Can I touch your hair?

bigirl

anti- voluntary ignorance
BGOL Investor
Just curious how often this happens to the rest of you? I dont mean at airport I mean on a regular day either at work, at the bar, in supermarket, wherever. CACs asking to touch your hair and having the audacity to act offended when you say no please. OR very rarely one just coming up and touching it without asking :smh: Anyone else?
 
not really my hair but every time i come back from vacation white coworkers always want to touch my skin with the "i have never seen black skin tan"
 
not really my hair but every time i come back from vacation white coworkers always want to touch my skin with the "i have never seen black skin tan"

Been thru that one too verbally but they never wanted to touch my skin only my hair :smh:
 
unfortunately on two complete separate occasions I have had a stranger in a restroom say "you have such pretty mix people hair" :hmm::smh:
 
This is probably one of most common things for me......its always thats not your real hear is it? Those are extensions right? Me: yes its my hair and no not extensions they are locs...random white person: no I don't believe you can I touch it. :hmm: or like you said automatically the grab and stare in awe....while I politely :hmm: remove my hair from their what I assume are nasty hands:puke:

I once had one say wow I didn't realize "your" hair could get that long.:hmm:I was like however do you mean:rolleyes:. No different than your hair if you allowed it to grow wouldn't you think? She did not know how to answer the question because we both knew she meant black.


Peace
 
When I grow it out, sistas love touching my curly fro. It's not only white people.
 
:hmm:
This is probably one of most common things for me......its always thats not your real hear is it? Those are extensions right? Me: yes its my hair and no not extensions they are locs...random white person: no I don't believe you can I touch it. :hmm: or like you said automatically the grab and stare in awe....while I politely :hmm: remove my hair from their what I assume are nasty hands:puke:

I once had one say wow I didn't realize "your" hair could get that long.:hmm:I was like however do you mean:rolleyes:. No different than your hair if you allowed it to grow wouldn't you think? She did not know how to answer the question because we both knew she meant black.


Peace

I am about to make some t shirts for us that say "DO NOT ASK TO TOUCH MY HAIR" I will make male and female ones.
 
:hmm:

I am about to make some t shirts for us that say "DO NOT ASK TO TOUCH MY HAIR" I will make male and female ones.


Honestly don't think it will help sis they would see it as an invitation.....the hubby had his first real experience recently....said ole girl wanted to run her hands thru to see how it felt....lol i told him she seemed to have been wanting more....lol
 
Honestly don't think it will help sis they would see it as an invitation.....the hubby had his first real experience recently....said ole girl wanted to run her hands thru to see how it felt....lol i told him she seemed to have been wanting more....lol

You sadly are right they WOULD see it as an invitation :smh: But I have mace and a legal taser I have been DYING to use...:lol:
 
You sadly are right they WOULD see it as an invitation :smh: But I have mace and a legal taser I have been DYING to use...:lol:

LMAO Id use that taser without hesitation....and then I'd be like ooops sorry...:hmm: didn't realize that you "only" wanted to touch my hair.:rolleyes:
 
:hmm:

I am about to make some t shirts for us that say "DO NOT ASK TO TOUCH MY HAIR" I will make male and female ones.

Some natural groups actually have a few of these.

http://www.zazzle.com/look_but_dont_touch_t_shirt-235243553394922732

http://www.yourboyfriendsbestgirlfriend.com/2013/01/don-touch-my-hair-t-shirt.html

http://skreened.com/fohat/don-t-ask-to-touch-my-hair-pink

I used to have a link to a really cute t-shirt but I cant find it now.


