Marinate with M.dot


Hoods to Woods trailer #2 from Brian Paupaw on Vimeo.

My homie Deka has a new film coming about
being a snow boarder from Bed Stuy, titled from Hoods
to Woods
. My favorite part of
the trailer was the young buck
backflips off the fence and Dekka
says, “If I put them sho’ties
on some snow boards, they ‘prolly tear it up.”
Tear it up and leave it new at the same time.

Last night, I was reading a book about creating Boundaries
in relationships
and was blown away by two statements. The first was,
“People with shaky
limits are often compliant on the outside,
but rebellious and resentful
on the inside.” Amen. The other is
that, “As you develop better boundaries,
you have less of a need
for anger. This is because in many cases, anger
was the only
boundary you had.” Church.

Please vote for my friend Marquette’s film, “Hero’s Wanted.”
It is in a competition
on Channel 13. It takes 45 seconds.
We are Not Quitters. (Can we trademark that shit?)

Did you know that the Blackend part of fish is created by putting
chili pepper on it?

I have found that Gotty’s Google feed is better than most
blogs I read. Many of the reliable online drug stores in the UK proffer all vital cialis online discount this link and its online purchasing. As per the today’s scenario, competition is very high. sildenafil generic cheap But these may be time consuming and complex, thus to help you have healthier erections easily, we bring forth realistic tips that not just assure but will definitely not harm us or cause side effects. online prescription viagra without The sad fact is that nearly all supplements out there included Acai are extremely low quality. viagra on line pharmacy Weird, no?

I have come to the conclusion that I cannot be a victim
if I say no and move.

Here are some interesting things I have found around the web.
Donwills, McDay job is so simple. I knew it, when I clicked on it
that it had personality and that I would like it. Barry Michael
Cooper is over at Open Salon doing his thing. You know
I love Oakland Goodness (Thank you Ms. Around Harlem.)

Did you know that Salon has started, Open Salon? I will be cross
linking there very soon!

My hands are faster than my mind. And my mind is pretty ‘effin fast.

I saw Medicine for Melancholy
. Thinking about a post for it.

My, Black Women, Property Twice, gets a lot of love at Blogher.

What are you marinating on right now?

Tyler Perry and Chris Brown: A Teachable Moment

Earlier this week I was sitting in on a class about the Myth of
the Black Mammy.

Tyler Perry and the fact that his films are popular with
white
crowds and Black crowds alike came up. I mentioned
that Black comedians have a history of dressing up like
Black women begining with Red Fox and Flip Wilson.
I went on to say that in some ways it is a rights of
passage
for Black male comedians to dress like older Black women,
ridicule them.
I pointed out that these are the very women
who have held down both Black and White families
throughout history.

The professor mentioned that one of the reasons why
Tyler Perry’s films are funny is because Madea says things
out loud that Black women have been saying to themselves
since forever.

The professor went on to mention how her mother told her that
if a man ever put his hands on her, that you wait until he went to sleep
and you poured boiling hot water on him. She then went on
to mention the regional differences. In New York, it was lye,
in the west it was grease, in the midwest it was hot grits,
in the south it was just using a hot iron skillet.

A white student raised her hand and mentioned that her
mother
never told her anything about what to do if a man
put his hands on her
and that in watching Madea was the
first time she heard a woman speak that way. There were
several murmurs in the class from other white women about
how they are beat, and that their mothers hadn’t given them
a language, pep talk or pre-conditioning to understand, anticipate
or deal with it.

This was remarkable for me. In some ways I came to appreciate
the survival skills that all of our momma’s have given us over
time.

Which brings me to Rihanna. I wonder if she followed her intuition.
I wonder what her mother taught her. I wonder what her dad taught her.

There is nothing like being beat. Q: What is the right dosage for taking viagra generika ? A:The maximum dosage is 10mg. This stress bring along something else too, a physical pain which has now become an integral part of our lives. levitra samples Stored food coffee fresh longer in viagra 100mg sales these kinds of bags. order cialis An ED considered one of the most awkward stages is men, which makes them fail enjoy their sexual escapades, they will also restore their pride, and prove their doubters wrong. There is nothing like being beat by
a loved one.

Here is where the teachable moment comes in . Here is an opportunity
for us to get involved in the lives of young people.

We often joke about Ike beating Tina, however this photo, if it is
true, it shows us just how dehumanizing violence is.

We can’t fix what happened between them, in fact we don’t know
what happened between them. However, given the attention
that the issue is receiving what we can do is take care of ourselves
and be an example to our peers and to the young people that watch
how we move
.

If you want to get involved there are a few organizations that do work
around gender and violence. The UNFPA does workshops. Women
Against Domestice Violence lists workshops and shelters
. The Audre
Lorde Projects does workshops and trainings around gender violence
.

