Having Barack Obama serving the nation as president, commander-in-chief, as well as first husband and father, may also inspire some men to think more cogently about marriage and family.
African-American men now have an excellent example of a happily married husband and actively engaged father leading the country from the White House. The symbolism of Obama as a family man may help counter the fact that most African-American children now grow up in homes without fathers.
Morehouse College President Robert M. Franklin exhorts black men that being happily married with a supportive wife and family would make them healthier, wealthier and probably wiser in his book: Crisis in the Village: Restoring Hope in African American Communities.
The case for marriage seems to have been well-made for everyone - men, women and children all do better in healthy marriages - and it would be good for many more black men to understand how marriage benefits them more than the single life.
Although there's been much attention given to recent U.S. Census data indicating that 42 percent of black women age 30 and above have never been married, little attention is given to the fact that 41 percent of black men age 30 and above have never been married, as well. Prudent personal choices, social mores, and family values may ultimately be more effective in reviving the black family than attempting to legislate behavior with new public policies.
Black men may need to take note of these facts:
Married men achieve more than single men in business, careers and
income. Married men lead more stable and healthy lives than
single men because of the extra set of eyes, ears and concerns
that a caring wife brings in terms of emotional support, more
nutritious eating and a loving insistence that her husband keep
up with visits to the doctor, give up smoking, not drink to
excess and drive safely. And when you say that you're going to
make purchasing director by age 35 or have that remodeling
business grossing seven figures in five years, the wife will
remind you and hold you accountable. That's when a little nagging pays
off big for married men.
Anthony King of Plano is a freelance writer, mentor and sociology graduate of the University of Texas at San Antonio.
Leave a comment