Black
Pain: It Just Looks Like We're Not Hurting
Click to
order via
Amazonby
Terrie M. Williams
Hardcover: 368 pages
Publisher: Scribner (January 8, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0743298829
ISBN-13: 978-0743298827
Book Review by Kam Williams
“How much does suffering from and living with addiction, incarceration, dirty
neighborhoods, HIV, hypertension, violence, racism, and class discrimination
make us vulnerable to depression in the Black community? How many of us are
suffering from it and not able or willing to acknowledge it? Who is talking
about it? What is our response? The silence is deafening…
Depression is a fact of Black life, but it doesn’t have to be a curse. And we
don’t have to be ashamed to admit it. This book will speak openly about my own
depression and share the experiences of other people, from celebrities to
regular working folk, so that we can think in different ways about this
condition – and about our options as Black people for dealing with it. More than
anything, I want to open a dialogue. I want to give a voice to our pain and name
it so we can make a space for our healing.”
—Excerpted from the Introduction
(pages xxvi-xxvii)
African-American females are generally undervalued by this society, despite all
the selfless sacrifices they routinely make at home, at work and in the
community. Besides being overworked, they’re expected to behave like
ever-available, accommodating sex machines or else risk being dismissed as
undesirable and unfeminine.
Black men, meanwhile, have a host of their own pressures. Pigeonholed as
dangerous, aggressive and angry, they have come to compensate for this
stereotype by carefully cultivating a disarmingly cool, above-it-all demeanor.
And, instead of developing a “language to talk about painful emotions,” most
adopt a super-macho mask to survive.
Apparently, neither brothers nor sisters think of themselves as entitled even to
feel their emotional pain, much less address it. This is the thesis postulated
by Terrie M. Williams in Black Pain: It Just Looks Like We’re Not Hurting. Ms.
Williams, a licensed clinical social worker, opens her groundbreaking text with
a revealing discussion of her own bottoming-out following years as a
highly-functioning workaholic plunged deeply in denial about her depression. The
author subsequently supplements that very personal story with empathetic
illustrations of additional case histories of what she argues amounts to an
unspoken epidemic currently raging in black America.
By book’s end, Ms. Williams is most persuasive, and achieves her basic aim,
namely, to acknowledge that life is hard in the ‘hood, that people are suffering
from depression as a consequence, and that the time has arrived to remove the
stigma in the community still attached to seeking out psychological help. A
convincing call for African-Americana to trade in a harmful cultural stoicism
for some overdue mental health treatment.