What did you feel when you saw the Rihanna photo?

Have you thought about how Eddie Murphy, Martin Lawrence,
Tyler Perry, Flip Wilson and Red Fox have all dressed up like
older Black women?

For the women, did you momma’s tell you anything in terms of
what to do if a many ever hit you?

Pimps, Ho’s and Chris Brown


It happened on Sunday. The news first broke.
I was on Twitter,
reading messages about The Grammys,
with the TV turned off, when someone wrote a tweet saying,

“Looks Like Chris Brown put his Pimp hand Down on a Ho.”

I unfollowed the person that made this statement.
And continued
about my business. Then I thought.
That’s odd, why is Chris Brown beating on a woman,
and isn’t he dating Rihanna?

Then I learned, via Twitter, that Rihanna canceled her
Grammy performance, and of course, unless you have
been under a rock for the last few days
you are aware
of the news, rumors, speculation, surrounding

what happened to them during the early hours of
February 9th.

The details of what happened between them are
not as interesting to me as what our response to
him allegedly beating her says about us.

Clarence Thomas.
Bill Clinton.
Elliott Spitzer
.
The Duke Rape Case.
R Kelly.
Imus.
Mike Tyson.

Now this.

When race, sexuality, violence, power and gender combine with
pop culture
it has a tendency to force us to choose sides and
our thoughts about the aforementioned
issues are laid out
for the world to see.

I grew up in a house where The Mack
and Sparkle were dubbed onto the same
VHS cassette
tape. I grew up in a house where adult family members
watched
The Mack and pointed out streets and family
friends who played extra’s in the
movie.

That being said, I have been exposed to the world of
pimping as an every
day, largely uncritizied, acceptable
phenomona
from a young age.

There is something frightening about the ways in which
some folks have uncritically accepted and tried to explain
away what he has allegedly done. “He is young, he is a good
kid
.” But then again, we have done the same thing with pimping.

What does our unwillingness to criticize both Chris
and Hip Hop/ R & B say about us? Is R & B and Hip Hop our Daddy?

The tendency to explain away Chris Browns alleged
behavior reminds me of the habit within the hip hop generation to explain
away hip hops misogyny, with out fear sounding incredibly hypocritical.

The things that we listen to shape our world
.

In the same way that many people, both Black men and women
felt that Chris allegedly beating her is an acceptable response
to finding out that she allegedly gave him herpes.

Many of us were raised getting spanked or whuppins by our
parents. Our parents loved us, but they were also beat
us as a form of discipline. Consequently there are many of us
who walk around scared and violent
because our parents beat us.
Some of also think that it is normal for a person who loves us, to beat us.
There are many of us who cannot connect intimately because
of our fear of being hurt. This is the legacy of violence.

Many of us conflate being hit with being loved. They are not one
and the same. Being hit constitutes abuse and violence.
Period. End of Story.

Which brings me back to The Bay and pimping.
The Bay Area is notorious for its reverence for pimp
culture and it shows in our music.

I am a firm believer that we use language to organize
how we relate to
one another in the world. I was
reminded of the danger of normalizing pimping when
I read
the following passage in Taking Back God American
Women for Religious
Equallity by Laura Tannenbaum. She writes,

…inclusive language is needed because words and the images
they evoke, have the power
to shape our attitudes: male dominant language creates and reinforces a hierarchical order in which women are regarded as subordinate; words indicate our basic belief and assumptions about ourselves, about others and about God.

The pervasive use of the term pimping serves to normalize
the expression of hatred towards women.

Pimp my ride.

Pimp Juice.


Pimp my myspace profile.

P.I.M.P.

Big pimping tells me a lot about what I need to know
about how women in general and Black women
specifically
are perceived in our culture.
There are some of us in the Black community that feel that
some women deserve to get beat for their behavior. This is exemplified
by the tendency in Tyler Perry Films for a woman to be slapped or
beat
, and for the violence to go unaddressed in the film.

Which leads me to ask a few questions. How can a culture have
such pervasive reverence for pimps and Black women in the same
breath?

Have you seen a pimp beating a woman? Have you encountered
a young
woman who thought her pimp loved her? I have, and
it is a heartbreaking
sight. Where is the humanity in this treatment?
Furthermore, not only is it heartbreaking, but I found nothing
entertaining about her life
. In fact it made me feel powerless.
The documentary film, Very Young Girls, by
David Schisgall about
13 year old prostitutes, illustrates the vulnerability of young women.


I was not surprised when a friend told me yesterday, (a friend
who
said he was being a feminist because he felt that under
no circumstances should a woman be beat) that he was
surprised that women
defended Chris Brown’s alleged
right to hit Rhianna, if she did in fact have an STD.

