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Where are you from and how is the natural scene there? How long did you transition and how long have you been natural? I grew up in the 70s, and I often alternated between a press and curl and wearing a BAA. So the thought of having nappy hair never bothered me. Now I won't lie and say I had a nappy love affair going on; I didn't. And other than an afro or a puff, which I viewed as being a dated hairstyle, I had no clue how to care for and wear my hair in its natural state. As a result, wearing nappy hair out was initially not an option.
In 2003, I offered a much better position in my career field in my hometown. In Omaha, I found an excellent braider; however, she was extremely unreliable. I either couldn’t get an appointment with her when I needed it, or after making one with her, she’d always reschedule. This caused me to keep my braids in way too long, resulting in horrible damage to my hair line. Other times I’d take my hair down and wouldn’t know what to do with all the nappy hair on my hair. That’s when I started pressing my hair and experimenting with natural hair styles — well twists anyway. But since I hadn’t taken care of my hair under the braids, and I had started using heat on my hair and had no clue what kind of products to use, my twists were dry, brittle and scraggly. But you know what? My family and friends ALWAYS supported me. They always said my natural hair was cute. So, although I wasn't really feeling them, I kept rocking my twists like I had the cutest hair style ever! Has there been any differences in your life from going natural? I finally found this site and Napturality in February. After that, it didn't take me very long to make the mental transition. Viewing the hair member hair albums and happening upon instructions on how to style and take care of my hair really helped tremendously. After being a member on that site for less than a month, I was totally sold on the concept of nappturality. As a result, I do now have a total love affair going on with my hair. It's so beautiful and versatile. Honestly, I can't imagine wearing it any other way.
How do you take care of and maintain your hair? I shampoo every three weeks, occasionally more, some times less. Since my hair is now between 11-13 inches long, depending on where I sample from, I've had to come up with ways to minimize tangles during the shampoo, conditioning and styling process. That now involves sectioning my and banding my hair along its length. Next I rinse my moisturizer out (which is water soluble, apply shampoo, squeeze each section gently and then towel dry. Then I apply conditioner and wear a shower cap for a little while to deep condition with my body heat. Then I rinse, combing though each section with a wide tooth comb to get rid of any remaining shed hair and make sure all the conditioner has been washed out. I towel dry and then use a blow dryer without a comb attachment to accelerate the drying time on each section of hair. Even without using heat my hair dries remarkably fast. I apply moisturizer and put each section into twists. I then style the next day. All this usually takes place over the weekend so I'm good to go on Monday morning! Although my hair is longer than it's ever been, my goal is to grow my hair as long as possible. I used to look at hair growth in terms of inches ...I don't any more. I would like to for my twists .
What advice would you give someone who was thinking of going natural? Also, gauge your support. If your family and friends aren't going to support your efforts, be ready to stand strong and steadfast in your convictions to stop the chemical abuse in order to have a healthy scalp and hair. Also, use the various hair boards out there as your primary support system; there's nothing wrong with that. I didn't have a hard time going natural, but when I want to talk to like-minded folks, many times I can only find them online. Having someone you can relate to will be a really big help. Finally, just go for it! And finally, just go for it. Just do it. I don't know. That sounds so simple. Once I decided not to relax again, I never looked back. However, I think my decision to stop relaxing was so easy because I wasn't afraid to have nappy hair. I didn't get my first relaxer until I was 23 years old.
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