Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:J&J was founded by Blacks that wanted to be exclusionary and were themselves excluded from DAR and the such.
Guessing nobody sponsored you.
This is the elitist attitude that is pervasive in the organization. FWIW, I am Black, two DC's in private (full freight), high HHI, etc... but this is the attitude we get from white people who look down on us and assume they know who we are. I don't need this from a group of Black people who's only "leg up" on me is that they are from a generation of well educated, well off, elite upper crust of Black society. Like a PP, I am first generation law school, self made and will not be getting anything from my broke parents' "estate". I've also never been approached about sponsorship and it is not something that I would seek out. I think J&J is a good organization for people who have a history and want to continue that legacy for their children; wanting your children to socialize with people of the same ilk is something other races/ethnicities have been doing for years. My own personal issue with J&J is that historically I would not have been someone invited to join and now that my family's pedigree may be aligned with other members, I don't feel the need to belong to a specific organization so my children can meet/mate with the Oak Bluffs crowd.
Most of the people I know from J&J aren't interested in genuinely befriending my family anyway.
Anonymous wrote:ThriveGrow wrote:
As someone who is seeking to work- where do these families go for someone to watch their child(ren) when family is not nearby?
They hire nannies.
ThriveGrow wrote:
As someone who is seeking to work- where do these families go for someone to watch their child(ren) when family is not nearby?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, Thanks for the responses.
We live on the Rockville/Potomac border. We've struggled to find diverse churches that are anywhere close to us. I have learned that Sunday is the most segregated day of the week.
We are members of the National Cathedral and while we love it there it currently doesn't have Sunday school or a youth group (just the nursery which DD has aged out of).
I tried Mocha Moms when DD was a toddler but the women in that MoCo chapter seemed only interested in putting on a show. It seemed VERY superficial. DH and I have money but nothing to prove. The last I heard was that chapter is now defunct.
I guess there isn't a right answer for us. I think that J&J may be too pretentious for me to deal with. What I really want is a diverse group of kids with whom DD shares many of the same experiences. J&J and Mocha Moms are certainly (and intentionally) not diverse but what is?
I guess my search continues. . .
yes -- try this church -- we have family members there and the congregation seems very diverse. We are AA and so are the family members that attend.
Grace Episcopal Church in Silver Spring is wonderfully diverse in every way, and has a ton of kids. My kids are in the choir, and one is an acolyte. Grace also has a youth group, Sunday school, and a crib room for babies and toddlers. It's closer than the Cathedral for sure. Summer is slower for sure, but your family would be most welcome if you came to visit and check it out. http://graceepiscopalchurch.org/ I can't say enough good things about Grace.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, Thanks for the responses.
We live on the Rockville/Potomac border. We've struggled to find diverse churches that are anywhere close to us. I have learned that Sunday is the most segregated day of the week.
We are members of the National Cathedral and while we love it there it currently doesn't have Sunday school or a youth group (just the nursery which DD has aged out of).
I tried Mocha Moms when DD was a toddler but the women in that MoCo chapter seemed only interested in putting on a show. It seemed VERY superficial. DH and I have money but nothing to prove. The last I heard was that chapter is now defunct.
I guess there isn't a right answer for us. I think that J&J may be too pretentious for me to deal with. What I really want is a diverse group of kids with whom DD shares many of the same experiences. J&J and Mocha Moms are certainly (and intentionally) not diverse but what is?
I guess my search continues. . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:J&J was founded by Blacks that wanted to be exclusionary and were themselves excluded from DAR and the such.
Guessing nobody sponsored you.
This is the elitist attitude that is pervasive in the organization. FWIW, I am Black, two DC's in private (full freight), high HHI, etc... but this is the attitude we get from white people who look down on us and assume they know who we are. I don't need this from a group of Black people who's only "leg up" on me is that they are from a generation of well educated, well off, elite upper crust of Black society. Like a PP, I am first generation law school, self made and will not be getting anything from my broke parents' "estate". I've also never been approached about sponsorship and it is not something that I would seek out. I think J&J is a good organization for people who have a history and want to continue that legacy for their children; wanting your children to socialize with people of the same ilk is something other races/ethnicities have been doing for years. My own personal issue with J&J is that historically I would not have been someone invited to join and now that my family's pedigree may be aligned with other members, I don't feel the need to belong to a specific organization so my children can meet/mate with the Oak Bluffs crowd.
Most of the people I know from J&J aren't interested in genuinely befriending my family anyway.