Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I think it was all to casually mentioned with no background, I understand anybody wanting to help or defend the situation
I also think she can get in trouble for casually mentioning it on the internet, since some ppl will know where she works and can prove it's her saying it.....I'm really not sure how that would work tho
I understand the frustration, but also this seems to be a bit of internalizing going on. It's wrong(the situation), but to be depressed....well I don't know. I do know I would be Irate tho, let someone say something out of line about my hairThe union would be doing something.....I wouldnt be depressed tho
nappy is relative, some would call any black person's hair nappy, wrong yes, but would we get depressed or mad? Me keeping in context of how it was meant, if it was truly meant racially-man forget that, I would do professional report to every union rep and the higher ups. Maybe someone can tell her that....whistle blower like a mugg.....someone would be doing something. If she feels helpless, she has to know this can't continue, I would not go around the supervisor without a witness and would ask the union to make it be that way.
we all know her supervisor didnt mean nappy as in tightly curled or coiled, even if thats what the word means...it was meant in a derogative way, and thats not how a supervisor should talk to an employee.
In short, taking someone to court for calling them "nappy-headed" or "kinky-haired" I don't think would take one very far, unless the judge was someone who is still haunted by the history of when nappy was synonymous with unkempt. But then of course, if the hair does look messy then by that interpretation, the cap would fit so how would the "victim" defend herself. Incidentally, can someone take another to court for being told she doesn't look smart when she herself thinks she does? I mean, isn't this is like being called ugly when you yourself think you are good-looking. I guess all these can fall under "harassment" but unless one has a very good legal team, I think it's a long shot unless one can prove it causes a lot of distress and affects work performance.*shrug*
I think the YTer would feel less offended if she realized that the words are not insulting. Unless 4B hair is so ugly to her that she doesn't want to be associated with it, then I don't see how being called nappy-headed (like me) or kinky-haired (like me) is offensive.
Both your intent on bringing this up and bringing it to light here was pure :Rose: I know that-you have a big feeling heart , nothing wrong with thatgirl i agreee... what i'm seeing right now in a (clinical settings) are tons of people feeling HELPLESS....and again later DEPRESSED only to show later as SI all stemming from job stress and the economy
to come on camera and express that you feel helpless about a personal situation is normally not a first step in mentally processing this.... yet often a subtle cry out (releasing stress, or worse)
I've seen a great many (in the clinical setting) become suicidal over the past year from job stressors SNOWBALLED with economy financial burdens + any normal stressors we all me embrace
events turn over so quickly, people would be surprised
oh bad doc, or maybe good doc with very bad bedside manner, I wonder if you can get it from a book?^^^^ girl i guess empathy is a hard one for some
laughing b/c one of my old professors said she reading a book that's teaching her how to be empathetic
and yet's she's been practicing medicine for 20 yrs:![]()
oh bad doc, or maybe good doc with very bad bedside manner, I wonder if you can get it from a book?![]()
Oh my...well...a few things -
- Yes, she is a member here
- I've met her IRL and no, she isn't sloppy for those of you wondering
- She made her screen name before she started doing videos (lol), and YT won't let you change your name, you have to make a new account and all that mess.
You know what's sad? A LOT of people (of all races) use the word nappy/kinky and have NO IDEA that it could be offensive. I promise you. Personally, I have no issue with kinky, but I don't like the word nappy, as I have ALWAYS associated it with unkempt hair, even when I had a relaxer. When my hair was dry and tangled from swimming or something, I always called it nappy, even when it was bone straight. I was talking to an ex the other week and I said something about my hair, and he said, "Well it's nappy and hard to manage because you're black, right?" He said this matter-of-factly, and seriously had NO idea that what he said was WAY out of pocket until I politely corrected him. Where do you think he got that term from? When I went home, I made a comment about hair typing and my brother said, "Well wouldn't your hair type just be nappy?" and no, he wasn't making a joke or trying to insult me. He seriously thought that this was an acceptable way to describe one's hair.