I like my hair played in so people touching my hair doesn't really piss me off, tho you never know where someone's hands have been. When I was relaxed I was very particular about the products I used so it WOULD be touchable as I didn't want it to feel sticky, stiff or tacky and wanted it to move when the wind blew and fall back into place. I'm natural now, so I only really get the movement if I'm wearing it loose and make sure I separate my coils well. I keep cutting it though and you really have to have length and weight to get movement when natural. I used to have this guy at work that would come up and grab my pony puff, and another one that felt the need to caress my head as he walked by (lil young guy with a gentle touch... I had to tell him to stop before he got something started. :lol:) This one supervisor...white guy...bless his heart...looked at me one day... "you have that good hair, don't you?" :lol: smh... I HATE the term "good hair", but it was funny as hell coming from a goofy white guy. I just rolled my eyes at him. It was sad tho that that type of commentary made it from our community to theirs, this was way before Chris Rock's movie. I have another supervisor that likes it when I put my hair in two strand twists, but she's never been bold enough to touch it. I mostly get that from family and friends who have no shame or sense of personal space. I'll get questions or comments, but no strangers reaching out. A couple of months ago I straightened it to get a cut, and this guy walks up to me and says "Excuse me miss, I just wanted to say you have some beautiful hair" He had me grinning ear to ear. He was so sweet and respectful. If I were 15 years younger...mercy... Blew my head up and I ended up keeping it straight for a week instead of washing it out that night. :D


You're not alone in not wanting to be touched tho:

http://www.cnn.com/2011/LIVING/07/25/touching.natural.black.hair/index.html

http://www.curlynikki.com/2011/07/can-i-touch-it-reactions-to-cnn.html

http://www.losangelista.com/2011/07/hi-im-liz-no-you-still-cant-touch-my.html

http://thegrio.com/2011/02/16/why-you-dont-have-the-right-to-touch-my-hair/#13683851635631&361px

http://www.chicagonow.com/fresh-n-single/2012/03/natural-curly-hair-please-dont-touch/

http://madamenoire.com/62838/never-touch-a-black-womans-hair-we-still-gotta-tell-people-this/
 
I like my hair played in so people touching my hair doesn't really piss me off, tho you never know where someone's hands have been.

haha im the same way

now i HATE being touched by strangers without prior warning...im very big on personal space so coming at me like that is a no no

my hair is natural 3c/4a and even tho its past my bra strap straight... it shrinks up to shoulder length when curly...when i used to wear wash and gos i got white people and black people asking to touch my hair and i really wouldnt mind people asking to touch it....i actually enjoy educating people cause i know the average chick will be rude and not take the time to share a new perspective/technique


now when i have my magic hair in a protective style im a little more protective over it....and since i blended it well white folks really really wanna touch it...fuck that...just know this shit looks good and you can admire from afar...only time ill let someone touch is if its another girl with magic hair :dunno:
 
A fucking petting zoo :smh: I see what they trying to do but NO.

http://www.clutchmagonline.com/2013...trangers-touch-varied-textures-of-black-hair/

you-can-touch-my-hair-natural-hair-exhibit.jpg


Touching hair is a controversial topic within the natural hair community. Several women with natural hair have to deal with unwelcome touches or various requests to discover what their hair texture feels like. Some are perhaps happy to oblige but most compare the experience to feeling like an animal at a petting zoo.

An editorial site that focuses on the black hair experience, un-ruly.com is exploring the touching phenomenon in an unconventional way. They are launching an interactive public exhibit called “You Can Touch My Hair,” which will*take place today and on June 8th, 2013 from 2-4pm in New York City’s Union Square.

The exhibit is being touted as their effort to “take one for the team and explore*the tactile fascination with black hair.” As part of the project, “strangers from all walks of life will have the welcomed opportunity to touch various textures of black hair” on live models.

It will be fascinating to see how the participants feel about their experience once the exhibit comes to a close. What do you think about “You Can Touch My Hair,” Clutchettes?
 
Founder of exhibit and her reasoning:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/anton...hair_b_3320122.html?ncid=edlinkusaolp00000003

I was in the 10th arrondissement in Paris, somewhere by Rue des Petites Écuries on a Saturday night. As much as us Americans like to think that Paris is a city of class and sophistication, Friday's and Saturday's have the universal power of bringing out the best in sloppy uninhibited drunks no matter where you are. On this particular night, I had my 'fro out for the first time in Paris. I had met up with my friend Maxence. He barely noticed that I had changed my hair from long and straight to round and kinky, but when he did I told him how people in America (particularly non-blacks) can't get enough of afros. I told him how, when I had my 'fro, it would always bring on so much (usually unwanted) attention, attention that would often result in the utterance of a simple five-word question that I've now gotten pretty numb to: "Can I touch your hair?"

