Dying On Our Feet


I’ve been waiting a long time to write this piece. For fear of offending people, for fear of seeming judgmental, for fear of stepping on people’s toes, even the ones that I love, just for fear, in fear. But at some point, this conversation has to be had, this darkness brought to light, this piece written. I am so saddened by it, yet angered by it, that I can no longer ignore the topic...unprotected sex outside of marriage.


It plagues my mind, humbles my spirit, angers my soul, and upsets my love for mankind. With all of the statistics that are readily available regarding HIV/AIDS and other STDs and the statistics surrounding single parent homes, I cannot help but to be completely baffled by the reality that women and men still place themselves in compromising situations where their lives and livelihoods are at risk. It’s one of those things that I just don’t get.


So often, when I speak to women, they use unprotected sex as a security blanket. They think that having unprotected sex is proof that the guy is not cheating on them. Or they have gotten to the point where they feel so comfortable with their man that they completely let their guard down. And letting your guard down is good. How can one expect to receive love if they are afraid of giving it? But that does not include putting yourself at risk or having children when you are not ready. How many times have we been dating someone, especially if we take it back pretty far, and feel that the relationship is going somewhere, really going somewhere? That this is someone I could marry? We quickly get married on scratch paper; you know, when we scribble our name with our boyfriend’s last name attached to it? We thought that it was going to last but it didn’t. So we end up having unprotected sex with all of our boyfriends, because this one, this one right here, this one, is going to last…but it doesn’t last forever. Our consequences do.


And it’s not about education anymore. It’s out there. The truth is out there. HIV/AIDS is real. Single parent struggles are real. But we seemed to have regressed to our teenage years, where we think that we’re untouchable, unstoppable. The problem is…we’re grown. We quickly find out that with our teenage decisions, comes a lot of adult responsibilities, adult reality, and adult heartache.


It’s not even specific to one type of community, or one type of person. There are educated, middle class women that make the same mistakes as uneducated women from lower class backgrounds. Teachers, lawyers, nurses, managers, McDonald’s crew members…we’re all cut from the same cloth. We make the same decisions when we meet a man that satisfies us sexually, mentally, emotionally, financially… or even if he doesn’t.


I have a friend who asserts that women, whether they admit it or not, have come to accept whatever the consequences are, as a possibility. That they have accepted the idea that they could get pregnant by this man, and that they are okay with it, and what comes along with it. I don’t agree, but okay, it’s probably not life or death. But the other side of that coin…have they also accepted the possibility of catching a life sentence? Have they swallowed that pill? I mean truly swallowed it? Because my thoughts are that it has to have crossed their mind at some point...what if? Just sit on that for a second. (second) What if? Truly what if? Why isn’t that “what if” strong enough, scary enough, challenging enough, to correct us?


We’ll continue to kill ourselves, kill our communities, kill our families, because we have not come to grips with the reality that bad or challenging things happen to good people, or that we are not immune from the harshness of life. We have the information we need. We have the statistics we need. We have the protection we need, yet we are dying on our feet (shoutout to King for the title).


And please please, do not waste your energy informing me of how nothing is promised, how marriages these days are not secure either. How your own husband can give you a disease. Save your breath. Save your fingers. Forget about Mr. and Mrs. Jones, and what they got going on. What are you doing to save yourself?

3 comments:

K.Files said...

*snaps in a circle*
Well said and a very important article to communicate.

November 19, 2010 at 11:09 AM
Calvin said...

*You sure know what to say*
Hopefully, someone that needs to hear this will read it!!

November 20, 2010 at 9:23 AM
Convo said...

Martina Sanders-Spight - This is a powerful sentiment and I certainly share your frustration when it comes to the HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections pandemics, as well as single mother epidemic. Taking nothing from those powerful points, there are ways to have a healthy unprotected sexual relationship within a nonwedded relationship. I obviously have had unprotected sex outside of marriage given that my fiance and I have a beautiful baby girl. But please believe we both went to doc and got tested several times throughout our relationship (there is an inoculation period for the virus). And one of first conversations included a serious discussion of our beliefs, values and priorities if we were to have a surprise lovechild. And of course, we discussed monogomy. All this happened very early and when our relationship was still casual. I know that you are not speaking about such couples who diligently, responsibly and thoughtfully have these tough convos, so I only included this anecdote as a strong suggestion to your audience in a effort to protect oneself in the event you decide to go unprotected sexually. With that, in a totally secular sense, comittment can and should come long before marriage and in those instances, it is up to the the couple to discuss all the possibilites - including the adverse outcomes of your actions.

November 20, 2010 at 9:25 AM

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