Showing posts with label weaves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weaves. Show all posts

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Weave and Black Women with Blonde Hair: Your View

I saw this video over at The Kitchen Salon and just had to share it with the Loc Rocker fam. I've never watched a complete episode of The View. Only excerpts from controversial episodes. But I've always been an enormous fan of Whoopi Goldberg. I mean, HUGE!! This is a conscious sista that thinks before she speaks and always has something thought provoking to say.

That said, check out of the following video.





Whoopi brings up good questions. While Sherri Shepard wears weave (Obviously. It looks so freakin' fake and horrendous. Sorry, but it does.), Whoopi questions why so many Black women have to wear straight and super long weave. Shoopi says, "Why isn't it an afro weave?" That's a damn good question.

And then Joy Behar (thanks Google) answers that question with "Well, because when your hair is straighter, you can do more with it."

*crickets*

Really?

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

3 year old getting a weave...

Veteran Loc Rocker readers know that I have an issue with weave. I usually keep my thoughts about weave silent as to not offend others but it's really one of those things that I vehemently dislike. I don't care who is wearing it, 9 times out of 10, it looks fake and I find that women who wear weaves on a regular have a complex; whether they like to admit it or not.

At the end of the day, I could care less how others where their hair, but I've never worn a weave and never will. And if I can help it, neither will my kids. What should simply be a hairstyle is really a complex. And exactly how can you break that when it starts as young as 3?

Pay no mind to the channel where I got this embedded video. This YouTube channel seems to be full of videos bashing Black women (surprise, surprise) and talking about what we ain't doing, shouldn't be doing as if we are a monolithic group. But I'll save that rant for my personal blog.







What do y'all think? Any former weave wearers feel that they had a complex about their hair and image? Did you feel more attractive with longer hair? I understand that this is an issue among girls of all backgrounds. Anyone ever catch those make-overs on America's Next Top Model. Just about every season, there was a white girl screaming bloody murder over the thought of having her hair cut. For some reason, women in general associate longer hair with femininity. Why is that?

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Are Perms/Weaves a form of self-hate?

This post was prompted by this brotha's video here...




I agree with some of what he is saying. But not everything. He isn't the first Black man who I have heard say this.

First off...let me say this.

I don't think that perms/weaves are a form of self-hate. I think to make that assertation is a little extreme. It seems that the finger is ALWAYS be pointed at the Black woman. As if we are responsible for this so-called "form of self-hate". No one sits back and thinks about WHY we do what we do.

They just see it, give it a negative connotation and move on.

That's not fair.

Now don't get it twisted. I am not supporting perms or weaves. AT ALL. I hate them both. I am proud to say that I have never worn a weave (only extensions). And I am proud to say that I will never put a perm in my head again. It is a personal decision that I have made but I could care less what anyone else does. My Mother, my sisters, my closest friends...they all rock perms and weaves. And do I look at them differently?

Hell no.

Do I think that my Mother secretly hates herself because she gets a perm every 4-5 weeks?

Nope. In fact, I would argue that it was my Mother who taught me how to love myself despite my insecurities. The insecurities that had nothing to do with hair. She helped me feel beautiful when I felt ugly because of the gap between my teeth. She taught me how to have "spa days" at home so that I can feel beautiful about my body. I learned about self-love from her. A woman who when I picked on her about being "old" on her 50th birthday responded saying,

"Whatever....I'm 50 and fine."


And she is. She loves herself. There is no doubt about it.

Yet she has a perm.

Okay, I'm lying...I secretly wish that all Black women went natural. There's a certain kind of love that you feel for yourself that just can't be felt with the constant use of perms/weaves; both which mask our unique and beautiful hair texture. And if you ask any napptural female, she will tell you the same thing. Being natural is freedom. It just feels good. And I want my fellow sistas to feel that feeling.

But I know some chicks won't drop the perm if you paid them. Oh well.


No one looks at the history of perms/weaves and the Black woman.

I like to think that if Black men loved Black women more, we may not be so inclined to rock perms and weaves. Seriously....think about it.

If Black men suddenly stopped putting ladies with long hair in their videos and ONLY had sistas with afros, twists, locs and braids, imagine what this would do to the psyche of Black women.

Imagine if Russell Simmons, Kanye West (his annoying behind), Jay-Z and Dwight Howard dropped the chicks that they are with and traded them in for nappy headed beauties. And these beauties are being seen on t.v. with them....and in magazines....and on stage...and on the sidelines. Imagine if these Black men proudly linked arms with sistas who are rocking their beautiful natural hair.

Imagine what that would do for Black women. And little Black girls. And the way we saw ourselves. If our Black fathers/brothers/husbands/uncles/friends can love us in our natural state then hell...


WE CAN LOVE OURSELVES TOO!

And so would start an epidemic of Black women dropping the perms and weaves and making the uneasy transition to sprouting beautiful natural hair.

Now that's just one thought. There are sooooo many.

I know because I had to write a 20-page paper on Colorism in undergrad for my Africana Studies discipline and I spent a good 6 pages talking about hair. That paper was a masterpiece, yall. I ain't even gon lie...lol!


I challenge Black men to love Black women a little better in our natural state. Our requesting that we love ourselves in our natural state.


What if Raven Symone rocked an afro on her show?

What if Tyler Perry ONLY had women with natural hair in his movies?

What if hair stylists honestly told their clients that natural hair is better?

What if there were more hair salons that taught us how to work with our hair instead of against it?

Just...what if?

Perms/weaves are NOT a form of self-hate.

As Black women, we don't hate ourselves.
We just haven't learned to completely love ourselves.
.....and we ain't the only race that has that issue dammit!

I would love to hear yall's thoughts!


[EDIT]
And I can I just say that even though wearing my hair naturally has given me certain kind of LOVE....I kinda thought I was the baddest thing walking even when I had a perm. LOL, seriously! Self-confidence is something we ALL need to work on.