I think Kurlee is saying you cannot just remove the negative connotation from a word for all of society because you do not find it offensive in and of itself.
But I think Nonie is trying to say, Its okay If everyone is not afraid to use it, because unlike the other derogatory N-word, or other derogatory words, its original meaning is neutral, meaning there is possibility that over time it could change, as people's mindsets change.
In both situations i think the words Gay, and F@g are great examples, because both of those words do not have inherently bad connotations, but depending on who you are and how they are used, they can be offensive, one more offensive than the other. Perfect example on how you
a) should not ignore the fact that a word is loaded
and
b) that a word's meaning is changeable.
Did I paraphrase both of your points correctly ladies?
BTW I think this is such a great thread. I like to break up the how I like to flatiron or condition my hair thread with some stuff of substance. Its also super great because we all have so many different backgrounds, I love the differences of perspective
Yes, you kinda did, except I'm not really so concerned with people's mindsets changing on it, but rather just hoped to enlighten people just as I was on what it is about this innocent word that came to make it so taboo in some people's minds. That my posts changed someone's mind was a plus but it's not why I have been posting. I just like to learn and understand people and assume others do too, hence my rambling to hopefully inform. But also because I realized that there were those who were just flabbergasted by the audacity of those who use the word casually, I wanted to lay down our point of view.
I appreciate your post because Kurlee's agreement that you assessed her well does confirm I too have understood her stand all along, even though she thinks I haven't, which is why I gave examples that showed how, in certain circles, being black will never be accepted in society but it doesn't affect me in one way or another because I don't view being black as a bad.
Perhaps Kurlee doesn't like my examples or see their relevance because she doesn't see the correlation between the word
nappy and the word
black since she can't imagine our people shunning the latter word. So to her, it's a bad example because it's not about "respecting our own", while avoiding the use of the word "
nappy" would be. Except, I do know a few on this forum (and I imagine they represent a quota of the population) who do not like to be called
black even though they are descendants of Africans and are as dark as I am with hardly any drop of an outside race in them. I respect their stand just as I do that of those who hate the word "nappy" and as long as I remember it is they I am addressing, I will try my darnest not to call them black. I forget all the explanations for not liking the word "black" being applied to them, but I seem to recall there being a history of being treated with contempt because of their skin color and having the word punctuate insults they got, so that it became a word that hurts. So a word many of us use so casually in almost every thread to describe ourselves is a word they view the same way some of you view "nappy".
But I don't see many of us making apologies for using it. In fact, I would dare say many rolled their eyes when these people expressed their discomfort with the word
black and stated that they preferred to be called
brown or
colored. And that we keeping calling each other "black" on just about every post isn't because we are "taking back the word" or "embracing it" or not caring at all about how they feel. We do it because in all sincerity, we are so comfortable with being black and calling ourselves black and find the word completely harmless, 100% true, very accurate, no-hidden-agenda neutral...just plain innocent. Now if we addressed one of those people as black and they told us "I am not black, I am colored", then we ought to respect them the same way we respect "My hair is not nappy" and avoid using it when referring to them. (I'm sure some of you can now understand the stress telling folks not to use an innocent word puts on someone to whom it's almost as useful as a comma.)
If I were the one who hated the word "nappy" I would truly be OK with folks using it on themselves. I have friends who call each other the N-word which I loathe but it is not my place to tell grown people who know my opinion on the word what to call each other. As long as they don't address me like that, fine. And if they slipped and did, I'd remind them. I honestly would not think they are doing it to be mean, coz they have made it in their head an innocent word, but it isn't to me. So while I can understand why they might slip and call me that (although they tend to use only among their fellow men so it's unlikely) I would hope they would check themselves and correct their slip if they accidentally used it on me. But I would not karate chop them. This would be one of those incidents where you have to look at the source and the intent.
Somehow when I was typing that point about AAs who hate to be called black, Tiger Woods came to mind because he is one who got mocked for saying he wasn't black. Up to this day, I have NEVER had an issue with his saying he was not black but Cablasian. I fully understood his wanting to embrace his whole heritage entirely, regardless of how he looks. Just the same way I understand the choice of those of you who say their hair isn't nappy but coily, curly or textured, regardless of how how nappy it looks
to me.
In other words, I don't try to force people to do things they aren't comfortable doing, and just hope that they won't force me to do things I'm not comfortable doing. Telling me not to use the word "nappy" w/r/t hair (
ever!) makes me tense because it'd be like telling me not to use the word "black" w/r/t race and it'd feel like I'd have to walk on egg shells for the rest of my life. It'd seriously feel like I lost my freedom and was living a different kind of slavery to words.