Kimberly Johnson Kimberly Johnson

The Optics of Betrayal and the Discipline of Self-Preservation

Some betrayals are personal. Others are instructional. Uncle Luke is not just a man in a post. He is a case study. A man who used grown women as public cover for the women he actually desired. Children. He was there too.

A man who leveraged proximity to whiteness as currency. A man whose positioning in a court case detoured more than his own reputation it destabilized trust in leadership and handed opponents a narrative.

This is not gossip. This is optics. When a Black man in visible leadership aligns upward socially, romantically, politically and uses his access to distance himself from the very community that positioned him, the fallout is collective. It reinforces a historical pattern: ascent through assimilation, followed by abandonment. After the Civil Rights Movement, many Black women continued the work education, church infrastructure, family stability, civic engagement. Many men pursued institutional access. Some built bridges back. Some did not.

That divergence is still playing out. So when another public figure performs allegiance while privately signaling elsewhere, it is not shocking. It is repetitive. The more dangerous outcome is symbolic. Another scoundrel becomes shorthand for Black manhood. Another cautionary tale circulates. Another generation watches.

And then comes the secondary expectation: outrage. Protest. Online combat. Public rage. But what if restraint is the more evolved response? The decision by many Black women to stay home to refuse to rant, refuse to march into chaos, refuse to argue into algorithms was not apathy. It was assessment.

There is no guaranteed protection now. The legal climate is different. Public dissent carries different consequences. History has already documented how quickly lawful protest can be reframed, criminalized, or neutralized.

Our elders spoke of slavery not to romanticize suffering, but to warn us about power recalibrating. Discipline is knowing when not to perform. When systems are not responsive, emotional labor becomes spectacle.

When solidarity is uneven, sacrifice becomes asymmetrical. Saving yourself is not abandonment of community. It is refusal to be expended. And perhaps this is the maturation we are witnessing:

  • A generation of Black women who are no longer reflexively mobilized by every headline.

  • A generation that understands alignment matters more than rhetoric.

  • A generation that builds quietly wealth, literacy, networks, internal sovereignty.

Sacred Pages exists inside that quiet build. We curate women’s voices because women have documented what power actually does behind closed doors. Writers like Toni Morrison and Zora Neale Hurston did not romanticize community. They examined it. They recorded its fractures and its brilliance without flinching. This moment is not about bitterness. It is about clarity.

  • Clarity that access does not equal allegiance.

  • Clarity that proximity to whiteness often comes with negotiated loyalty.

  • Clarity that discernment is survival.

If leadership fails, build internal leadership. If men ascend without you, ascend without waiting. If noise demands performance, respond with construction. The bookstore remains open. The women remain reading. And reading women are difficult to mislead twice.

by Kimberly!

Sacred Musings - Sacred Pages

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