viewpoint | articles
| marriage people
'Marriage Is for White People'
By Joy Jones
Washingtonpost.com
Sunday, March 26, 2006; B01
I grew up in a time when two-parent families were
still the norm, in both black and white America. Then, as an adult,
I saw divorce become more commonplace, then almost a rite of passage.
Today it would appear that many -- particularly in the black community
-- have dispensed with marriage altogether.
But
as a black woman, I have witnessed the outrage of girlfriends when
the ex failed to show up for his weekend with the kids, and I've
seen the disappointment of children who missed having a dad around.
Having enjoyed a close relationship with my own father, I made a
conscious decision that I wanted a husband, not a live-in boyfriend
and not a "baby's daddy," when it came my time to mate
and marry.
My time never came.
For years, I wondered why not. And then some 12-year-olds
enlightened me.
"Marriage is for white people."
That's what one of my students told me some years
back when I taught a career exploration class for sixth-graders
at an elementary school in Southeast Washington. I was pleasantly
surprised when the boys in the class stated that being a good father
was a very important goal to them, more meaningful than making money
or having a fancy title.
"That's wonderful!" I told my class.
"I think I'll invite some couples in to talk about being married
and rearing children."
"Oh, no," objected one student. "We're
not interested in the part about marriage. Only about how to be
good fathers."
And that's when the other boy chimed in, speaking
as if the words left a nasty taste in his mouth: "Marriage
is for white people."
He's right. At least statistically. The marriage
rate for African Americans has been dropping since the 1960s, and
today, we have the lowest marriage rate of any racial group in the
United States. In 2001, according to the U.S. Census, 43.3 percent
of black men and 41.9 percent of black women in America had never
been married, in contrast to 27.4 percent and 20.7 percent respectively
for whites. African American women are the least likely in our society
to marry. In the period between 1970 and 2001, the overall marriage
rate in the United States declined by 17 percent; but for blacks,
it fell by 34 percent. Such statistics have caused Howard University
relationship therapist Audrey Chapman to point out that African
Americans are the most uncoupled people in the country.
How have we gotten here? What has shifted in African
American customs, in our community, in our consciousness, that has
made marriage seem unnecessary or unattainable?
Although slavery was an atrocious social system,
men and women back then nonetheless often succeeded in establishing
working families. In his account of slave life and culture, "Roll,
Jordan, Roll," historian Eugene D. Genovese wrote: "A
slave in Georgia prevailed on his master to sell him to Jamaica
so that he could find his wife, despite warnings that his chances
of finding her on so large an island were remote. . . . Another
slave in Virginia chopped his left hand off with a hatchet to prevent
being sold away from his son." I was stunned to learn that
a black child was more likely to grow up living with both parents
during slavery days than he or she is today, according to sociologist
Andrew J. Cherlin.
Traditional notions of family, especially the
extended family network, endure. But working mothers, unmarried
couples living together, out-of-wedlock births, birth control, divorce
and remarriage have transformed the social landscape. And no one
seems to feel this more than African American women. One told me
that with today's changing mores, it's hard to know "what normal
looks like" when it comes to courtship, marriage and parenthood.
Sex, love and childbearing have become a la carte choices rather
than a package deal that comes with marriage. Moreover, in an era
of brothers on the "down low," the spread of sexually
transmitted diseases and the decline of the stable blue-collar jobs
that black men used to hold, linking one's fate to a man makes marriage
a risky business for a black woman.
"A woman who takes that step is bold and
brave," one young single mother told me. "Women don't
want to marry because they don't want to lose their freedom."
Among African Americans, the desire for marriage
seems to have a different trajectory for women and men. My observation
is that black women in their twenties and early thirties want to
marry and commit at a time when black men their age are more likely
to enjoy playing the field. As the woman realizes that a good marriage
may not be as possible or sustainable as she would like, her focus
turns to having a baby, or possibly improving her job status, perhaps
by returning to school or investing more energy in her career.
As men mature, and begin to recognize the benefits
of having a roost and roots (and to feel the consequences of their
risky bachelor behavior), they are more willing to marry and settle
down. By this time, however, many of their female peers are satisfied
with the lives they have constructed and are less likely to settle
for marriage to a man who doesn't bring much to the table. Indeed,
he may bring too much to the table: children and their mothers from
previous relationships, limited earning power, and the fallout from
years of drug use, poor health care, sexual promiscuity. In other
words, for the circumspect black woman, marriage may not be a business
deal that offers sufficient return on investment.
