So today a friend of mine who had decided to relieve herself of superficial beauty and perms and relaxers and the other hair rituals that many black women have become enslaved to, went back to a relaxer or a perm. When I asked why she responded with two reasons:
Reason #1: "Natural hair is too hard to tame"
Well I disagree. The only reason your hair is hard to "tame" or maintain is because you are trying to maintain it by using white hair pratices, and conform it to those europeanized standards of beauty, which it will never reach. This is very important to understand.
Your natural hair is made for very easy-to-maintain hairstyle which also last a very lengthy amount of time. Natural hair is strong, so it holds very well. You must wear styles that are natural to your hair, like braids twists, dreads, or even an afro. But if you keep trying to conform your hair to look like styles that are un-natural, of course it will be a HARD task.
Reason #2: "Its more attractive"
I myself like women with both straight relaxed hair and also extensions or weave. but I'm also attracted to women with natural hair because it takes an extraodinary beauty to defy the sterotypical views of beauty and exude without the aid of straight or long hair. But generally, the statement my friend made is true, The majority of society and definitely the media has protrayed straight and long hair as more attractive. This has been statistically proven by males and masculine lesbians as well as some feminine lesbians. Men and women define straight and long hair as beautiful and attractive. Compared to the opposite of curly or kinky hair or short hair. Which most women hair has been reduced to being short because of the amount of damage we cause to it by trying to make it conform to un-natural(caucasianized) hairstyles , with the use of flat-irons, heat, and chemicals.
Some other reason women say GOODBYE to Natural, and HELLO Perm!
is because...
NATURAL OR SHORT HAIR IS A MAN THING!
Short hair and natural styles are also consider masculine! Mainly masculine lesbians and males where natural hairstyles like braids, afros, twist, and dreads, or short hair. So being a feminine lesbian or women, you appear more masculine when you wear your hair natural or short. Many men have stated they view women with natural or short hair as "not feminie"
THERE IS NOTHING WRONG WITH WEAVES, OR EXTENSIONS, OR RELAXERS!
Your hair does not define who you are and should be your choice. Wearing a perm or straightening your hair, is a personal choice, and not always related to anything deeper than that a style perference, like the clothes you choose to wear.
However it does become a problem when it no longer becomes a choice. Society and mainly media is making it harder and harder for women to be natural. They are constantly shoving cosmetic products down our throats, and weave stores on the corner of every black neighborhood, and celebrities and models with these false "un-natural" images of beauty, with weave, extensions, make up, air brush, and many other things.
THE PROBLEM IS NOT STRAIGHT HAIR! THE PROBLEM IS THE MEDIA'S INFLUENCE ON SOCIETY'S NEGATIVE VIEW OF NATURAL HAIR!
... I am not that much different from the rest of society who have been brainwashed by the images of beauty protrayed by the media. I find women who do these things to conform to this mainstream view of beauty as very attractive, but it is because thats what has been installed in since a very young age. I learned what beauty was through tv and magazinges. And when those are the images you see for 19 years, its hard to change.
By showing this one image of beauty as being long or straight hair, commercials, tv shows, magazines, that we look at from the time we're born, installs in us, this false sense of what beauty is. It affects men and masculine lesbians by subconsciously installing in them this image of what "being attractive" looks like. And affects women because we have to conform to this "un-natural" image to be seen as attractive by these men and masculine lesbians, or sometimes feminine lesbials as well.
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