AfroerotiK

Erotic provocateur, racially-influenced humanist, relentless champion for the oppressed, and facilitator for social change, Scottie Lowe is the brain child, creative genius and the blood, sweat, and tears behind AfroerotiK. Intended to be part academic, part educational, and part sensual, she, yes SHE gave birth to the website to provide people of African descent a place to escape the narrow-mined, stereotypical, limiting and oft-times degrading beliefs that abound about our sexuality. No, not all Black men are driven by lust by white flesh or to create babies and walk away. No, not all Black women are promiscuous welfare queens. And as hard as it may be to believe, no, not all gay Black men are feminine, down low, or HIV positive. Scottie is putting everything on the table to discuss, debate, and dismantle stereotypes in a healthy exchange of ideas. She hopes to provide a more holistic, informed, and enlightened discussion of Black sexuality and dreams of helping couples be more open, honest, and adventurous in their relationships.

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

I Have Seen the Promisedland



I am feeling really accomplished in my life today, really proud of myself.  I started calling myself a writer back in 2003.  I knew I had talent and I knew I had something to say about race, sex, sexuality, and relationships but I was scared to call myself a writer because all I had ever known was you had to get a job and work for someone else until you were retired and half dead.  Saying I was a writer was sort of like the people who wait tables who call themselves actors.  I knew I wanted people to hear what I had to say about race and racism and the psychological diseases Black people inherited from slavery and I knew I could get them to listen with the words that flew from my fingertips on a keyboard.  I knew there was power in using erotica to get people to hear my messages.  I just didn’t feel comfortable in my own skin calling myself a writer.  My family certainly didn’t support me.  They still don’t.  The only message of encouragement I get are from people who have read my words over this strange thing called the Internet and they have responded to my call.  For that, I am immensely proud. 

When I started this journey, when I created AfroerotiK, there were NO photographic images of Black couples that weren't pornographic or artistic nudes.  The two extremes that existed were either gross and crass or contrived and not arousing.  I was the very first person to create true erotic images of Black couples, stimulating images that showed emotion and depth, that showed passion and intimacy, not just body parts, not weird poses that no one could ever replicate.  Today there are photographers who have made their careers from creating erotic images of Black couples.  I single-handedly opened that door.  For that, I feel tremendously accomplished and gratified. 

When I first started preaching from my soapbox about how detrimental it is to emulate the slave master with this pathological need to have straight hair, to put toxic chemicals on our scalps, next to our brains, to sew some Filipino woman's or some poor, naked yak's hair on your head, wasn’t no one trying to hear that.  When I started out, I was adamant about being PROUD and feeling beautiful with our own natural, nappy, wooly, African hair, there were no other public figures as unapologetic as I was saying anything similar. There was no such thing as the big chop.  There were no websites for women to go to to get support to transition from slave hair to natural hair.  There wasn't even such a thing as YouTube when I started preaching, let along videos teaching women different techniques to wear their natural hair.  There was me, from my yahoo group, Black Planet, and MySpace, screaming from my computer that it was way past time that Black women started loving our own natural hair, the way God intended it to be.  I got hatred.  I got personal attacks.  Today, there is a community of Black women embracing their natural hair.  There aren't enough today but at least I'm not the only person speaking out about it, who refuse to back down because they know that it's detrimental to Black women to find their beauty in the standards of our oppressors. 

Ten years ago, when I was relentless with my critique of Black men's emotional maturity, when I was using my knowledge of consciousness to attack patriarchy and sexism and misogyny, and I was really attacking the demons that created a nation of Black men who trapped in unhealthy behaviors and who refused to budge, my voice was the only voice.  I got death threats from Black men.  I got attacked and called everything but a child of God.  Today, this very day, I got a message from a young man. 

“. . . . I'm different now after reading that and I’m making serious changes in my life.  I've chosen to practice abstinence from sexual activity for a while. I’m incorporating yoga and meditation into my routine so that I can purge my mind of the views I had of women. The objectification and lack of intimacy was like a soul-eating cancer that must be starved and cut out and replaced with that which is whole and pure. I'd rather be in solitude then continue to see through those poisoned lenses.  I read in one of your posts that said we have to do better and scouring the Internet for meaningless sex was one of the things I was guilty of. So I instituted a hands-off policy. Off myself and anyone else if it's not whole and good and mutual and with a spiritual foundation.” 

