Positive Propaganda: Black Women & Girls Are So Much More Than Gorgeous Curly Hair ~
Hola, sistren!
I come to you now with a plea:
Can we tone down the zeal over our hair? 😉
No, really.
I mean, I get it. I soooo get #naturalhair. I’m natural…have been for the majority of my highly eventful life.
I also must show appreciation where required and add that my mother provided the positive legacy of natural-hair-living to her daughters, who, after many (count ’em, four each) bouts with chemically-induced textures, along with ever-changing lifestyles, imagination and imagery, bad decisions, master hair magicians, trickery, advice from countless, lively blogs, trial, error, and the requiste detours of big chops, fried locks, cooked, baked, crispy, and shaped, both, haggardly yet finally returned to “NO CHEMICALS ON OUR HAIR (not even color), EVER, and feel comfortable saying we both appreciate mom’s heads-up provided since birth. Thanks, Mom. 🙂
Not sure how she knew. I guess holding firm to her roots and the way she and all of her sisters grew up in the country of Lousiana, where pigtails and braids ruled the extremely warm summer days and nights, virgin hair was where it was!
So, I get it. My hair has been super long, super short, somewhere in the middle, straight, wavy, kinky, curly, balayage, blunt, razored, tinted, and rinsed. I’ve personally grown and lost (to only regrow again), THREE whole heads of hair in my short 30-something years, and am currently in a new growth cycle after surgery, so trust me when I say I’m not hating. I. know.
I could, have, and will again, write a small pamphlet on how to grow hair long and strong, for all races, but I don’t talk about it much unless asked.
You know what I DO talk about; a lot?
THE WELFARE AND HOLISTIC WELL-BEING OF BLACK WOMEN AND GIRLS.
That’s it.
Eleven words.
It’s what runs me; what gives me that “zing.” What helps me wake up in the morning.
It’s my pleahsuh!! *in my “Friday” voice* 😉
I love to talk about how great we are, and how we can be even better!
Let’s talk about heart health. Mental health. Emotional and spiritual health. Nutritional and physical health and well-being, and let’s investigate how we’re currently (and can improve) mama-cat guarding our young girls…our kittens…to ensure they have a future worth living and can pass the baton to future generations.
Speaking of generations, do you know the Native American saying that what we do today affects seven generations of our people? Sustainability. lt’s all about sustainable living – sustainable being, breathing, and thriving (thus the swell of eco-friendly products living under the banner of “Seventh Generation or “7th Generation”)!
We must, and those of us who can, HAVE TO share the knowledge of our individual capacity to shine and connect for the benefit of all. It’s our duty in this lifetime.
Did you also know, from a Black history standpoint, that we are in the fourth generation (that golden “4”…I’ll break that down in another post, just for you) of enslaved Africans evolving out of the curse of slavery, and are the first to develop new foundations for wealth, current and future economic prosperity, and can both consistently and economically nurture those that both create and record the rich oral history that unceasingly binds us together as a people, our storytellers? That’s a (responsibility-laden) gift, but as Peter Parker’s grandpa said… 😉
And as women, too…whew, I mean, say it again…as WOMEN, on top of all of that rich inheritance, we have supreme power in 360 full degrees, so why focus on only 10 percent…our hair?!
I’m perplexed. Our next meme is gonna be a pic of ‘Hope the Cat’ slightly perplexed, ’cause we need to find those answers and make it happen, but it ‘ain’t gonna happen by worrying about ONLY our beauty. We have to dig deeper.
If I hear one more skin color or hair-grade comparison for either gender, or witness any more jaw-dropping verbal or physical black-on-black crime, I’m going to lose it…and as you can so far tell, I barely have it! As my mother also said more often that not: “stop it; just stop it!” LOL!
And let’s please come together, sisters. Outside of what we do to ourselves internally as a community, we could do so much better if we stopped all hair wars (naturals v. straights, weaves v. braids, bald v. shaved, thick v. skinny…wait…I went too far… ;-)), and focused on joining forces against all enemies, we’d be in a stronger, truly impenetrable position on the planet, and as a people! It’s harder to kill in a stampeding herd. Never leave your girl to face a crowd alone. Don’t mess with her after she calls her cousins! Her family is no joke!!
‘Yall feeling me?
