by Kenny
Anderson
In his book, “The Myth of Male Power”, popular white male
issues author Warren Farrell states: “The
Black man is sometimes called an endangered species but receives little of the
protection an endangered species is normally accorded.”
As Black males, we need to seriously reflect on the
words endangered species’ that many social analysts are using to describe our
peril in America. When I think of the words ‘endangered
species’ I immediately think of a life form that is facing extinction; when
I think of an endangered species the spotted owl comes to mind.
Many social analysts have looked at the quality of life
data on Black men, concluding our future looks bleak. Many economists refer to
Black men as becoming economically obsolete in America due to domestic
immigrant workers and international cheap labor.
The fact that so many Black men end up jobless or in
prison is not surprising to scholars like Jewelle Taylor-Gibbs; for her, Black
males in America are ‘at-risk’ from inception:
“Black
males are endangered even before they are born, since male fetuses are more
likely to spontaneously abort; this vulnerability characterizes their health
and mental health for the rest of their lives, particularly during adolescence
and young adulthood. If Black males survive the high infant mortality rates,
which are nearly double the rates for white infants, they are more likely to experience
problems associated with low birth weight and lack of preventative health care.
They are less likely to be immunized against infectious childhood diseases such
as diphtheria, polio, measles, rubella, and mumps. They are more likely to have
chronic illnesses and higher rates of psychological or behavioral problems.
They are less likely to have access to regular medical and dental care. They
are more likely to suffer from poor nutrition and related health problems. And
most tragic of all statistics, they are more likely to die before age 20 than
any other sex-age group.”
Indeed, from birth too many Black males lives are in
jeopardy. From my perspective, psychologically speaking, most Black males are
socialized with endangering traits, which results in self-defeating and
self-destructive behaviors that compounds the external racial oppression that
jeopardizes their lives.
As a social work psychotherapist, who has provided
behavioral prevention and intervention services to at-risk Black male youth for
over 25 years, I’ve witnessed firsthand the negative consequences of these
jeopardizing traits. I’ve seen too many young Black males become teen fathers,
under-achieve, drop out of school, use drugs, engage in criminal activities,
end up dead, or incarcerated.
Based on the ‘psychological insights’ from my own
socialization as a Black man and from my counseling experiences with young
Black males, I’ve identified several jeopardizing traits that I define as the
‘S-Traits Syndrome’ (STS); words beginning with the letter S which provide
psycho-analytical insights. The S-Traits Syndrome is a group of socialized
symptoms, self-limiting character traits that make up most Black males’
personalities.
Though there are nine S-Traits Syndrome terms, I will
mention all of them, but I’ll only address
three in some detail; the terms are:
*Stud (womanizing, sexual conquests)
*Substance-Abusing (using and selling drugs)
*Sportsmen (jock mentality)
*Styling (preoccupation in obtaining expensive vehicles, clothes, shoes, and jewelry)
*Smoothness (cool pose; masking and posturing)
*Silliness (comedian attitude, non-serious)
*Sensationalizing (fantasy thinking, exaggeration)
*Set-tripping (Gangs, promoting sectarian violence)
From this list and from my experience and perspective, sportsmen, silliness, and sensationalizing have the greatest detrimental effects on adolescent Black males.
First, is the trait of sportsmen. When I interact with
young Black males psycho-educationally in the classroom, the overwhelming
majority are preoccupied talking about sports, particularly basketball. They’re
constantly talking about professional basketball players in the NBA like Steph
Currey, Kevin Durrant, James Harden, Russell Westbrook, Lebron James, Carmelo
Anthony, and others.