Ten years ago, there weren’t more than a handful of Black men who could have made those choices, let alone articulated them so well.  Today, I not only get very few attacks on me from Black men, on my womanhood, I see more and more introspective Black men, I see more and more Black men working on themselves, trying to be better, trying to heal their emotional wounds.  I see them trying to address the things that I’ve been preaching about for more than a decade.  It’s not a lot but the fact that I can see some small change, I can feel a tiny shift in consciousness occurring.  I’m certainly not the only voice that has been calling for the necessity for Black men to take ownership of their behaviors but I’ve been one of the few soldiers on the front lines, dodging the bullets, getting hit by the shrapnel[SL1] .  I’ve never backed down.  I’ve never surrendered.  I can’t think of anyone else off the top of my head who has used their public platform to address Black men’s emotional immaturity but I’m sure there are others.  But the message I got this morning from that beautiful, young, Black King is validation enough that I’m doing what I’m supposed to be doing.  A new mother showing of her beautiful newborn couldn’t be more proud than I am right now. 

I started writing interracial erotica because white people were reading my stories and they were learning that Black people were more complex than the ghetto, stereotypical images that they saw everywhere.  I was teaching white people what Afrocentric meant, that there were Blacks, groups and communities of Blacks, who spoke in ways they had never heard, that our “superiority” was not just in our oversized genitals or excellence at sports and entertainment.  Today, I have a huge following of white supporters who have a vastly different take on race because of my unapologetic stance, my unwillingness to back down, my fervent mission to rid them of the fallacy of white supremacy that has been in place and unquestioned for centuries.  I’m clearly not the only person who has been addressing racism.  There are lots of other voices out here, some louder than my own.  But, I know that I have been able to shift the perceptions of a significant portion of white people with my work.  I know that the handful of people that I have been able to reach now question their beliefs and have had to re-evaluate their biases based on the words that I have written.  That makes me feel incredibly proud. 

In my own personal life, I’m surrounded by dysfunction.  The stench of it has permeated my very soul.  I let it consume me at times, but today, I am not.  Today, I’m rejoicing in the fact that I have been instrumental in shifting the collective consciousness of people of African descent.  Today, I’m celebrating the fact that I have created a paradigmatic shift that is only going to grow and continue to spread.  I’ve known my mission for a very long time.  I was put on this earth to create social change, to educate and enlighten, to lift the collective consciousness of Africans born in AmeriKKKA, and to break the chains of mental slavery.  I’ve done that.  I’m not finished.  I have lots more work to do.  There are new battles to be waged.  The newest demon is the plague of young women who think that degrading yourself is empowering.  The next monster in line are the young people who think that being respectable is a bad thing.  I will slay those beasts with my words.  I will not give up the fight.  The war has not been won but today, I know that I have won some significant battles.  I may not have the wealth, success, and fame of many of my “peers” but I have a clear conscious in knowing that I have ONLY promoted, celebrated, and championed what is true, righteous, and healthy in our evolution as a people.  I have never sold out.  I’ve never compromised or lowered my standards or my integrity.   

So, going forward, I still have work to do.  I know now that the outcome is assured.  What I must do is what I have done. Write. I can write about what I know about and that's how the collective consciousness of Africans born in America was formed. (I don't write about Africans on the continent even though I have a tremendous and loving following there). I can write about the dysfunctional and detrimental beliefs we have inherited from white people. I can give models of what it means to be emotionally mature, vulnerable, and to be AfroerotiK. To be AfroerotiK is to be secure in your sexuality, to rid yourself of unhealthy views, to redefine everything that we've been brainwashed to believe is true. What other races do is not my concern. My only concern is to lift the consciousness of MY people. 

And for that, today, I am very proud of myself. 


Sunday, July 26, 2015

My Soul is Restless





Something is not right in my soul, there’s something amiss.  I feel ill at ease, anxious maybe, like I’m suffering from withdrawal; something’s just not right.  Old folks used to say, “Honey, you just have a good ole fashioned case of the blues.” It’s not that I’m depressed or melancholy; I’m simply frustrated. My body is aching for connection, touch, for intimacy.  Really, what I feel right now can be summed up with two words.  I’m lonely. 

I want to dive into that magical bond with a man that is chemical, genetic even.  I want to sit across a bistro table in the warm summer night air and stare into beautiful brown eyes and laugh at silly jokes and flirt.  I want to smile . . .  just smile from my heart when I see him. I want my hand to fit perfectly in his when we walk along the water’s edge, staring at the full moon, and feel him put his arm around me when I get a chill.  I need that romantic, thoughtful, sweet, amazing brotha in my life who takes my breath away every time I see him. 

