can do it all
and be it all but we can’t take away the fact that children respect and even at
times fear their fathers or male figures in their lives in a way that we as
women don’t evoke. Maybe it’s our loving
and forgiving nature, our nurturing, or just our physical makeup. Whatever it may be, I’ve seen boys act up
with their mothers and straighten up quickly when their father or another male
figure in the picture steps in to check them.
This isn’t the
first nephew I’ve seen go through this.
Time and time again I have heard stories from friends, colleagues, and
church members, all single mothers, expressing the behavioral difficulties of raising
their boys. The commonality is the
reality that these boys’ fathers aren’t active in their lives and there isn’t a
male figure who has stepped in to fill the void. The community of earlier times doesn’t exist
to help chip in to make sure boys aren’t in the neighborhood getting into
trouble.
Today’s young
men need constant structure in order to prepare them for tomorrow’s life
challenges. I see this with my nephew
who likes to go to bed late at night and then struggles to get out of bed in
the morning for school or other daily events planned. If discipline is needed, a boy, is more
likely to listen to his father whom he won’t even dare consider being
disrespectful to or stepping out of line to.
Boys need visuals. If they have a
direct male figure to use as a model of what being a responsible man is, it
teaches them in a more effective way than any program could do.
I believe my
nephew will be okay because he does have male figures. He inherited a great uncle and has a great
god father in addition to the pool of professional female family members that
are helping to structure him and praying for him every day. My concern is really for the boys out there
that don’t have this support. How to do
we reach those? Do we continue to do
all we can to get these fathers back in their sons’ lives, do we continue to
tell women to make better choices in men or do we get back to a community
mindset?
Whatever should
be the plan we have to do it soon because we have a lot of boys stepping out of
line and we need the men in our society to pull them back in.
Thursday, June 26, 2014
Why Communities Must Encourage Black Fathers to Commit to Marriage
By Rachel Miller-Bradshaw
![]() |
The Good Men Project |
As the country
gears up to commemorate fatherhood, this representation will mostly be in a
traditional family fashion. Though we are living in a society that acknowledges
various family structures, it is still conservative in promoting marriage. The
commercials that will be airing will present men not only as fathers but
husbands also. For the black community honoring its fathers, we should also
praise black husbands that have committed legally, and for many, religiously,
to the mothers.
In my household
I was privileged to experience the importance of marriage through my parents.
When I was 11 years old, my parents divorced and my sisters and I never had the
same close relationship with my father. Though proximity played a major role in
our distance, I believe my father’s commitment to us changed because his commitment
to our mother was gone. It’s simple to say fathers should be committed to their
children despite the relationship with the mother, but in reality many fathers
don’t handle it that way.
According to the
National Fatherhood Initiative, married fathers are more likely than unmarried
fathers to parent their children. In my feature documentary On My Own, the
mothers expressed their belief that the fathers would be parenting their
children if they were married to them. It is notable that marriage still offers
higher probability of stability than dating and cohabitation.
The community
must band together in our advice and message to encourage our young men to be
husbands. Marriage makes fatherhood easier when both the mother and father are
parenting in the same house. Black fathers gain from the wealth building that
the institution of marriage ensures. This is imperative if we desire to
decrease the fatherlessness epidemic.
The greatest
commitment black fathers can make to their children is showing their commitment
to their wives. It is a beautiful display that lets children know that they are
an extension of the union. Moving forward, we have to set the tone that this
national appreciation day is just as much about marriage as it is about
committed fatherhood. In the Black community this is an effective strategy that
will help raise young black boys into great men and fathers.
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