Young Black males constantly talking about and try to
purchase the expensive jerseys and gym shoes these hoop stars wear. They’re not
concerned with education, schoolwork, or homework. They’re concerned with
playing basketball in gym during school and playing after school; as H. Rap Brown
stated:
At home Black boys spend significant time watching basketball on television or playing basketball video games. In his excellent book "Hooked On Hoops” author Kevin McNutt provides a psychological reason why so many young Black males are consumed with basketball, he says:
“The
rewards and jubilation of the game, the made basket, are immediate, simple,
definite, quick, and repetitive. When you contrast that with the struggles of
day-to-day survival that Black youth face with invisibility, hopelessness, and
low self-esteem, it becomes quite clear how an escape to the neighborhood
playground is necessary just to make it through the day.”
According to a study done by Northeastern University’s
Center for the Study of Sport in Society, two-thirds of all African American
males between the ages of 13 and 18 believe that they can earn a living as
professional athletes. This is a stunning statistic, considering that the
actual chance of a high school athlete ever playing at the professional level
is slim.
Data from the Children’s Defense Fund shows a Black boy
today has less than a 1 in 4,600 chance of becoming an NBA player. They have a
greater chance, 1 in 2000, of getting a PhD. in mathematics, engineering, or
the physical sciences; a 1 in 548 chance of becoming a doctor; a 1 in 195
chance of becoming a lawyer; and a 1 in 53 chance of becoming a teacher.
In his book, “Darwin’s Athletes: How Sport Has Damaged
Black America and Preserved the Myth of Race”, John Hoberman, a historian at
the University of Texas, argues that a growing obsession with professional
sports among young African American males is destroying Black America. The root
of the problem, he writes, is that:
This obsession with ‘hoop
dreams’ causes so many young Black male students to become one-dimensional,
focusing only on basketball; minimizing their education; ignoring their other
academic talents and potentials.
Second, is the trait of silliness. Conducting
psycho-education sessions with young Black males today, I find the overwhelming
majority of them extremely silly, constantly joking – everything is funny!
Filled with laughter, their ‘over-humorous’ disposition makes them non-sensical and trivializing; lacking any seriousness about their schoolwork (studying, homework, test preparation, etc.), their behaviors, their plight, and their futures.
Filled with laughter, their ‘over-humorous’ disposition makes them non-sensical and trivializing; lacking any seriousness about their schoolwork (studying, homework, test preparation, etc.), their behaviors, their plight, and their futures.
Often times being hilarious is a self-distraction from
poor grades and learning problems. For them poking fun and buffoonery is more
than immaturity and getting attention, it reflects the influences of
influential Black male images today, comedians.
Black male comedians, comic actors, like Kevin Hart, Steve
Harvey, Cedric the Entertainer, Bernie Mack, D.L. Hughley, Shawn and Marlin
Wayan, Jamie Fox, Martin Lawrence, Chris Tucker, and Chris Rock are dominant
images on television. There is also the very popular, ‘Comic View’ on Black
Entertainment Television (BET), hosted by ‘Bruce-Bruce’.
Young Black males’ minds are saturated with Black male
comedy, so there is no surprise that they want to ‘clown’ all the time in
school. According to psychologist Naim Akbar, the pervasive clowning attitude
of young Black males, though more extreme today, is nothing new, their
behavioral root is the slave plantation; as Akbar highlights:
“Another
serious handicap which we inherited from slavery is the African American clown.
One of the primary forms of remaining in favor with the slave master by the
slave was to provide entertainment for the master and his household. It is easy
to observe that man exults in his superiority over lower animals by teaching
them to do tricks and being entertained by those tricks. In much the same way, the
slave owner prided himself in his superiority by being entertained by the
slave. Writers have long pointed to the jester, the clown, or the fool, as the
inferior one who was responsible for making his superior laugh. Using a person
for your clown has always been one of the major ways to assert your dominance
over a person. Mockery is one of the more sophisticated forms of humiliation.
Great favors of leniency and special rewards were given to the clowning slave.
He enjoyed a special status above the other slaves because he kept his master
entertained. Even the Arts, music and dance, which had originally been used for
self-expression and community recreation, became devices that were used by the
slave to protect himself from the master’s anger. Fiddler, in the TV drama
“Roots”, was a colorful example of this manipulative function of the clown.