I want to kiss.  Oh God, I want to kiss for hours.  I want to feel his body on top of mine, feel his arousal pressing against my body, his hands roaming over my entire curves while he whispers in my ear, “Scottie, I want you.”  I want to be serenaded by Coltrane playing softly in the background as I feel his lips kissing the nape of my neck, nibbling softly on my ear.  I need to fall asleep in a brotha’s strong arms, feel his body conforming to mine, our naked bodies covered by a soft, white, cotton sheet as a ceiling fan swirls above us. 

I’m lonely.  I miss the sensations that only a brotha can bring.  I want to make love.  I want to join body, mind, and spirit together in a hot, sweaty union of passion and bliss.  I want to fuck for hours: tasting, touching, exploring and every inch of his body.  I want to feel my orgasm building to a fevered pitch, feeling the pleasure consume my body as I fight it, as I struggle to channel that energy up my chakras through the top of my head.  I miss the sensation of my juices flowing freely, that slippery, sticky sweat coating our bodies. 

I can’t sleep at nights.  I don’t like going to bed alone.  I toss and turn in solitude, longing for that touch, that connection that I crave so intensely because I’m a better woman when I’m connected.  I offer up my prayers, my petition to the One Most High that I might find a partner with whom I can connect and bond intimately. 

Thursday, July 23, 2015

Empowering vs. Not Empowering

 Young Black women have been sold a bill of goods.  They've been told that anything and everything that they do is empowering.  They've been told that degrading themselves is empowering, that objectifying themselves is empowering.  Well, I've got to do something.  I know they won't hear me.  I know they will react violently, calling me vile names, but I must speak out and tell them that there is no power in devaluing yourself and your womanhood to your sexuality 

EMPOWERING
·         Owning your sexuality, not being ashamed of the number of partners you’ve had, not being slut-shamed for not conforming to the concept that women have to be asexual and pure to have value.  Human beings are sexual beings.  Women have a right to pleasure and they shouldn’t be ashamed of their desire and/or need for touch, intimacy, arousal, pleasure, or orgasms.  

NOT EMPOWERING
·         Being indiscriminate with your body, sharing it with people who have not earned your trust, respect, or who don’t value you as a person.  Having casual sex with people whose only intent is to get off, who don’t see your totality as a human being is not empowering.  Can you have casual sex?  Of course, that is your right as a human being.  Is it empowering to be used by someone in essence so they don’t have to masturbate?  No.  Is it empowering to use someone, to not take their humanity, feelings, and personhood into consideration?  No!  You derive no power from letting people use you, nor is it empowering to use other people. Using people is manipulative, it’s immature, it’s dysfunctional.  As much as people want to deny it, as much as people swear that casual sex has no consequences, it does.  Physical intimacy with another person is not recreation.  I’m NOT saying that sex is bad, I’m not saying people need to be chaste and asexual.  I’m saying it’s immature to think that using people is empowering.  

EMPOWERING
·         Feeling confident and beautiful in the skin you’re in.  Holding your head high, knowing that in your own unique imperfection that there is value and worth beyond anything that society can define or label. Empowering is being an individual who doesn’t conform, who doesn’t NEED external validation in order to feel attractive but who can graciously say, “Thank you,” when it’s given.  Empowerment is the unshakable knowledge that your beauty comes from being intelligent, having integrity, creating a style that is not contingent upon having men lust after how many of your body parts are on public display.  Empowering is knowing that you are sexy without having to show that you are sexy.  

NOT EMPOWERING
·         Spending inordinate amounts of money on your clothes, shoes, make-up, hair, and nails, often times to the point of debt, in order to conform to what society says is attractive is not empowering.  Needing external validation of your attractiveness = not empowering.  Putting your sexuality and body on display like it’s a commodity to be purchased.  Defining your beauty by what men determine is attractive to them.  Needing to alter everything about your appearance before you can feel confident, having to present to the world this false image of perfection at all times.  Calculating your self-worth by the number of people who tell you that you are sexy or hot, measuring your beauty by comparing yourself to celebrities is the very definition of not being empowered.  I KNOW, I know, you’ve been told that anything that women do is empowering.  You’ve been told that a woman objectifying herself is empowering.  Conforming to patriarchal, sexist, misogynist, limiting definitions of what it means to be a woman is not empowering however.  It’s the very opposite of being empowered if your power comes from being seen as pretty or sexually desirable to fuel men’s desire for you. 

