Saturday, January 18, 2014
Thursday, September 12, 2013
Being A Fit Motswana
I recently hit 50kg. I’ve never been 50kg so it’s quite a
messy experience being caught between, “you’re just growing” and “oh my I’m
getting fat”. Fortunately one thing is certain about me, when I don’t like
something I don’t like it. So I don’t like weighing 50 KG. So I decided to
finally follow through on my vow that 19 would be the age of healthy. I however
completely underestimated how difficult it is to be a fit African girl.
As is the case in most cultures, feasts are a common way of
celebrating anything.
Here in Botswana we glorify women and even babies with a
thick appetite and thick body to match it. When I was younger my “skinny”
figure was a cause for concern for my family, a little bit of teasing from my
cousins and once a partner that sat and watched me eat because he suspected I
didn’t eat much. Food is a form of bonding, it’s a way of interacting and
accompanied by the modern lifestyle it is really fostering bad eating habits
and unhealthy lifestyles.
I had no idea of this until I started my attempt at being
physically fit and healthy but a little secret on this side of the world is
that no one really likes and supports a fit black woman. The comments are
exhausting and I’ve stopped trying to share this part of my life with anyone. “Don’t
get that tight ass, that’s for white women”, “but You look perfect”, “are you
benching your boyfriend or?” just some of the comments I’ve received. I walked
into the gym and an instructor even exclaimed that I was attempting to ruin a
perfectly good body.
Honestly I’d like to
make it clear that it’s not about how I look really, actually never mind abs
are pretty cool. But this is about being Healthy and Fit: it’s about getting to
the top of the stairs and not needing a nap as well as oxygen mask, getting
through 8 hours of sleep as well as waking up with no trouble. Two weeks in and
I am already waking up before my alarm clock rings.
But the worst part is really how difficult it is to find the
foods that my new lifestyle requires. I’ve suddenly began to sympathize with
Vegetarians and Vegans because in this country well there is no healthy option;
Except for Green salad. There is always green salad for some reason. Living in
my parent’s house doesn’t make it any easier for the record. My father keeps
forgetting I do not drink Fizzy drinks while he laughs at my attempts at
working out. I forgive him because he has promised to buy me the Nike trainers
which all the cool fitblrs have.
Truth told if the tumblr blog community of “Fitblrs” had
more black women I’d probably feel less alone in my journey. But I’m finding it
hard to find body idols or role models that are anything close to what I look
like. Sadly the truth is being a fit black girl is proving to be a very
difficult and lonely path. Since I’ve been trying, failing and succeeding for
about the past 8months I’ve decided I’m not falling off the healthy living
train ever again, simply because starting again is so damn exhausting.
Honestly it is your body but I feel wonderful. So I thought
there is probably another girl out there who needs a start and well I’m going
to share what I’ve learnt in the past 8 months.
- Water and sleep are your best friends.
- Squats are your booty’s best friend, while running is the best all body work out there is.
- Eating clean isn’t dieting, it is the way humans should eat. Simply start by cutting packaged processed foods ( Fizzy drinks, crisps, etc).
- Eat. Eat. And Eat. Your metabolism needs at least 4 meals a day.
- Breakfast matters.
- Gym is not a delete bad eating button.
- You have the time to work out. 10min of skipping rope before your morning shower does wonders.
- Take the stairs. And the long way.
- Quitting is never doing it. Falling off is fine.
- You don’t have to give up your favourite foods.
- Also weights don’t mean bulk they mean muscle.
- The first two weeks hurt, and then it feels good. So don’t fall off.
-
Sunday, August 4, 2013
Why White America has ruined White Men for me.
There is a white American marine texting me right now. He
calls it flirting and would like to take me on a date. It’s cute, Shems. He is
currently in my country for some service with the United States Embassy and how
I met him is really such an awkward story I’d rather not share.
Now despite this young man having all the qualifications I
usually have for men whose advances I bother to entertain he is failing
miserably. Unfortunately I’m sorry to say it’s because he is white. I've never
had an interest in a white man so I thought, hey maybe I’m just not that into
him. But now I’m absolutely sure it has everything to do with him being a white
man.
