In Deep the Mind of a Light Skinned Black Woman

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LaQueefa;7039221 said:
@texas409 can I juggle your balls?

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That lightskin vs darkskin shit needs to go seriously it's a damn shame 2014 we are still continuing that inner struggle and tearing eachother down because someone is a shade lighter or darker. We are all black at the end of the day.
 
@texas409 if love was rain drops. I would want to be drenched with your passion.

Texas bae

Only loving kindness understand

And I humbly speak to my heart saying

I hear myself revealing the secrets of my bosom

Merciful loving-kindness listens to the fountain of my Words.

These words are dispelling to my tears.

Texasboi, bae....

All im trying to say

Aye nigga lemme fuck
 
To make a long story a little shorter-

I've always had my pick of men (Black, White, Mexican, etc.) because I'm light skinned and I don't apologize for it.

Other races accept me easier than darker black women, because light skin is more "comfortable" for them. Within our own race it's more "valuable", especially to certain Black men who see a light skinned woman as a prize to obtain; as an object.

In the end we're all guilty of having a skewed perception of skin color and of exhibiting favoritism. Because of this I'm always looking for the distinction between a dislike for dark-skinned girls and a simple preference for light skin when I meet a Black man.

Black men understand what it is like to be valued for their complexion and the misconceptions that come along with being a Black man. But they also put their best foot forward when it comes to the treatment of their light skinned, white, or latino women, but will be much quicker to dog a darker skinnned woman.

Is this why light-skinned women are less likely to take shit off of Black men; because they know they have more options?

Dark skinned men put me first before their darker partners. They give me gifts and allow me to abuse them in incredible ways because they view me as a prize. I use this to my advantage and you dark skinned women should do the same.

Colorism is so steeped in American culture that it is present even at grade-school level, as attested to by my own daughter's struggles with her identity, her lack of "good hair", and her early leeriness of dating Black men.

In closing, please don't think that just because my light skin problems aren't the same as your dark skin problems, that we don't all share in the struggle of being Black together.
 

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Busta Carmichael,
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