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8 Eco-Friendly Hair Products

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If you're wondering what's been coming between you and healthy, lush hair, it may be the products you use. Let's be real - when we meander the hair product aisle, more often than not we are looking to see what a product does and not what's in it. But not paying close attention to ingredients can wreak major havoc on our locks.

As the green movement picks up, an increasing number of brands are swapping out harmful chemicals for powerful, eco-friendly alternatives that work just as well to achieve desired results. In honor of Earth Day on April 22, make the switch; whether you need a basic shampoo or a time-saving blow-drying tool, these hair helpers will save both your strands and the planet.



 

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Remembering Manning Marable

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Manning Marable modeled the kind of intellectual who kept up with developments in his discipline, responded and informed them and then utilized those insights to produce and disseminate knowledge that would be of value to people engaged in struggle for social change. That is why he is as widely read by activists and organizers as he is by graduate students.

The untimely death of my colleague and friend Manning Marable provides the first of many opportunities to meditate and reflect upon his life and his legacy. I first encountered Manning through his writing. Books like Race, Reform and Rebellion and How Capitalism Underdeveloped Black America gave me a framework and vocabulary for understanding dimensions of the Black Freedom Struggle beyond conventional narratives of the Civil Rights Movement.

Later, after having read his work and listened to him on numerous panels and lectures, I finally had the privilege of getting to know him when he helped to recruit me to Columbia University. Manning had come to Columbia in 1993 to establish the Institute for Research in African American Studies (IRAAS). Under his leadership the Institute grew into one of the finest programs in the field.

What distinguished IRAAS was its location in Harlem, its early focus on the Social Sciences and its core philosophy of creating a space where scholars, students and members of the broader communities of Harlem and New York could engage in genuine debate, dialogue and conversation. The opportunity to work at the Institute, to share in and help to build that vision was a dream come true for me. I have never encountered anyone with his singular focus and boundless well of energy. Steadfast in his vision and generous with his time, Manning was a sheer force of nature.

Scholar, Activist, Mentor, Teacher, Editor, Institution Builder, Manning Marable was one of those rare individuals who succeeded in a number of arenas. His intellectual and political vision and work can be described as nothing less than a calling, one he met with extraordinary drive and consistency and from which he never strayed. Never an academic in the narrowest sense of the word, Manning was an engaged scholar whose writing and research were always addressed to people both inside and outside of the academy.

Remarkably, his devotion to a public beyond the academy in no way detracted him from working tirelessly within it. Manning understood the academy to be an important site where transformative work occurred. He was a beloved and devoted teacher. He relished the classroom. He mentored generations of undergraduates, graduate students, and young professors.

In addition to IRAAS, he built during his career a number of programs in Ethnic and African American Studies. Beginning with his first leadership post in his early twenties, he worked tirelessly with administrators and colleagues to make the university a more equitable place. No, Manning did not choose between the academy and public. He simply saw no separation between the two: A viable research institution was a part of "the public" and had responsibilities to the community in which it resided. For this reason the Institute's conferences took place both on campus and in Harlem institutions.

The opening of a conference on Reparations was held at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture while the second day's events took place at Columbia's Law School. A conference on Education and the Prison Industrial Complex had plenary sessions at a high school. Manning brought the public to the academy, but he also brought the academy to the public. He spent tireless hours lecturing at colleges and universities but also at churches and community groups. This was simply a natural trajectory for him.

The dramatic circumstances which surround the release of his magnum opus, Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention, will yield a great deal of attention. This major work, representing over a decade of research and writing, deserves attention as it is sure to be a definitive interpretation of one of the most significant figures our nation has ever produced.

This book is not the only representation of Manning's brilliance, however. Rather, it is a culmination of a lifetime of scholarship and activism, a larger project devoted to telling the stories of a people engaged in an epic, painful and beautiful struggle for freedom. That story had no better chronicler, that struggle no greater champion than Manning Marable.

