Hair Adventures of an Adoptive Mom to a Little Haitian Angel
The
first time I met my daughter in Haiti, she
had had her hair recently done by one of
the nannies in teeny, cute piggyback braids.
I really didn’t even have to think
about her hair on that visit, just over
a year ago now. I remember examining it,
as I examined every little feature of her
2.5 year old self, absorbing the fact that
this would soon be my DAUGHTER, my first
and only child.
With
all my nerves and worrying about the adoption
paperwork, the political unrest and violence
in Haiti, my daughter’s melancholy
and silent disposition during that visit,
and a hundred other new-mom-jitter-type
things, how on earth I was going to learn
to do her hair didn’t really creep
into my repertoire of worries until maybe
6 months before she came home.
Thank
goodness for the Adoption Hair & Skin
Care Yahoo Group, devoted to adoptive moms
with children of African descent. I joined
this group and learned a wealth of things.
The minutiae of daily hairdoings were gleefully
and supportively discussed on this group.
Barrell Beads or Square Beads? Store-bought
products or Homemade? Recipes and recommendations
abound, people commiserated & complained.
I learned that I had a lot to learn about
my little girl’s hair! Talk about
different than caring for white hair!
I
would LOVE to not have to wash my hair every
day, but I would have a tough time not being
able to just let my hair dry and be natural,
or toss it up into a ponytail. I would never
have to worry about it getting dry or tangling
up, it’s pretty much straight and
my scalp’s too oily for my liking.
One
thing that perked me right up was seeing
all the photos of all the fun hairstyles
that the moms did on their daughters. Beads,
doodads, clips, ballies, braids….I
have always been into beads, but now here
was a necessity combined with plain old
fun!
I
heard about these things called Hair Snaps,
which no one could seem to get a hold of
except for wholesale. So I started a little
business called Snapaholics.com, selling
4 different kinds of snaps, which has since
grown into a huge website of every snap
I can find, beads, ballies, clips, bandanas,
totes, beading tools, moisturizers and oils,
styling aids, combs, and anything else I
can think of that would fun and useful for
these little angels.
Even
with all the information and support, all
the different things that black hair needs
seemed a little overwhelming to me. Conditioner,
moisturizer, grease, oil, to ‘poo
or not to ‘poo, leave in or rinse
out, daily, weekly, monthly, butters, crèmes,
pomades, gels, waxes……OH MY!
And which product to put on at what time?
My head started to spin a little. Then there
were braids, twists, piggybacks, cornrows,
plaits, locs (dredlocs, sisterlocs, braidlocs)…..I
knew from my visit that my daughter had
very thin and short hair on the back of
her head, so looking down at my fat sausage
fingers, I wondered how on earth I would
ever learn to do these fancy beady snappy
oily things with her hair!
Then, in about July or so,
one of the moms from our orphanage went
for a visit and showed me a photo of my
daughter listening to the talking photo
frame I sent down for her. When I saw this
-
- I was sure that they probably were going
to have to cut this matt out of her hair!
I thought Holy Moly what am I in for???
Finally
December 2006 rolled around, and I traveled
to Haiti to spend the final few weeks of
the adoption with my daughter at the orphanage.
I took down some hair stuff, but really
didn’t use it much. I had thought
I would just learn how to braid and twist
from the nannies, but their hands flew so
fast (and I always had a hundred kids wanting
to play with me) it was a hopeless cause.
I
finally had the Hair Guru Nanny do a bunch
of tiny twists with snaps on the end that
I brought down, right before she came home
with me on Dec. 23, so it would last as
long as possible before I’d have to
redo it. I figured I’d have my hands
full as a new mom without having to worry
about her hair, too. Since I run Snapaholics,
I knew that my daughter, as my little sidekick,
would have to always look GOOD! And yes,
she is asleep in that photo. I am still
able to do her hair while she is asleep,
thank goodness!
With
all my worrying, her hair has turned out
to be an absolute joy! I LOVE braiding it
and planning the next style, which beads
and snaps to use. Should I band the base
or not band the base? Should I do butterflies,
hearts, stars, squares, flowers? Should
I do all one color theme or a multicolored
razzle-dazzle? Or should I take her across
the street to my neighbors and let them
put some extensions in? (Only until I learn
to do it too!) I am probably a little TOO
excited by it. I love to walk into my Snapaholics
office which is spilling over with every
shape and color of beads and snaps and ballies,
and kind of gleefully clap my hands and
dance a jig while I contemplate my next
style.
Sometimes
she picks the beads, sometimes I do. So
far my favorite look in her hair was the
new Glittery Shapes snaps I got in, which
were EXTREMELY sparkly. So much so that
I didn’t use any beads with them.
Some of the fine glitter came off the snaps
and was all over her scalp and I thought
it was adorable (and yes, it washed out).
The
metal tail seamless bone combs I sell work
great for parting her hair and combing out
without snagging, and to top it all off,
the Jamaican Mango & Lime products on
my site work very well in her hair, and
smell delicious, too. I like to combine
the Cactus Leave In Moisturizer with the
Cactus Oil in a spray bottle, and just soak
her hair with it.
But, by far, the most fun
are the doodads. If anyone reading this
hasn’t yet blinged up their girls’
hair with beads and snaps (forget those
old rubber bands or heavy ballies on the
end of the braids and twists), then you
NEED to try them!!!
Here is a photo of my very
first and second styles (before I knew about
the “pull-too-tight” bumps –
I soon found out):