I stay away from the “Men shouldn’t hit women” logic because
if you believe that then what stops you from saying that men
can do things to woman
“Because she is a woman.” That
logic goes both ways
.

I responded to him saying why should you be surprised,
why should women
be any less patriarchal then men? He
mentioned a previous conversation where we concluded that
misogynistic parents raise misogynistic children. That being
said, there are some women who think that violence is a
reasonable response to certain situations.
My reasoning is that
we only know
what we are taught and when we know better we
(presumably) do better.
I contended that both Oscar Grant and Rhianna
are human beings, and thus deserve to be treated as such.

To get into “women are more fragile, men are more strong,
some women
are stronger than some men” is some part to
whole reasoning, that only serves to mystify and obscure
the issue at hand, which is that every person is a human
being and deserves to be treated as such. Skin of the avocado may lead to cardiac distress and heart failure in generic viagra pharmacy certain bird species. Androgen’s is known to be the basic ingredient generic levitra cheap http://valsonindia.com/portfolio-items/cotton-yarn/?lang=sq that makes up the wall of arteries. So, it may be http://valsonindia.com/media/?lang=it cheapest viagra, the effect of it will be 100 and onwards. The natural aphrodisiac Safed Behmen improves functioning of nerves and cardiac system. on line cialis valsonindia.com Violence is not the
way to go, be it the male or the female as the initiator.
Period. End of sentence.


Let’s be clear. I am not writing from the inside out.
I come from a place that stipulates that you shoot first and
ask questions
later. If you think I am lying see the Oscar
Grant Riots five weeks ago.
I am talking about myself. I have
the strong urge to stick people with hot thangs when I feel
that they have wrong me. I also know that rage is destructive.

The issue of how to articulate responsibility between men
and women
fighting in public is a hairy one. I have written
about that here as well. In fact, it was almost exactly a year
ago to the day that I wrote, “Domestic Violence, What Would
You Do?” where I mentioned a discussion with
my brother about how he decides whether to get involved if
he sees a woman being assaulted in the street.
Powerful stuff.
My general stance is that oppression is oppression
and the no one
should be beating on anyone else.
Period
. End of sentence.

It seems that many of us are trying to make a connection between
Chris Brown’s alleged beating of Rhianna and our personal lives.

I read a post today by Jozen Cumming about Miles Davis and
Chris Brown.
I was reminded of my Patriarchy and Mobb Deep essay
when
Jozen, tries to reconcile what it means to listen to
and enjoy Miles’ music
knowing full well that he unapologetically
beat Cicely Tyson.
Jozen, splits hairs and ultimatly concludes
that the
man is not his music. He writes,

What I learned with Miles Davis is that my loyalty is not to
the man but to what the man created. As a matter of fact, I
don’t even know who he really was except for what he told
me in his autobiography. So why would I write off the very
thing he’s made for me (his music) to enjoy simply because
outside of his job he was (from what I read) a complete jerk
who gave the world the middle finger?

For me. The music isn’t just about the the artist or my enjoyment,
but about what
our young people are learning about what is
acceptable behavior in
relationships.

For me, fucked-up teenagers make miserable, and many times
addicted adults.

This awful incident gives us an opportunity to think about how
violence against women is normalize thorough our casual use
of the
term pimping to describe everything from actual pimping
to the act of making a car very attractive.

I hope that we can see the ways in which our response
to Rihanna’s alleged assault shows us who and what we value,
and the role that tolerated violence plays in our relationships.

Your thoughts?
I’m sure you have one or two. Big {Teef} Smile.

I Need a Beat


We Need a Beat.

Raquel Wilson and I are working on a podcast series
about Gender and Hip Hop.
We need your help with an
intro song. If you make beats and want to make a contribution, get at me.

The elements that I envision are: 1. For anybody who is losing your hair and all seems lost, there is help even so you should do your viagra cost india research find out why you really are losing your hair. Who uk cialis sales http://mouthsofthesouth.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/MOTS-12.05.15-allen-1.pdf are at risk of MND In older people. OT’s assess and super generic cialis help people perform a myriad of daily tasks. Far better yet, make sure it doesn’t even get indexed! If you cannot even get your company’s web website to rank well for its own name, chances are search engine optimization is not the field for levitra prices you. An intro like this DJ Juice
Cut, or something similarly creative.


2. The song used in the body can be Isis’s Ask a Woman or
something substantially similar.


3. One to Two minutes long should be enough.

We need a something to make it pop off from the get go. We envision
something boom bappie and feminine fresh
.

Make a contribution to something that is about to BLOW in
2009.
m.dotwrites AT g mail.

My Hair is Good, It Ain’t Never Hurt Nobody #1


I have been nappy since 1993. While there are some people
that contend
that Black women with natural hair love
themselves
more so than women who don’t. I don’t subscribe to
that notion.
There are some women with natural hair that
like themselves,
others who hate themselves, the same
goes for women with perms.

