I Didn T Work This Hard Just To Get Married
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I Didn't Work this Hard Just to Get Married
Women once saw living single as a transitional period--singles marked time till they found “the one.” But now marriage is the transitional stage, connecting one unmarried period of life to another. In I Didn’t Work This Hard Just to Get Married, through lively and revealing interviews with women from various walks of life, Nika C. Beamon explores the challenges facing single black women who defy expectations. They candidly discuss aging without a man and reevaluate dating, single homeownership, career, children, and caring for aged parents. The book speaks directly to the black woman’s experience, addressing challenges such as income discrepancies between genders, the high rate of male incarceration, and the Baby Mama Syndrome. Written in the best tradition of women talking to women, and girlfriend to girlfriend, the book delivers tales of lessons learned, hard times and good times, told by women who found ways to achieve their dreams by defying convention.
Only Death Can Tear Us Apart Book #3
My husband would have never thought that I had set up a bugging device under his bed. However, on our second anniversary of the wedding, I heard moans from another woman through the bugging device. My husband cheated on me! Even more, he took away our child, ignoring my pain! Who would believe that he was a doctor! Almost losing my life, I ran out of the room where he attempted to murder me. Then I met a guy, and he saved my life. I fell for my saviour, yet I did not know he was another man that would send me to hell...
Worlds of Difference
This collection of readings presents a variety of perspectives on ageing from different communities across the United States: Native American, Puerto Rican, African American, the elderly homeless, white working class, gay and Mexican amongst many others. The readings cover topics such as: life course; social and psychological contexts of ageing; paid and unpaid activity; the American family; and health.