
Beautiful black skin we age with grace
Testament to the strength of melanin flowing through our race
A positive stereotype about physical appearance
While all the time oppression wearing down mental perseverance
Erasure of oppressions in subtle superficial narrative: “black don’t crack”
Historical misconceptions, lay weight on black women’s back
Superwoman schema, generations of history—a heavy load
Cape-like shield, deflect society’s discriminating code
Obliged to show strength, while hiding tears
Suppressing emotions, internalizing fears
Vulnerability, misconstrued, like foe to resist
Success pursued, while resources run amiss
Juggling roles, carrying burdens not her own
Strength for all, unrealistic seeds are sown
Grounded in racist history, archetype cast
The Mammy’s devotion, dangerous legacies that last
At the intersection of expectations, unrealistic
Femininity and strength, a delicate balance characteristic
The scales tipped her resilient stride
“Strong black woman” trope, stereotypes collide
That’s what they say: “black don’t crack”
Racist expectation of strength, attack
Express no emotion, hide fear, hold back tear
“Superwoman” schema, worn as protective gear
Yeah! That part … we dismantling that

For what won’t crack will surely break
Unravel, put a whole race at stake
So take your label, and take your trope
Being black is … well, yeah, it’s dope
I’m a black woman, see this face
Beautiful melanin, skin age with grace
I’m Educated. I’m Empowered. I’m Motivated.
For my strength, for my resilience—loved? Nah, that’s hated

But that’s what haters do
Prejudice won’t let love come through
You won’t bring me down though, make me feel blue
Your hate is your own poison, I ain’t gonna chew
The “strong black woman”, sexist-racist construction
We taking back our power, reset the foundation
Resilient women of African descent
Across the diaspora, beyond the continent
We come in all shades of choc-lit
Like fire, we blaze legit, won’t quit
Hear us roar, our beautiful is black, back
We define our strength, yeah, that won’t crack

First published 2024 All Rights Reserved
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In creative solidarity, Dee
Powerful words and so well recited.
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Thanks Rupali. Appreciate you stopping by 🙏🏽🎉🙏🏽
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Nice post 🌅🌅
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Thanks very much Satyam!!!
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Simply beautiful. ❤️
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Thanks so much!!! 🙏🏽😊🙏🏽
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AWESOME – POWERFUL – FIERCE!!! Drop the mic my Sistah Queen! 🎤🎤🎤 What a bold and beautiful celebration my friend! 🖤💚💛💖
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Yeahhhh 👊🏾👊🏾👊🏾thanks dear Kym. Love your exuberance. You’re awesome!!!!
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Oh my dear sistah queen, I think you beat me to the punch with grace and exuberance! 😎🥂💃🏻 More power to you girlfriend. 🤜🏼🤛🏼
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You’re too kind. Big hug 🤗
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🤗💖😊🥂😍
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Dawn, I just adore how you’ve dismantled the stereotype, revealing the resilience and empowerment within the complexity of African descent. Fan-friggin’-tastic!
~David
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David!!!!! You got it!!!!! YESSSS!!!!! Your comment lands well. 🙏🏽😊🙏🏽
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I hear you, Dawn. And what a beautiful and powerful poem! ❤
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Thank you for hearing me. It’s like the S.African version of “ I see you” —sawubona!
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❤
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I hear you roar, incredible talent! A powerful poetic start to a significant historical month. Thank you for sharing your voice and talents, Dawn. It is truly a treasure to listen to you. 🙏🏻🌹
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Thanks so so much Michele. I like that poetry can tell hard facts gently. I appreciate your appreciation of this piece and the spirit that informs it. Thanks much my friend!!! 💗🙏🏽💗
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Thank you, Dawn. “… hard facts gently.” Lovely. 💞🙏🏻
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😊💗😊
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Your voice didn’t crack either, yeah, that’s part… of the blackness persona! A lovely share!
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Thanks Warren!!! Glad you like it!!!! Cheers 😊🙏🏽😊
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👏🏼 Powerful lines, Dawn.
I haven’t heard your interpretation before– a black friend of mine said that the saying refers to how black people don’t wrinkle and therefore look younger than their years. Either way, it reflects a proud strength. 💜
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Yea that is what it normally refers to. I took creative license 😊
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Oh, okay…. wondered if I missed something, ha!
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Nah you got it.
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Preach, Queen! Powerful poetry of truth.
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Thanks black goddess!!!!! 👊 👊 👊
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Such a beautifully empowering poem Dawn. Love it.
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Thanks dear Sadje 💗🙏🏽💗
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You’re most welcome
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