Clowning and buffoonery became one of the primary ways that the violent and
abusive slave master could be controlled and manipulated.”
Since slavery, Black men have also used ‘clowning’ as a survival defense mechanism. Adolescent Black males today, though not conscious of it, use constant joking in the same manner; to make light of the heaviness of racial oppression; to ease tensions and burdens; and to laugh when they really want to cry.
Third, when the young Black males I counsel are not
‘full of jokes’, they are ‘full of fantasy’, sensationalizing. Daily I hear
them lie, brag, boast, and over-exaggerate. This sensationalizing attitude is
understandable due to the bombardment of their minds with the self-glorifying
fantasy lyrics of rap music and rap videos that show young Black males who are
‘ghetto fabulous’; who live the lifestyles of the rich and famous; who have all
the beautiful and sexy women; who are larger than life crime bosses and
‘hard-core’ gangsters; who are arrogant and indestructible.
In his book, “The Violent Social World of Black Men”,
professor William Oliver defines young Black males’ fantasy, sensational
attitude as compulsive masculinity:
“The
term compulsive masculinity alternative de-scribes a compensatory adaptation
that many lower-class Black males adopt to cover up their inability to meet the
standards of the traditional masculine role. Since other symbols of masculinity
have been denied to too many Black males, the status conferral system in Black
life attributes high levels of esteem to those males able to demonstrate their
proficiency in fighting and sexual exploitation of Black women. But instead of
being an effective strategy to cope with environmental stress such as racial
discrimination, economic exclusion, and low self-esteem, the compulsive
masculinity alternative is a dysfunctional compensatory adaptation. Rather than
solving problems in the environment, it creates additional ones.”
Young Black males, like adult Black males, with
sensational attitudes are based on inverted thinking: converting socio-economic
powerlessness, dependency, and feelings of insecurity into an exaggerated
sense of self. Indeed, this attitude of exaggerated manhood creates
personality problems.
According to the Diagnostic Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders (DSM), an exaggeration of the importance of one’s experiences
and feelings is a clinical characteristic of Narcissistic Personality Disorder
(NPD). Other characteristics of NPD that young Black males with sensationalized
thinking exhibit are: grandiosity, preoccupation with fame, wealth, and
achievement; and excessive emphasis on displaying beauty and power (‘living
large’).
Moreover, sensational thinking young Black males like
individuals with NPD are often envious of others and believe others to be
envious of them (‘player-hating’). They also believe that they are superior and
that others should give them deference (‘all that’ mentality).
Furthermore, many young Black males with sensational
outlooks believe unrealistically they are ‘hard-core’, invincible (can’t be
‘touched’ or ‘faded’), resulting in them living irrationally and recklessly;
they usually wind up being shot, murdered, or imprisoned.
From my perspective sensational thinking, exaggerated
manhood, like the other S-Traits, are not mental disorders in the typical DSM
sense, but dysfunctional coping characteristics of reactionary Black manhood,
like H. Rap Brown (Jamil Al-Amin) stated:
“So
much of the life story of any Negro growing up in America is the story of what
has been done to him and how he reacts to that. That’s it, the White man acts Negroes
react.”
What has been done and continues to be done to Black
men is racial oppression, which is pathology producing. As Black men we must
struggle against the S-Traits Syndrome; this reactionary behavior is
self-oppressing; self-defeating, self-destructive, and self-endangering.
We must struggle against, constructively criticize, and
remove the dominant sportsmen, silliness, and sensationalizing S-Traits in
young Black males so they won’t continue to self-perpetuate internal
endangerment.
In ending, several years ago a white man, an animal
activist, climbed a towering redwood tree in the Oregon forest to protest and
prevent lumber companies from cutting down more redwood trees that the
endangered spotted owl inhabits. His committed activism led to the reduction
of redwood trees being cut down.
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