 

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Barack Obama 2012 Campaign Officially Launches

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. -- Man of Peace in a Time of War

Snapped: Rihanna's Red Pixie at the Country Music Awards

Terry McMillan's Advice to Aspiring Writers

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By Terry McMillan

1. Write as if no one is ever going to read it.

2. Try not to read, revise or rewrite what you've written until you've had a chance to let it simmer.

3. Don't believe your family, friends or lovers when they tell you: "It's great!" What else are they going to say?

4. Try not to think of an idea for a good story. In fact, leave your brain out of it.

5. Write about what frightens you. What you find perplexing. Disturbing. What breaks your heart. And what you wish you could change.

6. Write as if you're telling a story to an old friend you haven't seen in years. It's one way to find your own voice.

7. Read work by writers that you respect and admire. Just don't try to imitate them.

8. You want your reader to see what's on the page, not read the words, so paint a moving picture.

9. Don't compare what you're writing to published authors. They were once in your shoes.

10. Remember that a story is about someone who wants something and someone is preventing them from getting it. Whatever that might be.

11. All of us have flaws. Pass some of yours on to your characters!

12. You want your reader to care about your characters, worry about them and hope they can get out of whatever mess you put them in.

13.You have to have conflict in your story. Even fairy tales and cartoons have them.

14. Even if your early work gets rejected, don't beat yourself up. It doesn't mean your work isn't good. It may not be ready yet.

15. If you feel the same after you finish writing something as you did when you started, you've wasted your time.

16. Fiction is a way of making a lie believable.

17. Write the kind of story you'd like to read.

18. Read everything you write aloud. Pets make great listeners. They don't judge.

19. Don't forget that a story should be life affirming. There's enough negativity in the world as it is.

20. Tell the story from your character's point of view instead of yours.
Good luck!

Terry McMillan is the best-selling author of several novels, including Waiting to Exhale and How Stella Got Her Groove Back, which were adapted into major motion pictures. Find out more about Terry on Red Room.



 

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Snapped: Ashanti Parties in NYC

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Ashanti hosted Shia's birthday party at popular NYC nightclub Marquee on Saturday, but it seems she was the real belle of the ball!

The singer showed up in a grey-blue sequined one-shouldered dress under a cropped black fur, giant hoops, and shades.


Ashanti seemed perfectly comfortable dancing by herself and having a great time! But her outfit choice is up to you.

Tell us: Is Ashanti's Saturday-night party getup hot or not?

 

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Steal Her Look: Gossip Girl Looks for Less

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The hit CW show "Gossip Girl" is set in Manhattan's posh Upper East Side and follows the lives of the rich, young, and sociable. If you're a fan of the show, then you know that the characters' over-the-top, luxurious high-fashion outfits are always just as entertaining as their devious plotting.

While the a typical episode may leave you green with envy, there's no reason you can't get your favorite 'Gossip Girl' character's look for less!


 

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Blacks, Latinos: Ahead of the Technology Curve or Victims of a 'New Digital Divide'?

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Blacks, Latinos: Ahead of the Technology Curve or Victims of a 'New' Digital Divide?

According to a recent Associated Press article, a "new digital divide" is emerging between blacks/Latinos and their white counterparts in the United States.

The so-called digital divide boils down to a single, telling statistic: About 46 percent of blacks and 51 percent of Latinos are using cell phones to access the Internet versus 33 percent for whites, according to data from the Pew Research organization.

One conclusion of the AP article is that minorities are relying on heavily -- too heavily -- on mobile technologies, which could be detrimental.

How so?The article implies that some minorities who are surfing the Web with their cells phones may not have access to personal computers -- even though laptop ownership among whites, blacks and Latinos is roughly equal, at about 51 percent each.

But the greater threat to minorities may lie in what the article refers to as the "quality of engagement" used by those online. In other words, blacks are seen as mainly using mobile technologies for entertainment and social purposes (Facebook anyone?), not for business-oriented reasons or to advance their careers.

"Some see a 'new digital divide' emerging -- with Latinos and blacks being challenged by more, not less, access to technology. It's tough to fill out a job application on a cell phone, for example," the article states.

The author, quoting Pew Research specialist Aaron Smith, goes on to state that "there are obvious limitations on what you can do on a mobile device -- updating a resumé being the classic example."