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Theory of Relativity

All this Ashley Madison drama has me thinking.  There are potentially more than 30 million spouses that could find out that their mate has cheated on them in the very near future.  What is the appropriate reaction to discovering that you have been cheated on?    If you are in love, if you are in a committed relationship, if you have given your heart and your life to one person, what is the appropriate response to finding out your partner/spouse has betrayed your trust?  I'm going to assume that you aren't also cheating on your mate.  Then, the only appropriate, mature response is to walk away, no hard feelings on either person's behalf. 

But what if you are faithful and your partner cheats, how should you react?  The cheater always assumes that the person cheated on should take the high road, they always act as if the person betrayed should just suck it up and walk away and they shouldn't show any emotion, they shouldn't show any anger, they shouldn't try to get revenge.  Society in general is always quick to say that the betrayed shouldn't waste their energy on any sort of revenge, any sort of willful intention to hurt the person back. 

But, is that really reasonable?  If you have made love to someone, if you have shared your body, your secrets, your dreams, your fears with someone, if you have truly given your heart to someone, if your heart has been broken and your trust betrayed, even the most sane, reasonable person should be expected to feel extreme rage and anger when you discover that the person you were building a life with has decided that your feelings, that you mean nothing to them.  In my mind, only an insane person would react with no reaction at all.  That, to me, indicates, being so out of touch with your emotions that you are incapable of processing them.  

Clearly, you shouldn't physically harm anyone but isn't that asking a lot of the human heart to not seek any sort of salve for your pain?  I can think of no greater pain than being betrayed by your life partner.  I think society's insistence that injured party just suck it up and hold their head up high with dignity . . . I'm pretty convinced that's extremely unhealthy.  We are sentient beings and we are supposed to process our emotions, we are supposed to feel.  The concept of letting an individual who has inflicted tremendous personal pain on their mate just walk away, not having learned a painful lesson, seems delusional to me.  One of the reasons I think we are so unhealthy as a society is that we have this obsessive need to present fake images of perfection, facades of one-dimensional pictures that aren't realistic. 

So, is burning all your mate's clothing acceptable? Is a lost wardrobe really that detrimental for the crime committed?  Is going to his or her job and embarrassing them okay?  If your cheating spouse is embarrassed, if they are humiliated by co-workers, is that something they won't be able to rebound from?  Is outing them as a cheater to their friends and family acceptable?  What about doing something to the person your partner was cheating with?  Should they escape your wrath because it's socially unacceptable?  Cheating, lying, betrayal should be unacceptable but it seems as if society is telling the victims of adultery that they should just suck it up and be the better person and their their perpetrators walk away with their own guilt as their only punishment.  Where is the line?  What is the appropriate, acceptable response when someone rips your heart out and steps on it? 

Are we as a society so obsessed with pretending to be perfect that we've lost perspective of the fact that for every action, there must be an equal and opposite reaction? 

A primer for disgusting cheaters

If you are in a relationship and you aren't happy, if you want to have sex with other people, tell your partner BEFORE you cheat.  Let them have the dignity of leaving with their self-esteem.  Cheating hurts.  It's a betrayal of trust.  If you cheat, if you hurt your girlfriend/boyfriend/wife/husband, you are leaving an emotional scar that doesn't just go away.  You have changed them for the worse, you have broken their heart in ways that can't be repaired. 

If you tell them you are unhappy, if you tell them that you don't want to be with them any more, if you are HONEST with them before you cheat, you will hurt their feelings but people can rebound from that.  If you betray their trust, you have destroyed a part of their soul.  Be mature.  If you love sex with different people more than your family, more than your partner, don't bring anyone else down with your deception, lies, and betrayal.  You might get a thrill sneaking, lying, and having sex in the back of your car but the consequences of your immaturity have lasting impact on more than just you. 

If you're single, if you sleep with married people because you don't want an emotional commitment, you are the very definition of immature.  You are hurting the spouse even if they don't know about you.  You are hurting a family, a parent has to look in their children's eyes and lie about where they were and what they were doing.  If you don't want someone cheating on you, don't be the person that someone cheats with. 

There are more than enough single people who will have sex with you.  If you have children and you think that staying with your spouse is better and cheating is better than leaving, you are a pretty shitty parent and your kids are much better off knowing that you are being honest, not lying, not cheating. 

And if you  have cheated in the past and you've gotten away with it, tell your partner/spouse.  Why?  Because it's the right thing to do.  Because they deserve to know the truth so they can be informed.  They can decide if they want to stay and try to work things out or they can decide if they want to leave.  Information is power.  Tell them because you should apologize sincerely for your immaturity and betrayal.