When I told Maxence this he didn't believe me. "Putain, it doesn't make any sense..." he said in his strong French accent, which he thinks sounds British. "It's like asking someone if you can touch their boobs." Ain't that the truth. But on that Saturday night, I had a great I-told-you-so moment when a young, blonde, inebriated mademoiselle stopped us somewhere in the 10th district and rattled off something very quickly and passionately in French. Maxence translated: "She wants to touch your hair." (That's the short version of the exchange). My response to such a solicitation usually depends on my mood. On this night I was tickled by being asked the question in French, so I obliged. She stroked me. She actually really got in there, so I had to curtly make her stop. I wonder if she got any satisfaction from it and if so, what kind? Did my hair feel good on her hands? Was some sort of curiosity finally satisfied? Or was I simply just a Saturday night amusement?

This sort of an encounter is not unique to me. Several people experience the same thing. One of the readers of my site, un-ruly.com, explained how embarrassed she felt when two strangers tugged on her hair on an escalator in Herald Square. Another reader described how a simple trip to Starbucks turned into her being subjected to whispers of "Do you think she braids it everyday? What about washing it? It must take a long time? I wonder does it hurt her fingers?" A friend of mine had her hair fondled by a complete stranger who had creepily leered at her at Hale and Hearty before mustering up the courage to go for the gold.

The more I heard and read about stories like this, the more I wanted to understand what was behind it. Blogger Los Angelista attributed the phenomenon to "racial superiority and privilege." A 2011 CNN article quotes blogger Renee Martin who reasons, "it's about ownership of black bodies more than it has to actually do with hair." I found all that a bit extreme and likely written out of the anger and shock of their encounters. So I decided to talk to some of my white friends about the matter. Unfortunately, only one, who I'll call Mary Festonhouse, was willing to share her take.

Festonhouse, who's asked several people if she can touch their hair, reasoned that curiosity is behind the solicitation:

The same curiosity you probably have at getting to pet a snake for the first time and assuming it's slimy when in fact it's quite smooth and lustrous. Or that uncontrollable urge to touch a fur coat at Macy's. "Is it real rabbit?" and then you run the tips of your fingers through it and are surprised: "Oh, that's not what I thought it would feel like at all." So I'm not judging the snake or the coat, I'm just touching it for curiosity sake. I'm curious. Curious to know what your hair feels like since I only know what mine does. Curious to know why hair is so taboo, when I myself have never been raised to believe it was.
I found her comments interesting. Are we so different that touching us is as intriguing as touching a snake? Is our hair taboo?

A possible explanation for the intrigue is black hair (like black people) is rare. According to a 2010 report by the United States Census Bureau, blacks account for 12.6 percent of the U.S. population, which might explain why we're "foreign" to some people.

Ms. Festonhouse corroborated this:

I grew up in WV [West Virginia]. There were no black people there. We had two black people in my entire school who were much older than I was. I didn't run in their circle, so the opportunity to give them a noogie on the noggin never presented itself. Once I moved to Richmond VA in the 10th grade, my group of friends were the punks, skaters and artists. Richmond was insanely segregated. The lunch tables were a good snapshot of it. Tables of only black kids and tables of only white kids.
Festonhouse's depiction of her school cafeteria is an interesting one. A 2012 Huffington Post article explained that American schools are still heavily segregated as a result of socio-economic imbalances. Perhaps the socio-economic wedge present in our formative years, coupled with the natural tendency for birds of a feather to flock together is creating a larger less visible rift among the various cultures of America, preventing us from getting to know each other, which, among other things, is leading to an utter disregard of a stranger's personal space.