Personally, I find all the hand-wringing over the use of mobile technologies absurd and more than a little offensive.

Rather than suffering from any supposed new digital divide, many blacks and Latinos who are heavy cell phone users are simply ahead of the curve.

At the 2011 Consumer Electronics Show, which took place in Las Vegas, one of the most talked about trends was the rise of mobile technologies. The Wall Street Journal put it best, in a piece called "Bye Bye PCs and Laptops," when it noted that "the era of the personal computer is drawing to a close."

Instead, the future is all about the age of mobile computing.

In fact, by the year 2013, the number of smart phones will exceed the number of PCs, according to data from the Gartner Research Group.

Since the handwriting is already on the proverbial wall, let's not suggest that it's a "problem" that minorities are increasingly relying on their cell phones.

In the United States, blacks and Latinos are actually early adopters when it comes to cell phone usage and accessing the Internet.

However, in other parts of the world, such as Europe and Asia, consumers have been readily employing mobile technology for years. Yet, I haven't heard anyone question whether these individuals will have the ability to figure out how to fill out a job application, update a resumé or go to a library to use a computer if they don't have one or if they're without Internet access.

Why would tech-savvy African Americans be any less capable of doing so?

The truth of the matter is that if we deem education as a pathway to greater economic mobility and more career opportunities, then blacks and Latinos can't afford to get left behind on the technology front.

And understanding and using mobile technologies is a starting point for doing just that.

 

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Comcast Reveals Big Plans for More Minority Run TV

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From The Wall Street Journal: Comcast Corp. (CMCSA, CMCSK) said it plans to launch 10 new independent channels over the next eight years to satisfy a series of commitments to provide more minority-run programming.

The move comes after Comcast spent last year locked in an arduous regulatory approval process for its landmark deal to acquire a majority stake in media conglomerate NBC Universal. The deal included a number of public-interest commitments to diversity-promoting organizations.

Will this lead to a big change in black TV programming? Read more at the Wall Street Journal

 

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Black Playwrights Seeing More Success, Hoping for Broader Audiences

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From The Boston Globe: When "Broke-ology'' opened last week at Lyric Stage Company, with an all-black cast performing a work by a black playwright under the guidance of a black director, the remarkable thing was how unremarkable it was.

Nathan Louis Jackson's heartfelt family drama, directed by Benny Sato Ambush, was just the latest of numerous recent area productions that have showcased predominantly black casts in plays that explored aspects of the African-American experience while also tackling universal themes.

"It's exciting and interesting and so noteworthy that there's this proliferation in Boston,'' remarks playwright Lydia R. Diamond, the acclaimed African-American author of "Stick Fly,'' produced last year by the Huntington Theatre Company, and "Harriet Jacobs,'' performed last year at the Central Square Theater in Cambridge. "It's promising that there's a wider range of voices.''

Read more about this boom in black voices in theater at The Boston Globe

 

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RuPaul Opens Up on Hannah Montana In New Interview

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From NY Mag: The reality-TV genre almost defies parody (how do you invent a funnier version of Snooki than the real one, or outdo the already-outlandish America's Next Top Model?), and yet RuPaul's Drag Race nails all the jokes while still serving up a competition that's fun and gripping on its own.

And while there are a lot of skilled reality hosts on TV - and yes, we're giving American Idol's Ryan Seacrest his due - nobody can beat RuPaul's quicksilver tonal shifts: Whether he's got to gently prod one of his girls for an emotional backstory or nail her to the wall with an acerbic line reading, he always delivers. As the show heads into the home stretch of its third season, Ru rang up Vulture to discuss Drag Race's most frightening lip-syncs, the behind-the-scenes companion show Untucked, and his sympathy for The Kids Are All Right's Oscar-less Annette Bening.

Read the complete interview at NY Mag

 

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Steal the Look: Beyonce and Kanye West

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Kanye West has epic style, but it also comes courtesy of an epically-sized bank account. Same goes for Beyonce. So we talked to Jamila Galloway, buyer and stylist for DJPremium.com, for chic alternatives to their megastar looks.