How might I know this? Every time he says I am gorgeous I
see porn title flashing through my mind, “Ebony slut hungry for some white
dick”, “Black maid seduces white boss”, “explorer gets jungle fever”...
Basically I see myself being made into a fetish. Like when Justin Beiber
*cringes* cheated on Selena Gomez with a certain African American model and
White America’s headline punch line was “Justin Beiber Cheats with Black girl”.
Basically would I become “the first black girl I dated” or “Oh but I date black
girls”? Then I wonder if his friends made jokes about him enjoying
some African pussy while down here. I also wonder if I’m on a 20 things to do
before I am 30 list. “Go to Africa and bang African girls.”
Am I over thinking
this? Yes? No? Maybe? Have I watched too many Tyler Perry (I didn’t know
better) movies? Or have I been on the Zimmerman hashtag too long? Because I want to
Google where he is from and check how many black boys have been shot in that
neighborhood and how their courts dealt with it.
It doesn’t go just that far, the worst for me is whether
he’ll use pictures of us to justify why as a white male who dates black women
he does not fall into the category of racists that support Zimmerman’s
murdering a 17 year old black child.
Is he aware that he has white privilege?
And that in my city when we go out girls will snicker that I’m seeing him for
his bank account. Despite him probably making not much more than me (that’s a
lie I’m a student and journalist, my bank account doesn't know what money is)
but white is synonymous with rich in Africa.
I also wonder if on our first date he’ll ask to touch my
hair now that it’s out of its braids. I wonder how I will feel about him
touching it even if he was trying to be innocently cute in getting it out of my
face. I also find myself wanting to ask him how he feels about the fact that
the United States system is designed to keep the poor just that, poor, and that well the poorest
were black.
But I’m not sure how he’ll react and if my opinions might
tantamount to hate speech therefore landing me in Guantanamo bay being force
fed Monsato GMOs. After all he is a marine, he might be patriotic and ready to
die for his country and stuff and I’m just here a 19 year old black girl trying
to get her driver’s licence. So maybe despite it eventually coming from him
being a white American male, it might also simply be that I cannot be with
someone that I cannot be comfortable voicing my opinion to.
Saturday, April 13, 2013
1thirdofawoman reconstruction
Hi there,
I'm sorry first of all. But I was not happy with one third of a woman at all.
So i decided to spend a little money in having some graphics designed for the blog. Yes I know people DIY all the time but i figure if you're going to google me this will come up. It better look good and represent me well.
So until further notice 1thirdofawoman will not be up. Hopefully we wont have to move but I'm prepared to make this work now. Professionally.
with love, TJ.
I'm sorry first of all. But I was not happy with one third of a woman at all.
So i decided to spend a little money in having some graphics designed for the blog. Yes I know people DIY all the time but i figure if you're going to google me this will come up. It better look good and represent me well.
So until further notice 1thirdofawoman will not be up. Hopefully we wont have to move but I'm prepared to make this work now. Professionally.
with love, TJ.
Friday, January 11, 2013
A War is Coming *warning graphic images will follow*
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| TOO MANY WOMEN DOWN |
I read another angry blog today. This One is by a pretty black
South African lesbian woman who lives in Johannesburg and writes poetry. She is angry
about a number of things, white privilege, the ANC, lesbians and homosexual stereotype,
and the common women battles. She is so angry; she uses vulgar language when she passionately rants on twitter. You know what, it’s scary. I’m not out here to judge her
being angry. I don’t even care that she is black lesbian and an activist. I don’t
know her. I have no title deed to be able to say anything about her. But it
sure scares me that she isn't the only Angry woman out there. Blog posts by so many young ladies are talking about the anger and how they're affected by it, from SiyandaWrites to That Cracked Black. It is even
scarier that they have every reason to be. They're also tiring of writing about it.
