NURTURING THE RACE

Nurturing the Race

In cultures focused on the propagation and preservation of the species the nurturing of the race consisted of a never ending cycle of activity beginning with the selection of a mate.

A man looking for a mate sought one that would be the mother of his children and who would do everything within her ability to raise them to become respected and serving members of the family and tribe; a woman looking for a mate sought one who would provide the environment and means necessary for her to fulfill her function of nurturing the family, and the elders looked over the proposed union to determine if the marriage would serve the best interests of the tribe.

Once the marriage had taken place, the environment the woman lived in enabled the nurturing of her body as she prepared for the impending pregnancy; she resided in a loving community, ate wholesome foods, and shunned stimulants and other body and mind polluting influences. By the time she conceived she had reached the optimum level of mental, physical, and emotional strength to provide for the nurturing of her fetus, and during pregnancy she continued with a proper diet, received the guidance of the older women, and the security provided by her husband.

Upon the birth of her child, her healthy body readily supplied the milk necessary to nurture the newborn and her secure environment enabled her to administer this nourishment with love and calmness. When the process of weaning her child began she partially chewed its food before giving it to him helping the child make a smooth dietary transition, and as the child grew she would shop for quality foods and provide it with nurturing meals, the preparation of which she had learned in her childhood from her mother and the elder women.

Nurturing included caring for the sick, by utilizing healing remedies that had been handed down for generations and administered with love and compassion

Part of the nurturing of a child included the inculcation of a spiritual awareness and a value structure concerning its obligations, responsibilities, and considerations to the family and society; all members of the family and tribe participated in this training, especially the father.

Children raised in this environment had a sense of belonging, were healthy, happy, and well adjusted.

When the children reached adulthood they began the process of seeking a mate, continuing the endless cycle; their parents furthered their own development as elders by providing education and guidance to the young. The propagation and preservation of the species and its spiritual development entailed the daily activity of all members.

The above is an encapsulation of the nurturing activity inherent in family life as practiced for millennia.

Now I will offer an encapsulation of how the race is nurtured (mal-nurtured would be a more apt description) in the modern Western-oriented world.

Having a child is considered an action independent of the rest of society (except that society is expected to share in the cost). A woman decides to have a child, or more likely, she gets careless in her promiscuous lifestyle and becomes pregnant. She might be married or single, but in either case she probably has employment outside of the home and cannot properly prepare herself for the rigors of a pregnancy and the subsequent nurturing of a child. She will probably make use of pre-natal care offered by the government or various non-profits, which while providing technical assistance, cannot provide her with a caring and secure environment.

The child will most likely be born in a hospital and the mother will probably will not have any assistance from family. Upon bringing the child home she will receive maternity leave for a short time until she can make babysitting arrangements so that she can return to her place of employment. More than likely the child will be formula fed and then be weaned from the bottle as soon as possible. The nutrition received by mother and child at that point is marginal at best and will deteriorate rapidly as time passes as they both subsist on commercially produced food.

The child will be put in pre-school and after-school programs and be raised in an environment devoid of nurturing love. The mother will be stressed from the rigors of performing a fulltime job and will at best give her child part-time attention.

The child will receive little if any training in ethics or matters spiritual and will have little understanding of right and wrong; instead it will be inculcated to accept a system of what is permitted and not permitted, preparing it for an adult life based on legal and illegal.

When it reaches adulthood the child will have no sense of loyalty to the family, tribe, and race and will live a life of-self gratification until she gets pregnant and continues the cycle.

The child raised in this environment will have physical and emotional problems, be at high risk to drop out of school, get involved in substance abuse, join a street gang, become incarcerated, and/or get shot dead.

The mother who raised this child will most likely suffer from mal-nourishment, stress, female disorders, and depression.

The financial cost to the government of this second encapsulation is huge, but the human cost to society is humongous.

The first scenario depicts the natural way of life; the second an aberration.

If a man has any sense of race consciousness and spiritual understanding he will realize that he lives in an imploding society and must take steps to live outside of it.

A woman with maternal feelings and a desire to nurture the race cannot be satisfied with the conditions of modern society and would naturally want to support a man who will do his utmost to provide the environment she needs to fulfill her womanly obligation to humankind.

The clock is running my sons and daughters; are you going to sit and wait for the developing disaster to overcome you or will you take the steps necessary to live outside of it?

E.G.