 

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Crystal Gale Mangum Arrested for Allegedly Stabbing Boyfriend

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Crystal Gale Mangum

Since Crystal Gale Mangum (pictured) accused three Duke University lacrosse players of rape back in 2006, her life has been punctuated by one arrest after another.


Mangum's latest arrest occurred Sunday morning, when she repeatedly stabbed her boyfriend in the torso, according to the NY Daily News. Mangum was charged with assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill. Last February, Mangum was arrested and charged with attempted murder and arson after one of her children (at the time aged 3, 9 and 10) called the police to report domestic violence. When police arrived on the scene, Mangum reportedly gave them a false name and age and set her boyfriend's (not the same as the one she just allegedly stabbed) clothes on fire in the bathroom tub.

A few months later, Mangum held a bizarre press event on her lawn -- she was on house arrest -- attempting to tell her side of the story about the charges she faced in her previous assault and arson case.

By December, Mangum was convicted of misdemeanor child abuse and damaging property for her February incident.

Clearly, Mangum has some considerable issues to work out.

According to Fox News
, though, Mangum's life was tumultuous way before her rape allegations in 2006. Mangum claims she was kidnapped and raped back in 1993, when she was 14 years old, by three men. This case was later dropped, because Mangum filed her report three years after the alleged assault and then didn't pursue the case.

Her parents reportedly disagree on whether the rape actually occurred.

After getting married to Kenneth Nathanial McNeill at 18, she later accused him of threatening to kill her in a wooded area on June 16, 1998, but failed to attend the court hearing, once again, so the case was dropped.

At the age of 20, Mangum became pregnant while she was in the Navy (by an unidentified sailor) and was discharged. She returned to her hometown of Durham, North Carolina, and found work as a topless dancer at Diamond Girls, where she was reportedly arrested repeatedly. Mangum would have one more child by the sailor and a third by another man.

Some of Mangum's family characterize her as an exhausted single Mom who had a mental breakdown over debt, but who has nevertheless tried her best to provide for her children.

Mangum, who received an Associate's degree from Durham Technical Community College, and was a full-time student at North Carolina Central University, where she maintained a 3.0.

As an exotic dancer after school hours, though, some coworkers reportedly described her as a "problem dancer" who often passed out.

Learning about Mangum's past before she became known as the "Duke Lacrosse Accuser" begs the question of who
Mangum really is: the abused, overburdened single mother, or the misguided, immature liar who attempts to pin her problems on others?

It seems quite likely that Mangum was sexually abused at some point in her life, and her behavior is a cry for help.

And yet, she may also not be so different from many precocious teens who insist on being grown before their time, and then when life serves them a plate of consequences for bad decision making, refuse to take responsibility for their actions.

Her latest incident -- if true -- proves that she is violent and out of control. Her next blowup may not be on the next boyfriend but on her own children, as was deeply sad case case with Shaquan Duley, who suffocated and drowned her two kids.

And for that reason, we must hope Mangum gets the help that she needs.

 

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Michel Martelly Wins Haiti's Presidential Election


The Boxer: Bernard Hopkins

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Unless there's a big marquee name like Floyd Mayweather, Mike Tyson, Oscar de la Hoya or Bernard Hopkins, boxing has been relegated to a niche sport for only hardcore fans.

When I was growing up, I could watch a marquee fight with Marvin Hagler or Sugar Ray Leonard on my black-and-white television on prime time on any of the major networks. That's how I became a boxing fan.

Back then, anyone could be a fight fan -- even a skinny, little 10-year-old girl.

When 'The Fighter' came out, starring Mark Wahlberg as struggling fighter Micky Ward, audiences were reminded of the hardscrabble beginnings of most professional boxers. The film followed the real-life struggles and gritty aspects of the sweet science of boxing, not the bright lights of the Vegas showcases we see now.

Bernard Hopkins reminds us of that everyday-man aspect of the sport. At age 46, he may become the oldest professional athlete to win a significant title if he wins on May 21 against Jean Pascal in Canada.