Two years ago an unnamed black woman hosted an Ask Me Anything topic on social news site, Reddit: I am a black woman; ask me anything about my hair. Her discussion garnered 478 comments. It was a highly positive and productive discussion, with barely any trolling, and should be required reading for blacks and whites alike. One part of the discussion that stuck out was this response to a comment about never touching a black woman's hair: "Never. EVER. EVER, EVER, EVER. E.V.E.R. Touch anyone's hair without EXPRESSED consent from them first... Seriously." Similarly, many white women on the forum, Long Hair Community, say they dislike their hair being touched, especially by strangers. It's creepy. So it seems the consensus is a black woman's hair isn't taboo, a stranger's hair is taboo. Common courtesy says don't touch.

Even if we can all agree that it's unacceptable to touch any stranger in any sort of way, we're still left with an un-satiated curiosity about black hair and the sheer amount of questions on that Ask Me Anything discussion shows just how deep the curiosity goes.

To be honest I have a lot of questions about my hair, especially now that it's natural and the plethora of natural hair tutorials on YouTube shows that a lot of black women have questions about their natural hair too. Black hair is unique. It requires different care techniques and routines. And in a country where we primarily see commercials for white hair products and magazines that mainly cover white beauty topics and TV shows that mainly feature white characters, we, and those curious about us, have to find information about our hair from other sources.

It's easy to cite the media as the cause for underexposure to the various cultures of America. The media definitely plays a huge role. But another factor is the lack of the right kind of curiosity across the American population.

America the Melting Pot was renamed America the Salad Bowl -- a mix of cultures that didn't blend into one homogenous one, but instead maintained their own identities. There is such thing as a Black American culture, a White American culture, an Asian American culture, Native American, Hispanic American, and there are nuances and differences within those cultures. Living in America and not knowing anything about the other people that live in the country is impolite. It's like living with roommates for 236 years and knowing nothing about them; awwkwaaaaard. It's good to know your roommates; it makes for a more comfortable living situation. Americans are already notorious for not knowing much about the world outside of the U.S. We should certainly make an effort to know about the worlds inside America.

And if that effort means asking someone if you can touch their hair so it's not something that's foreign to you anymore, ask it. Ask the question. But ask it only when you've earned the right to do so. Ask it when you've taken the time to Google some of the basic questions about black hair. Ask this five-word request when you understand that it carries the weight of hundreds of years of being told our hair is unacceptable and now being told that it's a curiosity. Ask it when you understand that enlightening you about our hair is a responsibility no one individual wants to bare. Ask it when you've actually developed a relationship with a person to the point where you don't have to doubt their response to the request. Because if you're actually friends with a person, "Can I touch your hair?" is a question you don't have to ask because you know that you can either just do it or know to steer clear. And if you don't know any black people that well enough, maybe you should be asking yourself a different question.

***
Public Art Exhibit: You Can Touch My Hair
In an effort to "take one for the team" and further explore the tactile fascination with black hair, un'ruly will be holding an interactive public art exhibit in New York City, on June 6th and June 8th 2013, dubbed, You Can Touch My Hair, where strangers from all walks of life will have the welcomed opportunity to touch various textures of black hair. The event will take place in Union Square between 2pm - 4pm. Get a reminder about the event by RSVP-ing on Facebook or learn more here.

*

Follow Antonia Opiah on Twitter: www.twitter.com/hairunruled
 
A fucking petting zoo :smh: I see what they trying to do but NO.

http://www.clutchmagonline.com/2013...trangers-touch-varied-textures-of-black-hair/

you-can-touch-my-hair-natural-hair-exhibit.jpg


Touching hair is a controversial topic within the natural hair community. Several women with natural hair have to deal with unwelcome touches or various requests to discover what their hair texture feels like. Some are perhaps happy to oblige but most compare the experience to feeling like an animal at a petting zoo.

An editorial site that focuses on the black hair experience, un-ruly.com is exploring the touching phenomenon in an unconventional way. They are launching an interactive public exhibit called “You Can Touch My Hair,” which will*take place today and on June 8th, 2013 from 2-4pm in New York City’s Union Square.

The exhibit is being touted as their effort to “take one for the team and explore*the tactile fascination with black hair.” As part of the project, “strangers from all walks of life will have the welcomed opportunity to touch various textures of black hair” on live models.

It will be fascinating to see how the participants feel about their experience once the exhibit comes to a close. What do you think about “You Can Touch My Hair,” Clutchettes?