In the video, she didn't really go into detail about how they talk about her hair (like, do they just make a comment, or is it making jokes/jeers? Does she know they frown on it, or is it just because they call it nappy/kinky?), or if she has expressed her dislike from those terms (Did she? I was reading responses and listening at the same time, so if I missed that, I apologize). Anytime someone says something about my hair I don't like, I kindly tell them not to refer to my lovely hair in that manner, and if they want to call THEIR hair xyz, they are welcome to it. And yes, I would tell my boss this, and I work in a corporate environment. You don't have to go Mama Africa on someone every time they make an annoying natural hair comment. And I know that she said that they talked about her hair before she wore the scarf, but I would NEVER wear a scarf to work. NEVER. I understand that we are all into hair care and like to do things like undercover baggy and DC, but come on...I can DC when I get home, I'm not doing that at work.
Nonie, I see what you are saying (I've also watched that movie), but I'll start accepting the word nappy when people start using it as a compliment - you NEVER hear people say, "I love your hair, it's so nappy!" Actually, when my dad used the word nappy and told me that "if it isn't straight, it's nappy" I had no issue with him using it. So it's really the context rather than the actual word, at least to me. While a lot of people don't use it as a direct insult, they certainly aren't trying to tell you that you have nice hair - nappy and "hard to manage"? Come on...This may come off as very odd, but I find it sad that people get offended by the word "nappy". I really do. I feel as sad as I do that some black people hate to be called "black". Some of you may scoff at that last line, but it is very real for those who find being called "black" derogatory because to them their skin is brown. I feel sad because I am so proud to be black. I don't view that word as bad. Even with all the history of the word "black" being used to talk about all things negative (except maybe the state of a bank account) and white to describe things positive, I still have never felt an aversion to being called a black person.
I understand why nappy is associated with unkempt hair. There was a time when having nappy hair meant you had no choice but to have unkempt hair. It wasn't because the hair was unkempt that it was nappy, it was because it was nappy that it was unkempt. Nappy meaning "having tight curls" --and that is the true meaning of the word nappy. Tight curls that would not allow fine-tooth combs--the only combs available then--to go through and groom the mane. And that lack of grooming led to unkempt hair. Then--way back then--it was not nice for anyone to call your hair nappy because if you had nappy hair, it was without doubt unkempt. For those who haven't seen the movie 400 Years Without a Comb, I implore you to watch it and you'll understand what I'm talking about. I will give a link to it at the end of this post.
So yes, it saddens me that certain things can be so ingrained in our people that we cannot even stop to think rationally about them, no matter how intelligent and educated we are. I know some will want to stone me for this, but it is a fact, that we choose to remain in ignorance if the meaning of a word is as clear as day and we continue to use it incorrectly, just because there was a time it implied that. So effin what if the next person uses it wrongly? Why must we drink from the same cesspool?
There was a time when being black implied you couldn't speak good English or read or do many of the things we are free to do today and do them as well as we do them today. So perhaps back then, there might've been a few who wished they hadn't been born black so they could have had what others had.
But what reason is there today to want to remove oneself from what is true about one? Yes, there are people who will never like your skin color or your hair texture but a rose by any other name will still smell sweet. So running away from words that describe you because of misunderstandings/misconceptions of old and letting those who'd love nothing more than to see you cringe succeed, when there are enough resources and free access to them today to clear things up for you and confirm that what you've been told over the years has been a lie (namely, confirm that nappy doesn't mean unkempt) to me is just....(Words fail me!)
I am African, and I know there are people who consider it not cool to be African. But it is what it is. I am who I am. So just because some people associate being African with being backward or primitive, will I buy into that bullsh** and take offense whenever someone uses it as an insult or will I enlighten myself about what being African means and who Africans are so that the next time someone uses it to insult me, it rolls off me like mercury?
