The Strong Black Woman schema is a deeply ingrained sociocultural construct that promotes resilience, independence, and self-sacrifice among Black women. While often seen as a source of strength, this schema also imposes profound psychological and professional burdens, particularly in nursing leadership, where Black women are expected to navigate systemic inequities while demonstrating unwavering fortitude. This paper critically examines the paradox of the Strong Black Woman schema within nursing, arguing that the same resilience that empowers Black women also contributes to emotional suppression, burnout, and systemic barriers to advancement. Drawing from interdisciplinary literature, we explore how the nursing profession's culture of caregiving and self-sacrifice reinforces this schema, perpetuating racialized and gendered expectations that limit Black women's capacity to seek support and express vulnerability. Integrating Cheryl Woods-Giscombé's Superwoman Schema, we demonstrate how the psychological and physiological consequences of this paradigm impact Black nurses' well-being and leadership trajectories. We advocate for a redefinition of strength that embraces vulnerability as a leadership asset and calls for systemic changes in nursing education and practice. By shifting the discourse from mere endurance to a more inclusive and humanizing leadership framework, we challenge the dominant narratives that empower and constrain Black women in nursing.
Keywords: Black Feminist Thought; Strong Black Woman Schema; critical race theory in nursing; institutional barriers in nursing; nursing leadership; workplace equity in healthcare.
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