Hopkins isn't just fighting for money anymore -- he has earned a significant amount of money in his 23 years in the sport -- but he's not necessarily fighting for the fame either. Instead, he fights because he loves the sport.

He was one of the last fighters to appear on prime-time television on the Wide World of Sports, when he fought against Joe Lispey in 1996."When those networks embrace boxing again, you'll be able to see the youth built back up to the pay-per-view numbers promoters want to have," Hopkins said during a press conference about his upcoming bout.

Before promoters got greedy and realized people would pay big money for fights on television, boxing used to be accessible to everybody. Joe Louis' bouts - broadcast on the radio - were events.

During the Depression era, Louis represented hope for thousands of black people (and whites too, especially when he fought Max Schmeling). People would crowd around the radio and pour in to the streets to celebrate his victories. Louis and Muhammad Ali were superstars, and not just to hardcore boxing fans.

Hopkins comes from that time period when boxing used to be intertwined with America's vision of itself - Rocky Marciano, Joe Louis, Sugar Ray Robinson, regular blue-collar guys pulling themselves up by their bootstraps in true rags-to-riches fashion.

"Corporate Amercia is saying this is a sport that's been around longer than many others. It takes the right people, it takes the right marketing, it takes the right personality, to find that special athlete to be able to draw those people like Oscar de la Hoya did," Hopkins said, "Muhammad Ali was the same type of guy."

Hopkins, who at 17 was sentenced to 18 years in prison for committing nine felonies, took up boxing in prison, and when he came out, cleaned up his life and never looked back.

Since then, Hopkins has adhered to a strict regimen of no alcohol or drugs and getting a full night's sleep:

"This is a way of life for me. I've learned how to eat the right things in my life. I've learned a lot of things being in the situations in my life, some are good, some are not, and I think that it was easy for me to live a life-clean living, no drinking, no smoking, go to sleep early, up early, I think all that comes in my lifestyle. Boxing plays personally a part of my life."

Hopkins isn't concerned about going out of his routine for his rematch with Pascal. His training worked for his last bout, he says, which ended in a controversial draw:
"I'm coming in the ring with the same ammunition, same training, why change something that worked the first time, I just didn't get the decision. There are some things I should do more of and that's going to the body early."

In his upcoming match with Pasqual, Hopkins promises to put on another memorable show, and maybe another 10-year-old girl will flip through the channels for cartoons and be able to catch him during prime time, creating a new generation of boxing fans.

 

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President Obama Files to Run for Re-election

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It's been a busy two and a half years for President Barack Obama. There was this country's near financial collapse, wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and now the conflict in Libya. And who can forget the ugly battle over health care reform. There has also been political turmoil as the nation's first non-white president navigated the terrain of a country in transition.

But for all the drama, President Obama wants four more years. That's why he filed paperwork today to seek another term with the Federal Election Commission. The certification allows Obama to begin raising money in what some think could be the first billion dollar presidential campaign.

Obama also sent a video to his supporters and launched a new website that's already has 19 million Facebook followers and 7.3 million Twitter supporters.

"I just saw the energy and hope that he had for this country," says man named Mike from New York who is shown in the video. "Even though I couldn't exactly vote at the time, I knew that someday I'd be able to help re-elect him. And that's what I plan on doing."

With the country's economic position improving, Obama can say his policies are working. He can point to health care reform, efforts to reform this country's financial regulation, his international efforts, and the fact that foreign leaders have more confidence in this country's leadership as proof that he deserves a second term.

Obama's election wasn't easy last time and it won't be easy this time. He's no longer the upstart Senator. He is the President of the United States with a long record of decisions that his opponents can shift and pick through

"President Obama is one person. Plus he got a job. We are paying him to do a job so we can't say hey can you take some time off and come and get us all energized. So we better figure it out," said a woman in the video named Alice who lives in Michigan.



On the flip side, he is the president. He has the power of incumbency on his side. He can announce new efforts and take credit for his current policies all on national television. He also has the small fact that he's the first black president. Despite the criticism coming from some black leaders, Obama still remains enormously popular in the black community.