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9013075584/" title="TouchHair3 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3722/9013075584_fa4b44c4f2.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="TouchHair3"></a>

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9013076020/" title="TouchHair2 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7404/9013076020_04f7b24f11.jpg" width="500" height="444" alt="TouchHair2"></a>

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9011890605/" title="TouchHair4 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8267/9011890605_3c7dc13508.jpg" width="500" height="498" alt="TouchHair4"></a>

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9011919637/" title="TouchHair by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3689/9011919637_8269fdd435.jpg" width="499" height="500" alt="TouchHair"></a>
 
http://blackgirllonghair.com/2013/0...ouch-their-hair-as-part-of-social-experiment/

As part of a social experiment a group of black women — one natural, one loc’ed and on relaxed — stood on a street corner in New York holding signs saying “You Can Touch My Hair”. The experiment/exhibit is the brainchild of Antonia Opiah, a hair blogger. In an article for The Huffington Post she states:

Black hair is unique. It requires different care techniques and routines. And in a country where we primarily see commercials for white hair products and magazines that mainly cover white beauty topics and TV shows that mainly feature white characters, we, and those curious about us, have to find information about our hair from other sources.

It’s easy to cite the media as the cause for underexposure to the various cultures of America. The media definitely plays a huge role. But another factor is the lack of the right kind of curiosity across the American population.


The exhibit ran today and will run again on June 8th from 2 to 4 p.m. in New York City’s Union Square.

Okay, so I usually post articles without commentary, but for this I had to.

I think it bothers me that the impetus is put on us as black women to become accessible — and in some cases acceptable — to other ethnicities. I understand that black people are just 12% of the population so not everyone has ‘access’ to a black person. But it’s well documented that, for many Americans, segregation is a matter of choice and not circumstance. I fear that a display like this allows some people the opportunity to dip into black culture for an experience before returning to the ‘safety’ of a significantly less diverse world.

A significant percentage of women in the natural community are married interracially. Which proves that it is possible for men of other races to form meaningful and substantive bonds with black women without these types of displays.

I am still firmly opposed to strangers touching my hair. And while I take no offense at strangers asking questions about it (I welcome it), I hope we’ve gotten to a point in this country where my commonalities with a person of another ethnicity are more interesting to explore than my differences.

But that’s just me… And on an unrelated note, those colored locs and that curly fro are FIRE! What are your thoughts on this ladies?


_________
 
More pics from the "Touch My Hair" Event. There were a few others on her instagram: http://instagram.com/hairunruled/#


<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9020512477/" title="TouchHair10 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8393/9020512477_c918812482.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="TouchHair10"></a>

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9022738616/" title="TouchHair9 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3823/9022738616_34ab0aa78a.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="TouchHair9"></a>

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9020512651/" title="TouchHair8 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3673/9020512651_45e20bd47f.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="TouchHair8"></a>

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9020512687/" title="TouchHair7 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7288/9020512687_d9e8e7d80a.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="TouchHair7"></a>

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9020512775/" title="TouchHair6 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2891/9020512775_65e7183e4c.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="TouchHair6"></a>

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9022738958/" title="TouchHair5 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3795/9022738958_a339247f88.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="TouchHair5"></a>

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9022739054/" title="TouchHair11 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7360/9022739054_85491ac3c6.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="TouchHair11"></a>


And of course what is a movement with out a little dissent? There was a counter message...Hell NO you can't touch my hair... :lol::lol::lol:

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9022773504/" title="CannotTouchHair1 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3722/9022773504_e0177543e2.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="CannotTouchHair1"></a>

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9020547303/" title="CannotTouchHair3 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5328/9020547303_bdb7459df8.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="CannotTouchHair3"></a> :lol::lol::lol:

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/9022773452/" title="CannotTouchHair2 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3800/9022773452_1f31cf645d.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="CannotTouchHair2"></a>


:)
 
LOL with Black female's obsession with hair!

Fuck what the caucasoid says about your physical features. And fuck the negro males that judge you by your hair!
 
LOL with Black female's obsession with hair!

