How I Found the Courage Within to Be My Own Best Friend
After a very public breakup, professional dancer and Beyoncé's lead dance captain Ashley Everett's self-love journey has led her to find happiness and inner peace.
After a very public breakup, professional dancer and Beyoncé's lead dance captain Ashley Everett's self-love journey has led her to find happiness and inner peace.
Singer Rozonda ‘Chilli' Thomas reflects on TLC's groundbreaking women empowerment anthem, “No Scrubs,” and how it revolutionized dating.
The first time I sat on my therapist’s couch, she asked me “So, what are you here to work on?” Outside of my recent adjustment from college to the real world, my biggest priority was love. Knowing that fatherhood and building a family were two life goals I was firm on, I told her that I wanted to figure out how to build a long-lasting relationship. Up until therapy I only loosely understood how to navigate sexuality in a conservative southern state, much less, how to spend the rest of my life with someone. And although I understood monogamy wasn’t the only way, it was my way, and I was okay with that. My fear, however, was that I had never gotten the chance to exist among long-term relationships or healthy marriages, so how was I to build something I’d never seen before? Could I hope for a successful marriage when I didn’t know what it looked like? My family solidified my love and respect for women. Out of the seven women who played a role in my upbringing, six of them were single mothers or widows. I was able to see firsthand the absolute magic that exuded from these women when faced with adversity, and I strive every day to embody that for myself. On the flipside, this upbringing created gaps in other areas of my experience, specifically romantic relationships. There was a time in third grade or so that my mom introduced me to her friend “Charles,” but before I could understand what was really going on, sis had to cut him loose (#NoneOfMyBusiness). This experience felt so far from the experience of friends and classmates whose entire existence occurred around a marriage. They saw affection and intimacy up close and personal morning, noon, and night, not just on movies and television shows. How could I replicate that experience? How could I find a husband and build a lifelong partnership when I was at such a disadvantage? Hint: I wasn’t at a disadvantage. Since I can remember, I’ve always been pushed to never settle for misunderstanding. My philosophy is: when the answers are all around you, you find them, you don’t sit in confusion and twiddle your thumbs. So, I would compulsively study and observe the things around me and analyze my experiences to understand how to close this “gap” in my upbringing. Over time it meant that I would look closely at the relationships of family and friends, get a degree in communication, become generally obsessed with all things related to interpersonal communication, and prioritize my spiritual growth. In that time, what I found was that the disadvantage I thought I was working against was actually irrelevant. The fact that I didn’t grow up in a two-parent home or surrounded by successful marriages was going to make no difference to my own relationships as long as I maintained a certain level of self-awareness. As a matter of fact, it may have helped me. That entire time I was convinced that the answers to my problem could be found in successful marriages. I thought for sure that they had the secret sauce of how to live happily ever after, but the only thing I learned was that there is no secret sauce and there is no one answer. Actually, it showed me that the way you build a successful partnership is by first understanding yourself. I’ve witnessed relationships and partnerships go to the wayside, and sometimes even wondered if the people who grew up around successful marriages were working too hard to recreate what they had seen as opposed to building something new. See, what I took away from everything that I had worked to understand was that marriage is about two people coming as whole (not partial) individuals into a partnership. It’s not enough to recreate what you’ve seen, you must get comfortable with the idea of building something you’ve never seen before. I had convinced myself that marriage was something that happened to you, and my lack of luck in relationships meant that I was just going to try and try again until marriage happened to me. Then I realized, that’s not how any of this works.
We’ve partnered with BLK to explore the Art Of Dating in a digital age, and how to make your romantic connections work in your favor.
Black Love contributor Briana Johnson-Sims explores the ways to navigate dating when it comes to intention, communication, and most importantly, building a foundation for love.
Joy always knew she was supposed to marry Justin. They met in college and had been dating for over three years before she realized they needed to break up. See, she didn't want to break up with him — he was the love of her life — but she understood that Justin had a lot more maturing to do before he could commit to the type of relationship she required.
Contributor Bianca Brabant opens up about learning how to separate love from control and manipulation after leaving a physically and emotionally abusive relationship.
From sliding into DMs to walking down the aisle, why this wife is encouraging more women to be open to meeting men online.
Niecy Nash was at the 2018 Black Love Summit dropping jewels of knowledge about how she dated for marriage, and so can you. Niecy Nash holds court at "Clips and Conversation"
It’s staging-blacklove.kinsta.cloud Travel Week! Travel Curator Kasara E. Davidson, Esq. talks the Black Travel Renaissance and well-traveled (or, not so much) significant others.
Need a push to see the world on your own? Here's a few beginner's rules to vacationing alone.
She wrote her first “Future Husband” list in the 6th grade. But it was in letting lists go that she let love in.
What’s the secret to successful dating? Editorial Colmunist Brook Sitgraves Turner learns it’s all about FLOW.
Black Love columnist and author of Single To Single: Embracing and Maximizing Your Season of Singleness Antwan Steele explores four reasons and ways that people in today’s society date.
staging-blacklove.kinsta.cloud contributor Briana Johnson-Sims shares her experiences with dating and what she has learned about what it takes to build a relationship and keep a good woman close.
The Art of Dating. While navigating digital spaces to create meaningful connections can be tricky, our Intimacy Expert, Kamali Minter, offers valuable practices to be mindful of yourself in the process.
travSometimes when you’re dating, you want to switch it up. staging-blacklove.kinsta.cloud has your back with our top out of the ordinary date ideas.
If you're looking to date with intention and cultivate meaningful connections with potential partners, join staging-blacklove.kinsta.cloud and dating app BLK to talk about the Art of Dating.
How a solo long-term project helped Arynetta Floyzelle get to know herself, provided a career breakthrough, and landed her in a foreign country.
She didn’t think her father’s incarceration affected her adult life, until she hit rock bottom and had to find her way back up.