I saw that firsthand last week in Obama came to Harlem for a fundraiser and black folks stood out in the chilly weather for hours to catch a glimpse of his the president in his limousine. You know black folks don't like cold weather but the crowd gathered on 125th Street and Lenox Avenue screamed when Obama's limo passed.

And given that the Republican/Tea Party candidates seem to be popular at raising money and getting attention in the blogosphere as opposed to formulating policies that a majority of Americans agree with, Obama actually finds himself in a decent position going into 2012.

"What he needs to say is that he came in to office facing unprecedented challenges - two wars and an economy that was on the cusp of the next Great Depression - and has gotten the country back on track but that there is still enormous work ahead of us," Chris Lehane, a Democratic political consultant who worked for President Bill Clinton told the New York Times.

 

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A Sensitive Matter

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Women claim they want a nice guy who's in touch with his emotions, is sensitive to issues and worldly causes and is wonderful in every way. He loves puppies and isn't afraid of shedding a few tears. You can take him home to your parents, showing him off like a shiny silver dollar.

Honestly, though, who the heck wants a sensitive guy? Nobody, that's who. At least that's what I first thought. I'll admit, when I first sat down to write about sensitive men and how much they stink, I immediately thought of a funny, tongue-in-cheek piece about, well, how sensitive men stink. However, a friend asked me a question about the topic, and it got me thinking beyond the surface. How was I defining the word "sensitive"?

I thought, sensitive is sensitive! How could it mean anything other than what sensitive means? And then I thought about it; how men and women differ in their relationships, both how they get into them and out of them, and especially how they conduct themselves while in them. Sensitive doesn't just mean he cried profusely when you watched 'Titanic' on TBS last weekend. It's so much more complex.



Men who are in touch with their feminine side seemingly have the long end of the stick because they are far more successful in relationships. They communicate well, convey emotion as needed, are sensitive to their woman's needs and have the qualities of Cliff Huxtable. Women never have to nag sensitive men because they just know exactly what to do to make her happy.

Most sensitive men are nice guys as well. You rarely meet a jerk who happens to be emotionally in tune with a woman's needs. Although there are quite a large number of jerks with major emotional issues, they're still jerks, so they barely count. In the end, you wind up with a nice guy who feels you and has feelings all at the same time. Congrats.

Yet there is a reason women constantly go after emotionally unavailable men. The insensitive bastards who give us a challenge and, whether we consciously realize it or not, give us the chance to take care of him -- something women love to do. It's what makes women, women: our innate need to nurture and take care of someone or something. It's the maternal instinct and it's just as big a part of us as estrogen is.

So for much of the journey through dating life, men lose points for being too nice or overly sensitive. It's where the "nice guys finish last" saying comes from. All the sweetie pies are put on the back burners of life, while women continually bang their heads up against insensitive assholes until they have a massive headache. or get sick and tired of chasing and changing men who don't want either.

Men who are too in touch with their feminine side somehow lose the very essence of what makes a man, a man: his masculinity. I've always stated my discomfort with men who cry. I know it's wrong. I know I should show more leniency. After all, I've shed a tear or two in front of my man, but it's one of those double standards that just is. There can only be but so much estrogen in a relationship, and if he's bringing more to the table than the chick, we have a slight problem here. The next thing you know, his "you emasculate me" argument is more common than her "you don't tell me how you feel" argument, and she's sick of wearing the pants and he's wishing she'd let him be a man, man.

In society, women are allowed to be sensitive. We cry, scream, throw temper tantrums, get our feelings hurt, get all lovey-dovey -- all of it. We are taught early on that it's okay to cry, emote, live with our feelings on our sleeves. We are bred to be available, but it's reserved for us, so when/if we meet a man doing the same thing, we assume he either plays for the other team or eventually get sick of his antics -- the way men probably get sick of women's. And then we move on and start all over with someone else. Sure, we have baggage, but it doesn't stop us from jumping into another relationship, most times making the same mistakes we made before. We don't care! We love! It's what women do best! So, we get a pass.