I have asked this before and I'll ask it again: there are men who look down on women. Everything dumb that is done in life is always some woman's fault. So if they said, "After all, you're just a woman" that would not be meant as a compliment. So suppose you grew up in a culture where women were second-class citizens who had no say and happened to have had those sort of male chauvinists around you all your life--nay, let's even just say you were visiting the village where all that goes on and learned that the word "woman" is used as a derogatory word--would you stop calling yourself "woman" because some ignoramus uses the word as an insult?
The point I am trying to make is NAPPY was never a dirty adjective. It was always a word that described a type of texture made of tight coils. Just because slavery made it out to be a bad thing to have that sort of hair doesn't mean we should continue to buy into that BS when we know very well that tightly coiled hair can be so beautiful and isn't the unkempt mess it once was. Back during slavery days, nappy meant unkemptHowever, today nappy means hair that, because of its tiny curls and their ability to do so much, is the most versatile hair type there is and can
I pray you will open your minds as you watch the movie I mentioned earlier which is linked to in this thread.
- be worn in more styles than any other hair
- hold styles better than any other hair
- show off many looks than any other hair depending on what you do to it
- grow long once we stop trying to copy habits of other hair types and embrace it and listen to its needs and none other.
but I'll start accepting the word nappy when people start using it as a compliment - you NEVER hear people say, "I love your hair, it's so nappy!"
i agree with you on the definition of nappy...but just because in the days of slavery nappy meant unkempt, and today nappy can be embraced as a description of tightly curly hair, doesnt mean we should ignore the word when its used it a way that connotes unkempt hair or is meant to describe natural hair in a negative way...some black people embrace the other "N" word, but if a white person called you one (with obvious malicious intent), you're not going to neglect the history of the word just because today some people choose to use it with a non negative connotation. the same goes for nappy...just because it might also describe tightly curled hair, that doesnt take away from the fact that it was and still is used to also negatively connote unkempt/undone/ innapropriate/etc. hair, which is obviously the way in which the lady in the video's supervisor intended it to come across.The point I am trying to make is NAPPY was never a dirty adjective. It was always a word that described a type of texture made of tight coils. Just because slavery made it out to be a bad thing to have that sort of hair doesn't mean we should continue to buy into that BS when we know very well that tightly coiled hair can be so beautiful and isn't the unkempt mess it once was. Back during slavery days, nappy meant unkemptHowever, today nappy means hair that, because of its tiny curls and their ability to do so much, is the most versatile hair type there is and can
Nonie, I see what you are saying (I've also watched that movie), but I'll start accepting the word nappy when people start using it as a compliment - you NEVER hear people say, "I love your hair, it's so nappy!" Actually, when my dad used the word nappy and told me that "if it isn't straight, it's nappy" I had no issue with him using it. So it's really the context rather than the actual word, at least to me. While a lot of people don't use it as a direct insult, they certainly aren't trying to tell you that you have nice hair - nappy and "hard to manage"? Come on...
And my apologies - I should have elaborated on my story with my brother a little bit more. After I told him that my hair wasn't nappy, he said, "Well, I mean, it isn't now, but usually it is naturally, right?" And I looked at him like he was crazy, because I was wearing a wash n go...I told him that that's how my hair does look naturally...and he was like, "Huh? You didn't have to use heat on your hair to get it to look like that?" He thought that I had done something special to turn my "nappy" hair into "nice" hair. Then, because my hair wasn't "nappy" and he is my sibling, he was like, "Hmm, wow, maybe I should grow my hair out if it'll look like that [yes, I told him that even though we are brother and sister our hair may not look the same], can you tell how mine would look, or is it too short?" He has a fade. So...yea, while he wasn't trying to insult me, he certainly wasn't trying to pay me a compliment in using the word.
There it is. Asking someone to accept something directed towards them that is meant to insult or degrade them is completely incomprehensible.
i agree with you on the definition of nappy...but just because in the days of slavery nappy meant unkempt, and today nappy can be embraced as a description of tightly curly hair, doesnt mean we should ignore the word when its used it a way that connotes unkempt hair or is meant to describe natural hair in a negative way...some black people embrace the other "N" word, but if a white person called you one (with obvious malicious intent), you're not going to neglect the history of the word just because today some people choose to use it with a non negative connotation. the same goes for nappy...just because it might also describe tightly curled hair, that doesnt take away from the fact that it was and still is used to also negatively connote unkempt/undone/ innapropriate/etc. hair, which is obviously the way in which the lady in the video's supervisor intended it to come across.