Clear
barrel beads and Style #10 Snaps
Black
rubber bands from Sally’s at
the base
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Sparkle
Flower beads and Style #3 Snaps
Black
rubber bands from Sally’s at
the base (covered by the flower beads)
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Then,
in an overzealous moment of crazed doodaddy
delirium, I went totally overboard on her
little 3 year old head with not enough hair,
and did what I called the “Party Do”
Glittery
Square Ballies with Transparent Square Beads
and Style #1 Button Snaps
This style would look good
on a bigger child with a LOT of long hair.
Next
I went more sedate with small box twists
all over, with her really short back area
left free (I frequently leave this area
free now in the hopes that it will catch
up with the rest of her head!).

Hot
Pink Glitter Barrell Beads and Snaps Style
#16
I
continued along quite well, trying new things
with the snaps (such as making a ballie
out of two of them snapped to a rubber band)

Screaming
Deal Beads plus Snaps Style #11
Colored
rubber bands from Sally’s at the base.
My
biggest nemesis, besides the short and thin
hair on the back and sides, was getting
the parts straight….especially if
I was doing the parting while she was asleep.
I soon learned that the best thing to do
was to part her hair BEFORE she went to
sleep, at least in the major sections, then
either continue the hairstyle after she
fell asleep or do the braiding and twisting
the next morning at breakfast.
It was fun to let my neighbor
put extensions in her hair, and I managed
to shove my trusty beads on to the fake
hair, snap the snap on, and burn the end
of the hair up to the snap.
Extensions
with Sparkle Clear Barrell beads and Style
#11 Snaps.
One
fun thing to do, since her hair is short
on the sides, was to take glossy embroidery
thread and string some beads on it in a
long length, leaving empty thread in the
middle, and wrap that around her side twists,
securing it with the ballie, and let it
dangle and jangle. She LOVED it.(Style #17
Snaps, 16mm Double Ballies, and Opaque Star
Pony Beads on the danglies).
She requested butterflies recently, and
got them in a big way, along with some Triangle
Parts, for which I was VERY proud, as they
came out awesomely symmetrical.

Glow
in the Dark Butterfly Ponies with Frosted
Matte Multi Barrel Beads in between, and
Style #3 Snaps on the ends.
Please notice how much LESS
scalp is showing in between the parts since
the first few style photos, likely thanks
to better nutrition and the Jamaican Mango
and Lime products I use on her.
Finally,
I re-negotiated the hanging butterflies
into a few piggyback braids to go green
for St. Patrick’s day, which only
took about 2 Dora Episodes, in Preschooler
time.

Shamrock
Mix of Pony Barrel Beads, Style #17 Snaps,
and Green 16mm Double Ballies, plus 10mm
Clear Ballies.
So,
all in all, I guess I was kind of worrying
for nothing. The most worrisome moment SINCE
she’s been home has really only been
the time she leaned her head on the good
bedspread right after I had oiled her scalp
up! And it is a tad frustrating when she
turns her head at breakfast RIGHT when I
am about to wrap the end of the hair around
the snap hinge and close it, and it slips
out of my hands and beads go clattering.
But
other than that, I’m having a blast!
She just turned 4, and I don’t want
to even think of that day I know is in her
future, when she turns to me and says “Mom,
come on, I’m too old for all that
flowery bead stuff!”
Enjoy
them while they are young and think that
the more bling that is on their head, the
more they are like a fairy princess!
-Stephanie,
Mom to Gyrlande, age 4, home from Haiti
since Dec. 24 2006

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