16th October is Blog Action Day!!!!!! It is a day
when all bloggers have one conversation. In the sense that, we all make posts
on one topic/theme. It is my first time participating. I registered my blog and
I am ready to just express myself! This years’ #BAD14 theme is
INEQUALITY.
Now since this is healthy hair lifestyle blog, I decided to make
a post about INEQUALITY within the healthy hair community.
My phone dictionary app (don’t we just love technology?) as “1.
The condition of being unequal. 2. Social disparity; injustice 3. Partiality.
I also think it can be defined as a way in which socially defined
categories of persons are differently positioned or treated as a result of the
category in which they fall. In the healthy hair community the different
categories are “natural, relaxed, colour treated and white (yes! White! )
Different people on healthy hair journeys have at some point
in their life found them unfairly treated because of their hair choices.
Now, as a relaxed black lady, I have found myself in many
instances in situations or groups where I felt that I was being undermined
because,
- I do not keep my hair in its natural state
- I have short hair.
I have personally committed myself to researching and
exploring healthy black hair practices. Finding myself being unfairly treated
or getting a different response as a person with unadulterated natural hair or
a person with long relaxed hair surely does make me feel some type of way.
However, this is not to say that only persons with short
relaxed hair are unfairly treated or discriminated against. Some long haired
relaxed ladies have been vehemently rejected in some circles. I have heard
stories and seen it happen first hand but, it is not in my place to go into
specifics.
The natural hair community is not left out of this. In fact,
I personally (I repeat, “PERSONALLY”) feel they are the most discriminated
against. I will attribute this to the fact that the natural hair community is a
relatively new one. Some natural hair ladies have received bad judgment because
their hair isn’t “tamed.” I have heard stories first hand from natural hair
ladies who lost job opportunities because they wore their natural hair out for
job interviews. Others have also been warned in their workplaces because their
hair wasn’t deemed “professional” enough.
Now about the white…..hm white. Some communities felt that
they reserved the right to the word “natural.” They felt it was going beyond a
certain limit if curly haired white girls or white people in the general used
the word. I do not want to get into that.
That is that. It would be hypocritical to deny that these inequalities
exist in the black healthy hair community.
We should all just learn to respect each other’s hair choice
and support. It’s my hair it’s your hair but, we are one people. SUPPORT! TREAT
EACH OTHER AS EQUALS!
Leave your 2cents in the comments. Share your
experience. And I love a good argument. *wink
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