The last time I straightened my hair, I had an interview at
Spike DDBO for an administrative assistant job. For
someone
reason I thought that I having straight hair
would increase my
getting a job. It was Spike Lee’s ad
agency, if I was going to be able to have a job as a nappy,
it should have been at his agency.
I was 22 and looking
for a job, I didn’t know any better.

My boyfriend at the time flipped out. When my hair is
pressed, I have big James Brown-esque curls. This
boyfriend
, Black Bill Clinton, irritated me about my
newly straightened hair so much,
that I ran my hair
under the shower to show him that it was
a temporary.
He learned really quick that the water will
turn back the
naps
. I was livid and tired. Latoya Peterson,at
Racialicious wrote recently about
the politics of
telling your partner about going nappy.

She recounts sharing her decision with one of her friends,

?What did your boyfriend say?? she asked carefully.

I was kind of shocked that this was the first comment from my pro-natural, all organic food eating, anti-make up, womanist, vegan friend. However, she was simply expressing a sentiment from her own experience – sometimes, something simple like transitioning your hair can end your relationship. KJ still felt the sting from prior relationships that were seemingly full of love, trust, and shared personal politics – except when it came to the issue of her hair. In that case, she was encouraged to conform to a beauty standard she did not believe in to please her boyfriend with a long sheet of silky hair – after all, she?d been growing it out for years, so it should be really long by now, right?

In many ways it reminded of the ways in which,
historically
Black women’s bodies and their hair
specifically
have been seen as family and or
community property.
Latoya speaks to this notion when
she writes,

Of all the stories I heard from the women I spoke to, it is the incident at the wedding that stands out to me most. Two women expressed the desire to have natural hair and yet would not do it because of the perceived social cost. And that saddened me, because two women subverted what they wanted to do to please others.

Latoya also mentioned how older Black women can
sometimes feel like a thick head of natural
hair is
“a waste” and that it should straightened
to see how long it is.
I remember how in the eyes of my mother I went from a
person with a “whole lot of hair sticking up on my head”
to someone with a thick head full of hair and that “I should
let her press it out.” Long hair is capital in our society, in the
same way, lighter and or white skin is
. Taking the medicine without prescription can increases risks of having minor side effects such as stuffy nose, blurred eye vision, headache, digestive problems, diarrhea, flushed prescription cialis usa skin, and dizziness. It is a rich source of vitamins, minerals and nutrients that help boost testosterone level, which is necessary for the use of men’s health in general of alcohol and smoking. get viagra Penile failure is often just a temporary condition, but in case, the levitra without prescription http://downtownsault.org/downtown/dining/subway/ issue persists, you may need to seek medical intervention at the earliest to avoid further aggravation of the woman’s condition. Kamagra has come up as a boon levitra mastercard for the patients and they remain deprived of the treatment as well as lovemaking session. In the book
Tenderheaded Mariame Kaba explains one of the
reasons why Black women straighten their hair. She
writes,

Kathy Russel, co author of Color Complex: Politics
of Skin Color Among African Americans. Black women
“take the heat” to achieve access to the economic and social
resources within American society. (Of course there are
other powerful incentives for straightening ones hair, which
have more to do with gaining social acceptance from family,
friends and men). And the usual results from pressures within
the community, but that isn’t my focus here.

She goes on to say that,

While these notions have some validity I find them lacking.
My research suggests that if they are also practicing a white
standard of beauty then it is a means to an ends. Anita, a 32 year old
housing specialist, offers this insight, ” I wear my hair straight so
that I can fit in. My mother said that if I didn’t have good hair,
I would
have no hope of getting a job, a husband, or any
real respect
in society.

When I was in middle school, and admiring the b-girls
at Skyline high school who were natural and the women
with twists that I would see in Berkeley, a woman
who lived in my building told me “My hair is good,
it ain’t never hurt nobody.” I love that because it speaks
to how our hair is just hair, but also loaded and full of historical
meaning as well.

I went to a predominantly white prep school high
school in San Francisco. It was at this high school that
I broadened my idea of what African American
beauty was. Ironic, no? In some ways, my white peers were
more receptive to my natural hair then the people
in my family. They thought it was “cool.” My brother always thought
I was weird. My dad thought that I was completing my transformation
into a vegetarian hippie,and my mother thought it was just a phase.
My sister thought it was awful and offered to send me to “the shop.”

Everyone had an opinion about my naps.

I was also reminded of this when I read about the
Chris Rocks new film, Good Hair, which was inspired by
his daughter
asking him “whether or not she had good hair?”

Any conversations about napps lately?

How much do you spend on your hair per month?

For men/women, who date women, do you have
a nappy/straight preference? If so, why or why not?