Against the odds
Even as they thrive, successful black men feel the burden of grim 
statistics and the pain of peers' hopeless lives
Richard LaBennett, 23, of Cary, readies himself for a meeting for his 
Web design company on a weekend morning. He is also a software 
engineer for Lenovo International. 
Staff Photo by Corey Lowenstein  
  
Kelly Starling Lyons, Correspondent
It blasted through cyberspace, commanding attention from barbershops 
to board rooms. A March 20 New York Times article, "Plight Deepens 
for Black Men, Studies Warn," revealed poor African-American men face 
a reality more dire than some experts thought. Think soaring 
unemployment, incarceration and dropout rates. The findings, drawn 
from several university studies, were brutal.
By 2004, 72 percent of black male high school dropouts in their 20s 
were jobless. When high school graduates were included, half in their 
20s were without work. By their mid-30s, six in 10 black men who had 
dropped out of school spent time in prison. Poor black men, the 
article said, are falling further behind while other groups are 
gaining.
Some decried the front-page story for spreading negative stereotypes 
about African-American men and focusing on the problems while 
offering few solutions. Others said the national spotlight offered a 
way to stoke calls for action. But perhaps more quietly, successful 
black men may have faced questions of their own:
How do they navigate life when friends or family may be faltering? 
How do they raise sons in the face of negative images of black men? 
How do those who grow up in poor neighborhoods turn things around?
Here are the stories of three men whose lives provide some answers.
Young, gifted and black
Richard LaBennett saw the whirl of flashing lights. He pulled over on 
a downtown Raleigh street and waited for the officer to come. 
LaBennett, who was driving a sedan with tinted windows, was told he 
was stopped for having an expired tag. Then, the cop said he smelled 
drugs. Before long, two police cars joined him. One officer unleashed 
a dog that sniffed around LaBennett's car. Nothing.
"When I started talking, he heard I wasn't some ignorant guy and he 
changed his demeanor," LaBennett says. "But by then it was too late."
LaBennett is a 23-year-old software engineer for Lenovo, where he 
leads a team of five. He owns a Web design business and rental 
property. But just like that, assumptions are made, he says.
"Being young and black, those are the things I run into," says 
LaBennett, who lives in Cary. "I'm challenged a lot. So I put myself 
in a more mature crowd, always try to stay on top of my game."
LaBennett grew up in Indiana, the child of an engineer dad and a 
professor mom. His parents gave him leeway, but he also had 
structure. LaBennett had to read for an hour every day, help tend 
vegetables in the garden and attend church on Sundays. Good grades 
won him cash. He attended camps in the summer and took the SAT in 
seventh grade. For LaBennett, being good wasn't enough. He had to be 
the best.
"As one of few black kids there, if you fall short, that's what 
people will focus on," he says.
But he knows he has had a more privileged upbringing than some. The 
differences stood out in his high school where some classmates 
challenged his blackness because of the way he talked, in the homes 
of peers that lacked the luxuries his had. LaBennett felt the 
disparity when he visited family in towns where the dreams of some 
young people are limited to their surroundings.
"I have cousins who are younger than me and have two or three kids," 
he says. "Living is getting a job and saving up enough to buy a nice 
car and pay the rent. That's what it means to make it."
LaBennett and his friends talk often about the sober statistics about 
young black men.
"There are two arguments," he says. "One is that it's how society is 
set up. A lot of our youth grow up with the wrong idea of what's good 
and bad. When they run into trouble, they're sent to jail. There's 
nothing to really turn them around so it becomes a cycle."
"The other is that we don't take initiative as a people to educate 
and go back into our communities to help."
He uses the numbers as motivation.
"I don't get down about it," says LaBennett, a graduate of N.C. A&T 
State University. "I can do much more by putting a positive spin on 
things."
LaBennett plans to one day educate people on financial literacy and 
teach them how they can set themselves on the right path. In the 
meantime, he works through his fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha, to uplift 
everyone he can.
Father to son
When his son Chad landed a second speeding ticket, Dr. Moses Watson 
III said all bets were off. Though he and his wife had just bought 
Chad a neon blue PT Cruiser to take to college, he told his son he'd 
have to earn the right to drive it again.
Watson assigned him an essay that explored family history and the 
results and consequences of speeding. Chad also had to earn good 
grades.
When his first semester marks fell short, Watson kept the car at home 
again. His son tried to negotiate with him. No deal. Watson wouldn't 
budge.
That wasn't the first time he and Chad squared off. Another time the 
issue was wearing droopy pants. Watson vetoed that too.