Again, when my dad used the word nappy to describe my hair, and was using the actual definition, I did not correct him. The way he used it, YES, my hair is nappy, and that's fine. When I see a natural hair salon with the word nappy in the title, I don't cringe, and when people use the word in the natural hair community it's a-ok with me. However, if you say something to me in a negative way and I don't agree with your interpretation, I will refute the description.
You're misinterpreting my story with my brother. No, he wasn't saying he didn't like hair that is combed out. To him nappy is non-defined, afro hair, like when he used to wear a flat top. He is one of those people that think all black people have 4b hair. He hadn't seen my natural hair in quite some time, and thought it would grow out like his - "nappy." When he realized that my hair didn't look like his and wasn't "nappy" to him, he was confused. To him that's what black hair is, nappy. Like I said, the notion that black people have lesser hair is generally accepted in society, even by other black people. He wasn't stating a preference, he just thought that because I was black my hair would be "nappy" by his definition of the term.
The David Howard situation is totally different in my eyes, because the word n.i.g.g.a.r.dly is a completely different word from the n-word to me. Like you said, you didn't know what the word meant, and most likely, the people upset didn't know what it meant either. Also, he wasn't trying to be insulting towards blacks when using it (no, I don't think he used it on purpose as some kind of secret jab) and he knew what he was saying when he said it. I've used the term as well. I don't get how that's the same thing when a person using nappy doesn't know what it means (or they may know what it means, but they are using the slang definition), and they are using it in a negative manner.
And yea...I don't really care. People can call my hair whatever they want. I'm just offering you a different perspective. To give another example, if one of my friends called me the b-word using the slang definition, I wouldn't care, but if someone used the word in a combative manner towards me, using the actual definition, yes, I would address that. Again, it all depends on the context. We're just going to have to agree to disagree. I'm not one of those people who think it's so clever to try to turn an insult around on a person...(I don't really get the cig reference either, I mean...I get what you are saying, I think, but if someone said that to me in America with either meaning it wouldn't offend me, so I'm having a hard time coming up with a reason why it would?)...like, if someone came up to you and called you the c-word (which actually by definition refers to female organs, or just a female - yes, it's considered obscene but not really insulting), would you look at them and say, "HAH! Yes! I do have one of those!"? I know I wouldn't...
Well this is really hard to respond to (I keep scrolling up and down), so I'm going to address the bolded (dang it, I bolded a bunch of stuff and then the post was too long so I had to take out the quote, bah!!):
- I agree that people view being black as less, but that isn't because of the word black, or brown, or directly with the color of our skin (although people do look at our skin and automatically assume certain things, but if it were directly the color, they would assume the same thing about someone of another race with that skin color). That has to do with an entirely different set of stereotypes regarding the characteristics of blacks as well, which yes, do offend me. But people are not calling hair nappy as in unkempt because they are trying to be ignorant, or insulting. The POV that black hair is naturally unkempt, ugly, and unmanageable is generally accepted in society as fact, at least in America. Even when people aren't insulting natural hair, they will talk about how it's so unruly, or thick and hard to comb, or it's too puffy, or how it won't lay down. Now, many of these descriptions may be true, but people aren't just saying them to say them, they say them to draw the conclusion that our hair sucks. I hate to say this, because I ALWAYS refer to the dictionary or encyclopedia when explaining things, but in society words take on a twisted meaning often times when they are put in a specific context. To be frank, I don't give two shakes what the word actually means, because I can interpret how the word is being used in any given situation and react accordingly. It all depends on that context, like I said. We are all familiar with slang, and usually know what people mean when they address us. Again, when my dad used the word nappy to describe my hair, and was using the actual definition, I did not correct him. The way he used it, YES, my hair is nappy, and that's fine. When I see a natural hair salon with the word nappy in the title, I don't cringe, and when people use the word in the natural hair community it's a-ok with me. However, if you say something to me in a negative way and I don't agree with your interpretation, I will refute the description.