Men, sadly, do not. Men aren't taught to weep and wail. They are taught to be tough, to "man" up and protect the females in their lives. They are far less giving with their love and affections. It's put on reserve until they are totally ready to give it. The lady has to be pretty special to allow him to open up and bring down all those walls he was taught to build up. When they finally fall, it's similar to silly putty.

The emotionally attached man is the man who isn't going anywhere. He's in it for the long haul, loyal until the end. If, by chance, his heart should be broken, he will never really get over it. This is where all those sensitive feelings get him in trouble yet again. See, men only melt for one or two chicks, tops. Yes, he will probably love again, get married, seem completely happy, but he'll never truly get over Joanie, his high-school sweetheart who dumped him two weeks before spring break and went to Cabo with his best friend. Fast forward through every relationship he's had since and the residual damage isn't just there, it's chillin' beneath the surface, blocking him from loving that much ever again.

So, the debate continues: Who's more sensitive and who's allowed to be? Well, it's clear that women get the sensitive pass. People expect women to be emotional beings. Men show any signs of sensitivity and his boys are cracking on him and his girlfriend is leaving him for Biff who pumps iron and crushes beer cans on his head for sport.

This is perhaps why men love women who are more in touch with their masculine side. The ones who are aloof and don't care as much. They're independent, surviving just fine should he decide to hang with his friends one night. It is why many women try to turn down their emotions, pretending to be unscathed or bothered, instead electing to keep the seas calm versus flipping out, which will make him run.

The reality is that it isn't so much about how sensitive a man or woman gets to be or doesn't get to be, it's about whether or not they are sensitive to issues that deserve large amounts of energy or emotion. Everything is about finding balance. But sorry, guys, you still only get to really cry on two occasions in life, so make 'em count.

 

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How to Identify and Design an Accent Wall in Your Home

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Ever wanted to add a splash of color to a room without completely revamping its four walls? Then add an accent color as a bold design choice for your home!

An accent wall changes the proportion and mood of the space from the standard four walls that are painted in the same color. It draws your eye to the desired part of the room that you want to highlight and gives you an opportunity to experiment while being fearless with color. But before you take the plunge and start coloring, here are a few guidelines for getting this look right.

Typically, the accent wall is the first wall that you see when you walk into a room; it's the focal point of the space. The color anchors the room or if you have an open floor plan it can be the wall that you see from other rooms in the house.

As a design element, it can be the perfect backdrop for your furniture arrangement, bed, fireplace, entertainment center, photo gallery or artwork. An accent wall draws your attention into the space, highlights your design and makes a statement.


Now that we've identified the accent wall, let's talk about color. Selecting the right paint color for your accent wall can be a challenge. The easiest way to get it right is to go two to three shades darker (which can sometimes mean brighter) than the color choice of the entire room. If you're looking for contrast or drama, select a complementary color from the decor that is already within the room. You can pull this color choice from your area rug, throw pillows, artwork or other decorative pieces.



A key suggestion is to select your furniture and decorative pieces before choosing the color of your accent wall. If the paint is selected first, choosing a decor scheme to match can sometimes be a nightmare.


Your accent wall can look and feel like suede, denim or even sand, thanks to all the faux paint finishes currently available. But, paint isn't the only way to accentuate your wall. It can also be defined with decorative wall paper, stencil and wall art decals (pictured above, Baroque Tapestry Vinyl Cut Outs (Set of 9; $38.00, dezignwithaz.com). There are many decorative options on the market today that can add texture to the room and transform your walls into a work of art.

Tell us, what type of accents do you prefer on you walls?


As always... "Experience Something Beautiful"

Kesha Franklin
CEO/ Design Specialist
The Beautiful Experience
Design-Events-Lifestyle
www.thebeautifulexperience.com

 

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Mo'Nique Hair Transformation

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Mo'Nique went from being the loudmouthed mother on the BET hit 'The Parkers' to an Oscar-winning actress, all while holding down a successful career as a stand-up comedienne. If that's not hard work, we don't know what is.

As her career path changed, so did her look. Let's take a gander at the many interesting hairstyles of this trailblazer.



 

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