He said his three children have enough friends at school. He doesn't 
care about being popular. Instead Watson works to instill lessons 
that will keep them from making mistakes that can crush their future, 
landing in a system that can be tough on black men, he says.
Watson is happy he can provide a comfortable life for his daughter 
and two sons. But that also brings challenges.
"Once you get out of mama and daddy's house, life is cruel," says 
Watson, a 42-year-old dentist who practices in Raleigh and his 
hometown of Laurinburg.
The toughest part of being a dad, he says, is the uncertainty. Are 
you doing the right thing? How will your decisions affect them in the 
future?
"I just pray that I'm doing what's best," he says.
He has good children, Watson said. But young people today are exposed 
to so much more -- explicit language, sexual content, violence -- 
than in his era.
"I grew up scared of jail, scared of my mama," he says. "Kids today 
aren't afraid of anything."
Watson learned a lot from his father who was a hardworking truck 
driver. He saw his dad open a trucking company, a gas station and a 
convenience store. The father was too kind-hearted to stay in 
business for long, Watson says. But the model of working for 
yourself, taking care of your family stayed with him.
Watson tempers lessons for his children with fun. He takes them ice 
skating, roller skating. He and younger son, Jacob, belong to a 
father and son book club at Richard B. Harrison Library.
He and his wife, Pam, give their children the tools to make good 
decisions. But they also make sure to watch for signs of trouble, he 
says.
Years ago, Chad attended a rural elementary school that didn't push 
or encourage him. His self-esteem plunged. Watson and his wife bought 
positive-thinking tapes that they played for Chad while he slept.
"After a while, he'd go in and play them himself," Watson says.
Chad's spirit rebounded. His grades stabilized. But Watson took the 
extra step of moving his family to Cary, which offered more 
opportunities and better schools, even though that meant a 90-minute 
commute to his job.
That Chad turned around wasn't coincidence.
"If we wouldn't have worked with Chad, he would have ended up like so 
many kids who just wander through life," Watson says.
"If we would have allowed it, that's what would have happened."
A different path
In the East Flatbush neighborhood in New York City where Tyronne 
James grew up, teen pregnancy, gangs and drug-dealing pocked his 
world. He saw little of his dad. His mom was there but faced 
struggles of her own.
His grandma made sure he and his older sister had the necessities -- 
a home, food to eat. She even scrimped to enroll him in a private 
music school. There, he took vocal and piano lessons that opened his 
mind to another life. His musical talent and his academic ability 
helped him escape from the pressures of poverty that derail some 
young, black men.
James attended Manhattan's Talent Unlimited High School. But he also 
had to start working as a baker to help his grandma and support 
himself. Some days, his lack of money overwhelmed him. They lived 
paycheck to paycheck with no cash for extras. Sometimes even buying 
food was a struggle.
"It just basically felt like we were down and out and never 
succeeded," he says.
There were times when he was tempted to do whatever it would take to 
turn things around, he says. But he thought about his grandma's 
lessons, recalled inspiring trips like the tour he took as a member 
of the chorus in the British Rock Symphony to 35 states and reflected 
on his faith. He chose a different path.
James focused instead on excelling in his advanced placement classes, 
hanging out with friends who coached and encouraged one another. His 
senior year, he was accepted to N.C. Central University. He thrived 
academically and socially. But even there, money woes threatened to 
pull him down.
While James [ a 2003  initiate of Gamma Beta Chapter of Alpha Phi 
Alpha ] received some scholarships and financial aid, it was never 
enough to cover all of the costs.
"I was almost sent home all eight semesters I was here," he said.
James persevered and graduated magna cum laude from NCCU in December. 
He was the first in his family to earn a college degree. Now, James, 
who is 23 and lives in Durham, is program coordinator for the James 
H. Ammons African-American Male Leadership Academy. He helps young 
black men who are performing below their potential.
"I don't know who's responsible for presenting that the only way out 
is to sell drugs, play basketball or be a musician," James 
says. "People need to hear that you can make it by education."
He watches changes in his students unfold. Some arrive as gang 
members with little care about grades. Weeks in, spirits lift and F's 
turn to A's.
"I see their bright eyes and eagerness to excel," he says. "For many, 
college isn't an option before the program. Now, it's something they 
know they can accomplish."
James sees himself in the young men he helps. Many came up in grandma-
headed homes or live in rough neighborhoods. James wants them to know 
they can succeed despite those obstacles.
If he made it out, so can they, he says.
Correspondent Kelly Starling Lyons can be reached at 
email@kellystarlinglyons.com.
  
    
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