Fuck what the caucasoid says about your physical features. And fuck the negro males that judge you by your hair!


It's not only black women, it's ALL women. You don't think there are two to three rows of "white" hair products vs 1/4-1/2 a row for "black" hair products because we're the only ones obsessed? (Well, thanks to Target, in the last 2 years this is changing) However above the fray black women want to be, our hair is politicized by others (militant, etc) So the views of others can affect us, whether we want it to or not.


Anyway...this made me laugh out loud...

 
I rolling with those ladies in the CANNOT line.....:lol::lol: some of those lil posters are exactly what I'm usually thinking when I get approached.
 
It's not only black women, it's ALL women. Anyway...this made me laugh out loud...


Thin excuse. Because white women do it, I'm going to do it. White people have been controlling the paradigm of what is beautiful, "civilized" and what is excepted for far too long.

Y'all ain't doing nothing except paying for Korean and white folks kid's private and Ivy League schools tuition!

954866_515566231825983_1765786262_n.jpg
 
Thin excuse. Because white women do it, I'm going to do it. White people have been controlling the paradigm of what is beautiful, "civilized" and what is excepted for far too long.

Y'all ain't doing nothing except paying for Korean and white folks kid's private and Ivy League schools tuition!

954866_515566231825983_1765786262_n.jpg

umm... I'm pretty sure based on past discussions that the majority of women who have posted in this thread, including myself are chemical free. The touch my hair event was sponsored by a natural hair blogger. Even if they aren't tho, it's all love. I haven't had a relaxer in over 7 years. The majority of hair products I purchase are from black owned small businesses (not products branded as african american but white owned) but truth be told I only purchase products because I like to try new stuff and new scents. I'm good with just coconut oil. :flyingkiss:
 
source: WBEZ91.5

I want to put my face on

Black women spend 80 percent more on cosmetics and twice as much on skin care products than the general population. So why are they still ignored?

I grew up inside of the beauty stores that littered Madison Avenue in Oak Park. I have definitive memories of beauty and childhood: the first time my mother used a hot comb on my hair, my strange and strong desire to cut off my long thick locks (and the moment in which I actually did it), the first burn of a first relaxer. But none stick out so clearly in my mind as the beauty supply store, probably because, unlike those earlier experiences, going to the store was a ritual itself. This was not a one-time moment of trauma or fear; this was a homecoming every few weeks.

According to Essence’s 2009 Smart Beauty research study, black women spend $7.5 billion annually on beauty products, while paying 80 percent more on cosmetics and twice as much on skin care products than the general market. Reading this was affirmation of something I’ve always known: we want. We want to play and protect and hide and and comfort ourselves in the same way that a "new face" can for others.

In high school, a dance teammate asked, “Can black people even wear eyeshadow? Does it even show up on your skin?" And so, although I want and we as black women want, what remains is a blissful, perhaps even deliberate ignorance to those desires. They can't possibly want, they think. And if they do, does it ever even matter?

Earlier this year, my mother, sister, aunt, family friend, and I attended a beauty “trunk show” event hosted by Nordstrom. My mother had grown to love these shows. Everything was exciting, from the waiting in line to the runway presentations, to the free samples at the end.

“Honey, sit down. I’ll take care of you,” a representative from Smashbox told me as we lingered near their display. I was interested in trying their CC (color correcting) cream, the latest advancement on their BB cream. As a woman with years of acne, hyperpigmentation, and the most sensitive of skin, BB creams emerged as my chance to create a face that was clear and smooth and average. Average escaped me most of my life.

“I’m going to get this,” I later told her after she applied her products.

“Me too!” my mother said.

“And me as well!” my aunt chimed in.

“Will this work for me?” my mother whispered to me before handing over her purchase. She wondered not because it was something new or she was not a professional. She wondered because we are shades considerably different. My mother has light skin with freckles. My father’s skin is much darker. My sister and I ended squarely in the middle.

Smashbox had one shade for darker-skinned women. This is their fault and yet not. In many ways, they are just competing at the same plateau as their fellow beauty brands. I was reminded of reading teen magazines as a child.