We need each other so much more than we can survive being torn apart.
Let’s let that pink water splash us in the face of reality, sisters, and awaken us to the need to congregate in order to get our story straight, so that we can then tell it and defend it by any peaceful means necessary!
Aren’t you ready to march for respect of black women and girls? I am.
I see us all now, a flood of pink, black, and gold in the streets of the capitol, holding each other up and demanding that our men support, our artists listen and cooperate, our lovers protect, our children respect (and are respected), and that our futures and destinies are highly guarded and regarded.
In short, we have work to do, #sisters.
And if you wanna rock your freshest two-stand twist, your flyist box braids (maybe), your pin-curls, headdress, wash ‘n go, press ‘n curl, dippity do or God-knows-who, do you, but support, love, desire, want more, demand more, love each other, love yourself, stop fighting, bickering, giving bad advice, telling lies, living in illusion, competing, and riding the train in the direction furthest AWAY from what we say we want for ourselves, including focusing and spending so much time, money, and attention on #hair!!
And put down the Moscato. It’s a dessert wine anyway, and it’s silly and highly caloric to drink it all night starting sundown. One or two glasses is ok, but after that it’s just a bad homage to a glorified song about stripping, which is neither lady-like nor pretty to glamourize. Smooches. 😉
So, a little bitter with the sweet, but real. Alll of the time. 😉
Can you tell I’m on fire for the cause? And so many others are too…so many of us who hear the clarion call for change…real, lasting, holistic, organic and timely change, that will touch lives beyond our capacity to envision.
Are you ready?
Our site and movement is reaching one full year! I admit, I must touch base more often. How often is too much, how much too little? As I recently heard, “you can’t start a revolution by meeting monthly” so I’ll post more. 😉 Today’s post was an exercise in following my weekly connection schedule, so kudos to me and high cat paws to all on that one!
I’m so in the pink flame for this, sisters! I love you, and I want better for us all, as I know you do, too (along with all of our sis-supporters…you rock like EPMD!).
First order on deck: PositiveProp Pajama Parties coming to your area. We need to converge, comfortably (maybe with woobies?) to get our feelings out and then develop and implement our ACTION STRATEGY.
We’re deciding whether to launch on the east coast or here in L.A., so stay tuned. Definitely more to say about the upcoming series next week. Meow.
And one last thing: if we’re gonna be obsessed with #hair, which we will to some degreee as humans and as women, let’s do it from the ownership standpoint, putting non-black haircare industries and vendors out of the game entirely and reinvest the loot into our own community. Done.
Until then, stay coiffed, but please do from a higher place, with a higher purpose, and with thoughts, words, and deeds of reunion, not division.
Most imporantly, allow no division inside of yourself.
Oooh…so deeepp!! 😉
Talk then,
Amie~
* Whatchu say?: @PositiveProp
I just came across this blog. And I love it! I love what you stand for and will continue to check out your posts after this stumble???? But I must say that I think the natural hair movement is SUPER important to black women, our community, and culture as a whole. We have just ended generations and generations of misinformation on hair care and a stigma that black women have ugly hair. We have been tormented, ridiculed, and ruled out because of our hair. As a child my white friends would ask me what am I gona do about my hair before we went swimming. Black men often ridicule you and call you bald headed because you wear weave etc. And yes there is a 30 something year old black man currently ridiculing me to this day at my age of 29 at work. Its important for other people to understand our hair. They need to accept our hair and all of its capabilities. We deserve it after all these generations of misinformation about black hair care. It’s a revolution! We can finally grow our hair long, since so many black men laughed and told us we couldnt. We can finally prove them wrong. Its very important. And from an economical standpoint we can finally own our own hair care and hair extensiom industry! Black women have made the hair extensions and hair care industry billions of dollars and not much of that came back into our community. Now we have black women with start ups and full fledge businesses of products that cater to our hair, our needs and keep the money in our community. Hair extensions now are better than ever, using hair that matches and is made specifically for our hair texture, by black people. This is exactly where we need to be. And at the end of the day, there is a large market for beauty amongst all women. There is a large market for beauty amongst black women that has been underserved. So thats us with our hair posts and length checks. We’re proud! And were proving all our naysayers wrong! Black women are beautiful and sexy too. And our hair is sexy and just as drool worthy as any other woman.