If you’re wondering whether as a black woman I have good hair, go ahead, ask. It isn’t a fair question to pose because black women continue to face societies that tell them their hair is not fantastic.
This is the same hair my granny dreaded to comb; she always had a comment to make about it when I sat in her lap. But after styling it she would say, “Look how pretty you are; just like your mother”. I laughed every time she said it because my mom actually has sexier hair. There are some things I think my mother held onto tight when she gave birth to me and the hair happens to one of them.
Do I relax my hair, or as the hair gurus would say, do I perm my hair? The answer is yes or I used to, but the question is as irrelevant as asking me whether I prefer roast pork or stewed pork – I don’t eat pork. The hair chemicals that are sometimes frowned upon made my hair silky and I have to admit that it was some feeling. I would run my hands through my hair all day after a perm and spend hours in front of a mirror flirting with my own image. To phrase exactly how I reacted I would say, “An endless obsession with the physical”.
But the idea that my hair has to be silky for me to admire it faded as I grew and today comes over as juvenile. Currently I wear silky hair which is not mine and probably came from a woman somewhere in India who (I hope) had it chopped off as a sacrifice in the name of religion. Her hair is my weave or my wig and that only, it does not change the fact that I am a black woman and it certainly does not take away from it either.
The good thing about my silky weave is that it is temporary, meaning I control when I wear it and when I abandon it, actually in another few days I am likely to drop it for another, not in the name of style but in the name of convenience. I have a bad habit of not wanting to comb my hair and when it is silky it is manageable, when it is a wig even better. If I knew how to make my sexy, kinky hair manageable I would be rocking it as much is I do the pair of black stilettos I picked up a few months ago.
My truth obviously differs from the next black woman, but I doubt she is so desperate to hide her own hair that she must wear a wig. I also doubt that she so hates the hair she has that it must be permed to look good and be acceptable. I rather suspect that she rubs chemicals in it to make it more manageable and perhaps even sexier.
I have much to be thankful for because this black woman already has sexy hair and though I have not flaunted it for quite some time I soon will. I don’t feel the need to reassure myself that I have good hair; this I already know. Sure it looks like my granny’s afro style from her glory days but it is a crown of hair I am proud of.
So go ahead ask me if I have good hair.
Chris Rock might have made a film about it that digs into the reasons why black women don’t always go natural, but I am in a position to relate personally why this black woman has good hair and always will, even if I choose to perm it or wig it out.
(thescene@stabroeknews.com)