SKIN CARE FOR PALE SKIN, FOR LIGHT SKIN, FOR OLIVE-TONED SKIN, FOR DARK SKIN.

We were left with few options in my childhood. There was one foundation color for black skin in youth theater and it did not match my skin. When at first our faculty sponsors did the make-up, they covered me from limb to limb, leaving no surface bare. "We can't have you all mismatched," a woman said.

I told my mother, “I don’t like this, but I don’t really know why," and she just nodded her head. As an adult, little had changed.

On a family trip to Maui two years ago, I went inside of a local Walgreens and stood in the hair care aisle in awe. Lined on the shelves were the products and brands I came to understand as my own, the kind that were made for my hair.

“They have more black hair care products than any Walgreens I’ve seen in Chicago,” I told my mom.

The comment was made as a moment of humor at first, but quickly grew into a moment of questioning and then a moment of anger. My thoughts began as thoughts of amusement and ended as thoughts of recognition. At home, I thought, your needs are not good enough. At home, I continued, your needs are no one’s but your own.

“That’s not surprising,” my mother responded to me in the car as we prepared to leave the store. Eventually, we are conditioned to not care as much and then to not care at all. This is what it is. I heard it in my mother’s voice. This is not surprising.

There will always be beauty supply stores for as long as there will be black American women. But I do not live mere blocks away from these stores anymore. I live in neighborhoods where a quarter of one shelf dedicated to creams and gels and conditioners for my kinky coils is generous. This is not a plea. This is what it is. It does not make me uncomfortable anymore. Whether that is a good thing is yet to be seen.

As a child I used to find beauty supply stores strange and overwhelming. The truth, I recognize now, is that a lifetime without access to the things I wanted or needed trapped me in a cycle of loathing for something I could not comprehend. These merchants want you to want them.
 
I dont wear makeup other than occasional lipstick and nailpolish and I have locs and do have beauty supplys around me so a giant tub of my loc gel that lasts for months is $5 and change same as bottle of oil which also lasts months or years. Mine is pretty cheap.
 
I'm good with just coconut oil. :flyingkiss:

And there we have it.


I'm determined to buy some Oyin when it gets a little colder shampoo wise but I've found two that works for my three heads. I use HH on occasion for conditioner but the coconut oil... [luther]nobody does it better, oh yeah...oh yeah, oh yeah[/luther]


As for the touch my hair thing...if you want to dispel myths and use as a teaching tool...ok fine. But it can't be me. I don't like it when people touch me to get my attention, why I want you in my mane? Home girl had it right, "i dont know where you hands been" :yes:
 
And there we have it.


I'm determined to buy some Oyin when it gets a little colder shampoo wise but I've found two that works for my three heads. I use HH on occasion for conditioner but the coconut oil... [luther]nobody does it better, oh yeah...oh yeah, oh yeah[/luther]


As for the touch my hair thing...if you want to dispel myths and use as a teaching tool...ok fine. But it can't be me. I don't like it when people touch me to get my attention, why I want you in my mane? Home girl had it right, "i dont know where you hands been" :yes:


Target is supposed to start carrying Oyin soon.
 
I always have people asking me if they can touch my hair. Men, women, black, white, indian, young, old etc. All kinds of people

I check if their hands are clean and I let them

Even though it annoys the shit out of me and I dont want them touching me its like I know in the back of my mind that they have misconceptions about black womans hair in their minds and I enjoy drop kicking peoples ignorant thoughts so I let them and they always always always say "its so soft :eek:" like they were expecting to get their hands cut when they touched it. People are crazy smh
 
Black women spend 80 percent more on cosmetics and twice as much on skin care products than the general population.

Rotfl I highly doubt this

most bw dont start wearing makeup till they get older. I didnt start till my early 30's and i only wear it on special occasions

these little white girls got on 3 layers of makeup by the time they hit grade 7
 
Rotfl I highly doubt this

most bw dont start wearing makeup till they get older. I didnt start till my early 30's and i only wear it on special occasions

these little white girls got on 3 layers of makeup by the time they hit grade 7


You need to re-read the statement.
 
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