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Nicole Forrester

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Dating Outside of Your Race

Posted: 12/04/11 10:27 PM ET

As Dr. Martin Luther King's speech goes, I've been brought up to not judge people by the colour of their skin, but rather by their character. I cannot control how someone may view me, but I can choose how I view the world. So when it comes to dating, race is not an issue, but an individual's character is!

While some people prefer to date within their own race, there are also those who prefer to date strictly outside of their race. Both to me seem to offer a limited approach to dating. To date within a box of "I will only date someone who is ____ (whatever race)," is dating with constraints. Like really, what does that have to do with how well a person will treat you? You could be shutting the door on The One simply because of his/her race. I believe love sees no colour.

Yet, even with my hopeful "we are the world" outlook, I am wise enough to know that we haven't reached an era where race doesn't play a factor for some people when selecting a mate. In fact, in online dating it has been found that racial preferences do exist, with black women being "disproportionately snubbed by men of all races." What gives?

Well, I'm not going to debate this finding... now. I'll save it for another day. However, I thought I would jump down the rabbit hole of interracial dating, and offer four DOs and DON'Ts when it comes to dating outside one's race.

1. Do Man Up. Often the greatest barrier to dating is the willingness to be vulnerable and to ask your person of interest out. If your girl is old-fashioned, like me, she may depend on the guy to do the asking. This challenge may be further magnified when it comes to dating outside your race.

Sometimes people assume someone would not be interested in them because of their race. The problem with this is that one's attempt to be "forward" and flirt may be altogether missed. It might be shrugged off as nothing more than someone being friendly. Meanwhile, the poor guy/girl interprets it as not being interested in them. What we have is a failure to communicate. Sometimes you have to be a little bit more direct when approaching someone outside of your race. On the other hand, you may just be too intimidated to even try and ask someone outside of your race out. I'm sorry, but you've got to man up! Rejection is hard, but you'll never know unless you ask. The worst thing someone can ever say is no. Besides, if you see her as a person (and not just her race) why shouldn't she be willing to see you as a person as well? And if your race is an issue then obviously this person is not right for you. But you do have to step up to the plate and ask her out.

2. Don't Use Stereotypes. Stereotypes are deadly because they over-generalize things. When it comes to dating, people want to be treated like an individual, so avoid stereotypes at all costs! This is not the way to win your beloved's heart. Do not use stereotypes in your approach to picking up a girl/guy. Do not use stereotypes to appear knowledgeable about your beloved's race. And do not refer to stereotypes to show how accepting of all mankind you are. Obviously, a difference in race does exist and there is nothing wrong with acknowledging these differences, but you don't need to live in the land of labels.

3. Do Be Open-Minded. If you are dating outside of your race you are going to be exposed to different cultures and habits. While it may be intriguing to you why your new black girlfriend showers with a shower cap, understand that this is the norm for her. Likewise, dating a different race may also involve exposure to different cultures. You must be willing to try new things, learn and embrace diversity. Diversity is a beautiful thing, so enjoy it!

4. Don't Change. News flash! If you are dating someone outside of your race, they know that already! Translation: this means you don't have to change who you are. The best person you can ever be is yourself. You don't need to change the way you act, the way you talk, the way you dress, what your interests are, or whatever! But you do have to be comfortable being you. Sure, differences may exist between you and your beloved. Getting to learn these differences doesn't mean you have to change who you are, it just means you have to appreciate it. YOU are enough!

At the end of the day, everyone just wants to be loved. We may have idealized what that packaging might look like when it arrives, but we must be willing to expect the unexpected. Love doesn't discriminate, so why should we when it comes to finding love?

Colour blind,

Nicole

 

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As Dr. Martin Luther King's speech goes, I've been brought up to not judge people by the colour of their skin, but rather by their character. I cannot control how someone may view me, but I can choos...
As Dr. Martin Luther King's speech goes, I've been brought up to not judge people by the colour of their skin, but rather by their character. I cannot control how someone may view me, but I can choos...
 