In the past, marriage was primarily just such
a business deal. Among wealthy families, it solidified political
alliances or expanded land holdings. For poorer people, it was a
means of managing the farm or operating a household. Today, people
have become economically self-sufficient as individuals, no longer
requiring a spouse for survival. African American women have always
had a high rate of labor-force participation. "Why should well-salaried
women marry?" asked black feminist and author Alice Dunbar-Nelson
as early as 1895. But now instead of access only to low-paying jobs,
we can earn a breadwinner's wage, which has changed what we want
in a husband. "Women's expectations have changed dramatically
while men's have not changed much at all," said one well-paid
working wife and mother. "Women now say, 'Providing is not
enough. I need more partnership.' "
The turning point in my own thinking about marriage
came when a longtime friend proposed about five years ago. He and
I had attended college together, dated briefly, then kept in touch
through the years. We built a solid friendship, which I believe
is a good foundation for a successful marriage.
But -- if we had married, I would have had to
relocate to the Midwest. Been there, done that, didn't like it.
I would have had to become a stepmother and, although I felt an
easy camaraderie with his son, stepmotherhood is usually a bumpy
ride. I wanted a house and couldn't afford one alone. But I knew
that if I was willing to make some changes, I eventually could.
As I reviewed the situation, I realized that all
the things I expected marriage to confer -- male companionship,
close family ties, a house -- I already had, or were within reach,
and with exponentially less drama. I can do bad by myself, I used
to say as I exited a relationship. But the truth is, I can do pretty
good by myself, too.
Most single black women over the age of 30 whom
I know would not mind getting married, but acknowledge that the
kind of man and the quality of marriage they would like to have
may not be likely, and they are not desperate enough to simply accept
any situation just to have a man. A number of my married friends
complain that taking care of their husbands feels like having an
additional child to raise. Then there's the fact that marriage apparently
can be hazardous to the health of black women. A recent study by
the Institute for American Values, a nonpartisan think tank in New
York City, indicates that married African American women are less
healthy than their single sisters.
By design or by default, black women cultivate
those skills that allow them to maintain themselves (or sometimes
even to prosper) without a mate.
"If Jesus Christ bought me an engagement
ring, I wouldn't take it," a separated thirty-something friend
told me. "I'd tell Jesus we could date, but we couldn't marry."
And here's the new twist. African American women
aren't the only ones deciding that they can make do alone. Often
what happens in black America is a sign of what the rest of America
can eventually expect. In his 2003 book, "Mismatch: The Growing
Gulf between Women and Men," Andrew Hacker noted that the structure
of white families is evolving in the direction of that of black
families of the 1960s. In 1960, 67 percent of black families were
headed by a husband and wife, compared to 90.9 percent for whites.
By 2000, the figure for white families had dropped to 79.8 percent.
Births to unwed white mothers were 22.5 percent in 2001, compared
to 2.3 percent in 1960. So my student who thought marriage is for
white people may have to rethink that in the future.
Still, does this mean that marriage is going the
way of the phonograph and the typewriter ribbon?
"I hope it isn't," said one friend who's
been married for seven years. "The divorce rate is 50 percent,
but people remarry. People want to be married. I don't think it's
going out of style."
A black male acquaintance had a different prediction.
"I don't believe marriage is going to be extinct, but I think
you'll see fewer people married," he said. "It's a bad
thing. I believe it takes the traditional family -- a man and a
woman -- to raise kids." He has worked with troubled adolescents,
and has observed that "the girls who are in the most trouble
and who are abused the most -- the father is absent. And the same
is true for the boys, too." He believes that his presence and
example in the home is why both his sons decided to marry when their
girlfriends became pregnant.
But human nature being what it is, if marriage
is to flourish -- in black or white America -- it will have to offer
an individual woman something more than a business alliance, a panacea
for what ails the community, or an incubator for rearing children.
As one woman said, "If it weren't for the intangibles, the
allure of the lovey-dovey stuff, I wouldn't have gotten married.
The benefits of marriage are his character and his caring. If not
for that, why bother?"
joythink@aol.com
Joy Jones, a Washington writer, is the author of
"Between Black Women: Listening With the Third Ear" (African
American Images).
© 2006 The Washington Post Company
|