By definition, nappy has no negative meaning. It is simple a word that describes texture...I still don't see any reason why anyone would continue to apply a meaning to a word that has no basis in this day and age. History's theory of unkempt nappy hair ceased to exist when combs that could groom our hair came about and nappy hair became the beautiful crown it is today. *shrug*
I had to quote this on its own because you lost me with the part highlighted in purple.
So are you bothered by the world hating type 4B hair, or are you bothered with them thinking it sucks? What do you care if they think our hair is hard to manage blah blah blah? Good! Let them think that. Just means I must be the sh** coz I've mastered mine. WTF do I care what the POV of others is of my hair? It hasn't stopped me from doing anything I've wanted to do so pfft. I mean,
That whole paragraph seems to me that your issue isn't so much with the word "nappy" but with how the world perceives our hair. But that is not going to change just because you pick what you deem a better word for your hair. Just because people walk on eggshells around your hair isn't going to change it.
Do you know how a lot of people come to admire my hair? Coz I tell them about it. I actually talk about it with the love I have for it. I talk about it the way you talk about a child you love. And do you know I am yet to meet someone who is grossed out by my hair or makes me feel bad about it. Even when my Coolio do was made fun of (and rightly so!) I turned that around in my favor and had the heckler confused. Why? Coz I effin love my hair. The Coolio incident would be the kind that makes someone post a thread about it, but I left there bemused at how jeering turned to admiration.
Until y'all stop worrying about America's POV then you'll never get to enjoy your hair. Do we have to wait until JLo's butt stands up to be counted before we embrace our badonkadonks? Why do we have to be validated by others? Where's our self-pride?
The part in purple was simply talking about the societal definition of nappy. Like I said...it really doesn't matter to me, which is probably why I don't need to go into educate mode every time someone uses the word. That's exhausting. No thanks.
Well, you did misinterpret my story with my brother because he wasn't saying he had a preference for one kind of hair over the other, or that he dislikes hair that he thinks is nappy. He actually thinks similar to you in the sense that, well, our hair is nappy, that's all, shrug. He uses the societal definition though.
The reason I used those other words is because I'm trying to highlight the difference between a slang/societal defintion and an actual definition. The b-word can also mean friend, like, "Omg, I love her, that's my b**ch." And I use that word like that ALL the time, and am never offended when my friend greets me like that. However, if we're in a fight, and the same friend uses the same word, the reaction is different because the intent is different. Truth be told, the c-word isn't really offensive to me at all, and in England it's commonly used. But - if there was some dude in a bar screaming at me and calling me that word, I would be mad due to the situation. Even if you don't like it, or aren't willing to acknowledge it, nappy meaning unkempt/undefined IS a slang definition of the word. When I told my brother my hair isn't nappy, I wasn't saying it wasn't tightly coiled, I said it wasn't nappy because I knew what he meant. Just like I said that when I was a child I used the word nappy to describe relaxed hair that looked a mess.
It's just not as cut and dry as you are displaying in your posts (as in, well that's not what the word really means, so we should just tell people). I absolutely completely understand what you are getting at, but many others, myself included, have a different perspective. That's all.
So I ask you too, the day a bigot makes a comment that is meant to degrade you as a black person or you as a woman, you will quit accepting those descriptions of yourself? What if the compliment is "You're so beautiful and smart for a black person/woman", what will you do then? Will you just see ignorance for what it is? Or will you stop being a black person/woman because when the words are used, they aren't used as a compliment but rather they are the thing that, according to that statement, is normally responsible for people not being beautiful or smart?
I dunno, to each his own. I'ma stay nappy-headed with my nappy hair and continue to walk tall with my short black African self.