![]() |
| FREE SELF DEFENSE CLASSES IN INDIA |
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| IT BEGINS HERE. |
Statistics show an increase in rape. It’s being recorded and
sent around as porn in South African high schools., it’s being used to teach women lessons, as weapons in war, or for the fuck of it and the
sad part is whole town’s are covering it up. I’m in tears as I type this
because we’re losing the battle. I don’t know why I was sitting here thinking that
if I sit on my lap top and I type about these things somewhere somehow I would
save the world. I’m crying real tears because despite spending the morning
reading tweets about how perpetrators should alone be left with responsibility
of their actions; I’m sitting here thinking I’m not doing enough. I’m sitting
here thinking how unfair it is that I grew up in a home were my father is a
good man and my mother is treated like a goddess while majority of my friend’s
have sad childhood memories, missing fathers or battered mothers. I’m not angry
anymore. I’m sad and scared.
I’m sad because every time I walk down the street and a man
whistles and hollers I say hi because I’m scared he might consider me rude and
decide to rape me because of it. But then again he might rape me because my “Hi”
was flirtatious. Well, he might also just do it for the fucks of it. Literally.
But I’m also scared that it might be one
of my friends on a night out, when I've had a few too many so I’m quitting
drinking this year. But then it could be a cousin. You know what I feel like
right now? My friend recently became a father to a very pretty little girl,
when he told me it was a girl my heart sunk. I got sad because that is one more
burden for me. That saddens me. Because I love being a woman but I’m still feeling
like the moment I was born and I had a vagina. Well I was screwed.
![]() |
| IT IS COMING TO AN END |
But women are getting angry. They’re getting angry and they
are mobilizing the troops. There is a storm brewing, there is a war coming
world. It is going to be messy. They won’t fight with their muscle like you men
do. They won’t use brutal force. They will use your seeds. They will take your daughters
and they will teach them to hate men. They will take your sons and teach them
to hate themselves. We've seen the race wars, the tribal wars, civil wars; tell
me how will we survive when the women rise to the goddesses they are? How will
you protect yourself from your mother? Will you kill them all? Will you beat
them into submission? There is a war coming and I fear the future generations
that will be born in its times. How will man and woman survive without one
another?
Labels:
abuse,
African issues,
Corrective rape,
culture,
domestic violence,
Fear,
Feminism,
girls,
India,
protest,
rape,
Sadness,
siyanda,
slut walks,
Tshepo Moyo,
War
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
ABOUT CROP TOPS, MINI SKIRTS, LOW RISE JEANS, IMMORAL DRESS AND SWAZILAND
I was going to write an article on Swaziland's recent decision to enforce the 1889 law that bans "immoral dressing". But I figure if you've read SLUT WALKS and you know how I feel about women being told how to dress. But I feel it is my duty to share with you a certain young lady I love and adore's article on it. I was going to ask her to write something on it as soon as I came back from my holiday because she is actually from Swaziland well, half way. But anyway, she beat me to the punch because she doesn't holiday, and here is a link to my soul mate Siyanda Mohutsiwa blog SiyandaWrites.
About The Author
Siyanda is a 19-year-old BSc undergraduate studying Mathematics/Statistics at the University of Botswana. She lives for mathematics, literature and laughing loudly at her own jokes. She has a particularly inexplicable passion for feminism, pan-Africanism and a growing interest in the socio-economic landscape of her country. She also has a border-line psychopathic love for dead African heroes. She refuses to reveal more on that issue.
Her sometimes indiscernible cries to her imaginary audience can be found on Twitter (@siyandawrites). If you happen to be in the country you can find her articles in the award-winning Sunday Standard’s The Telegraph. If you aren’t, a quick browse through the Sunday Standard website will land you in her articles.
Email siyandawrites@gmail.com for inquiries regarding freelance writing and editing.
P.S I am glad I don't live in a country that subjects me to so much. They're still too many women out there in such situations. allow me to say it but too many of our women down in the field. But at least i know a lot of women whose skill and passion is strong enough to pull the rest out. My Christmas wish is that more of them are born and none of them are afraid to fight the war.
