This study introduces a distinction the existing literature has approached but not yet named: the difference between suppression and substitution in the Strong Black Woman schema. Drawing on five peer-reviewed studies and 17 years of autoethnographic longitudinal data, it proposes that financial strain does not simply add to the psychological burden of schema performance — it triggers a qualitatively different event, converting behavioral suppression into identity substitution. The study further identifies the digital self-exploitation pathway as a contemporary extension of this mechanism, in which financially strained Black women inadvertently replicate and monetize the schema in online spaces. THE SORT Method is offered as a four-stage reflective framework for practitioners and individuals navigating the return from identity substitution to native self access.
Thomas Shae (Mon,) studied this question.