 
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10:18 AM on 12/19/2011
Just live in a real city, like NYC, and inter racial dating is as common as the sun rising and setting.
09:58 AM on 12/19/2011
Personally I feel that the culture difference is the biggest obstacle, much more so than color. I can look at a picture of a man of any race in a magazine and find them attractive, but in person it tends to feel awkward, like something is just not connecting. Ultimately I guess I'm attracted to people who were raised in a similar way to me, because it's easy to relate to one another and we have similar values and views on the world around us (I mean I wouldn't want to date someone EXACTLY like me- partners should always have something to add to eachother- but it's nice to have similar foundations). I guess that rules out a lot of people, but it probably rules out a lot of white boys too!
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Nicole Forrester
09:05 PM on 12/23/2011
I can agree about culture being important... But, again culture isn't a matter of race. Culture means being Jamaican, Italian, Portugese, Irish, Nigerian....etc. So you could be of the same race, but differ culturally just the same. Personally, values are probably most important.
09:35 AM on 12/27/2011
I get that, I'm trying to say that I tend to be attracted towards people the same race as me because I find I often have more in common with them when it comes to personality, social interaction, favorite foods, views on the world, music tastes, family values, etc, than people of other races.

So it's not really the race that I am attracted to or not, but from experience I just seem to get along with men of some races better than others, and I'm chalking it up to cultural differences.

If I get along with a guy I don't care what race he is. But I do find that race absolutely influences culture, personality, and values, just because of how people are brought up.
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Frank-Landfield
11:02 AM on 12/18/2011
I hear you
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Frank-Landfield
10:44 AM on 12/18/2011
Thank you
04:10 PM on 12/15/2011
this is a logical and optimistic view on dating outside one's race but unfortunately the reason why some people strictly do so is due to #2. I hate to admit it, but sometimes I am one of those people.
01:04 PM on 12/15/2011
Nicole...will you have dinner with me?
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Nicole Forrester
09:11 PM on 12/23/2011
LOL!!! And you know, I'm not one to turn down food.
03:04 AM on 12/15/2011
I like your approach.
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Semprini
Stamp out and abolish redundancy
07:23 PM on 12/14/2011
"The worst thing someone can ever say is no. "

I wish that were true...
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Ppenguinator
Life's too imprtant to be taken seriously.
05:13 PM on 12/14/2011
I never heard about the shower caps before.
02:32 PM on 12/14/2011
How will the black community survive and better itself if it doesn't even exist? I really don't understand why some black women are obsessed with interracial dating.
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Nicole Forrester
03:45 PM on 12/14/2011
It's not about being obsessed. It is about being open minded to whatever shapes and sizes love might come in. I don't see how discriminating is ever okay. The black community survives through being engaged, educated, helping each other, being supportive and social responsibility. And you can do that regardless of who you date....
06:52 PM on 12/14/2011
Love is a self-deluding emotional hang-up, like depression, and therefore shouldn't be used as a starting point for making good decisions. Like fire, it is also a willing servant but a fearful master. A woman may fall in love with a murderer and think twice before following him into uncertainty and calamity, at last deciding to follow him anyway.
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Nicole Forrester
04:22 PM on 12/14/2011
A willingness to date outside one's race is not an obsession. It is a willingness to be open to all shapes and sizes that love may come in. Likewise, the survival of the black community comes through engagement in the community, support and social responsibility. And this can be done regardless of whether someone is in an interracial relationship or not.
05:51 PM on 12/14/2011
The survival and success of the black community will primarily come from talented people intermarrying with talented people to create talented babies. That cycle must continue inhibited for there to be any dividends. The assertion that the black community will reach its zenith if its most talented people - the ones most open to interracial dating - leave the community to contribute their abilities to other groups is wrongheaded and dangerous.

For an analogy, look at Detroit. All the rich people left and with them the know-how that drove the economy; now all that's left is the poor and downtrodden. That's what happens to the black community again and again. That is what is happening to Africa too: once someone is smart and diligent enough to get a medical or law degree, they emigrate from the continent and leave it without the professionals needed to drive innovation and commerce.
06:51 PM on 12/14/2011
The point is that love, as capricious and deceptive as it can be, is not so much governed reason as by emotion. As such it is dangerous. The black community is best served and improved when its best and brightest put their academic and athletic gifts back into the community, like every other group does en masse. That’s ultimately how one contributes to the community in a meaningful and long-lasting way. Lecturing with the largest part of oneself in the other racial moat is a recipe for short-lived adulation and praise, not paradigm-changing praise.