Labels:
1889 laws,
abuse,
African issues,
domestic violence,
dressing,
Feminism,
gender equality,
girls,
guest writer,
justice,
kings,
men,
monarchy,
other blogs,
politics,
protest,
rape,
siyanda,
siyandawrites,
Swaziland
Friday, December 21, 2012
When I grow Up I Want to be Pope
I don’t really want to be pope
when I grow up, but I imagine there is a little girl somewhere in this world
kneeling in a Roman Catholic Church praying she gets to be Pope one day, so
this one is for that little girl. I’m not a very religious person. By religious
of course I mean I don’t belong to a particular church. I’m not atheist either
because I use Rollo Reese May’s definition of an atheist, “call
it confidence in the universe, trust in God, and belief in one’s fellow men or
what not, the essence of religion is the belief that something matters- the
presumption that life has meaning. So the religious person is one who has found
meaning in life. And an atheist is one who cannot, or has not found it.” I
have found my own meaning. I don’t think my issue is with religion, or God.
Although I've been told there is a special place for me in hell, that’s not my
issue. I think my issue is with institutions in general. I don’t like
institutions, religious or not. I simply do not want to be institutionalized.
Albert Einstein apparently said
“Imagination is more important than Knowledge.” How true would you say this
statement was? How important is innovation in any field? The thing with
institutions is they slowly murder your ability to be imaginative. Like, Harper
Lee said, “The book to read is not the one that thinks for you, but the one
that forces you to think.” You know what the problem with being institutionalized is? The problem with being institutionalized is we have a bunch of rules dictating what you can and cannot
do. You know what the sad part is, you have a billion people in the world
walking around thinking they’re special. In the words of Dash Incredible,
“saying everyone is special in their own way is just a nice way of saying no
one is special.”
Do you remember in primary? There was a stage where you learnt
that little speech. “My name is Tshepo. I am 7 years old. When I grow up I want
to be a Insert Teacher’s choice.” that sentence is the first step into
being institutionalized Fire-fighter, soldier, teacher, doctor all of these
careers these teachers picked for you are that first step. Of course unless
your parents are “baby boomers” they've also been institutionalized No teacher
picked I want to be “a broke poet travelling through Europe appreciating art
eating French croissants, and bar-tending for a little bit of money.”
I mean my baby sister came home
the other day and told me she wanted to be a doctor. She is seven. When I was
her age I wanted to be a princess. So I’m thinking she is either really smart
and has figured out her older sister is a flop, ( I've decided I want to write
for a living and be an activist I’m typing this in the hope that it will save
me the conversation with my mom. Hi mom.) and her parents need something to be
proud of. Or I've been screwed from day one. Anyway back to institutionalization.
We live in a world where we’re
fed mixed singles. On one hand you’re told you’re unique, be yourself, you’re
special, on the other you’re fed mass everything. Mass education, Mass
religion, Mass clothing, even be unique is becoming a mass message. So here we
are humans, who are brought up in homes with individualistic believes then
taken to institutions with mass believes. Imagine if my family had been
catholic, I’ve spent my whole life with my parents telling me I can do anything
I want, I can be anything I want. Imagine then that I came home from Sunday
school and told my mom, hey mom guess what I've decided I want to be pope. I’m
imagining my mother has to tell me why I can’t be pope, which from the research I've done stems down to me being a girl. I’m imagining telling your child they
can’t be something because they’re not allowed to must be traumatizing.
So I don’t like institutions. I
don’t like schools. I didn't like reception. I didn't like primary, middle
school or high school. Unfortunately varsity has changed nothing. I like
education. I like knowledge. I have an undying thirsting desire for knowledge. I’d
rather read my text books at home than sit in class. But I would also rather
sit on Google and find ways to prove those text books wrong. I’m probably just
anti social but truth told I don’t think I even like the institution of a
country or a government rather. I've read this blog post over so many times and
feel it makes no sense. But let us see how this will work out. I have no reason
for hating institutional-ism other than that I am also a sad result of it. I
wish I wasn't because maybe then I would believe my dad when he said I should
be Botswana’s first female president. But unfortunately the institutions tell
me I won’t be, because Botswana’s Political institutions do not foster female
presidents or even politicians. So I’m sorry, I’m sorry to all the Catholic
little girls that will never get to be pope.
Labels:
dreams,
girls,
institutionalism,
law,
roman catholic
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