naturalmanenyc
Well-Known Member
I think many of us who transitioned can relate to this. I did a bit of a series on my blog about my own struggle with transitioning. I didn't get to the point of tears, but I can relate.
The standards of beautiful hair are changing but we ain't there yet.
http://goingnaturaltransitionington...-why-transition-from-relaxed-to-natural-hair/
The things nobody tells you about transitioning - BC is easier
http://goingnaturaltransitionington...t-transitioning-from-relaxed-to-natural-hair/
Lies about natural hair - it's stronger than relaxed hair
http://goingnaturaltransitionington...t-transitioning-from-relaxed-to-natural-hair/
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/07/15/teyonah-parris-natural-hair_n_5587721.html
Teyonah Parris Cried Over Her Natural Hair: It Didn't Look Like 'What I Thought Was Beautiful'
Video at link
Posted: 07/15/2014 12:52 pm EDT
Natural hair in the black community has been a hot topic for some time, with discussions ranging from its care to the debate surrounding its exclusivity. But one thing we can all say for sure is that not everyone has the same experience with their own manes.
"Mad Men" actress Teyonah Parris stopped by HuffPost Live to dish about her upcoming gigs, like "Dear White People," and took a moment to open up about her personal natural hair story.
Parris described going natural as "a challenge" and said that she had her "aha moment" when she saw a woman on the streets of Harlem rocking her kinky curls. "I said, 'Oh my gosh, I wish my hair could do that,'" Parris recalls.
Once Parris decided to grow out her chemically relaxed hair and wear her natural tresses, she started on an emotional journey towards self-acceptance.
"I cried, I cried. I was not used to seeing myself like that, I did not want to walk outside...My [friend]...had to literally come over to my house and walk me outside because it was such an emotional experience and it wasn't just about hair. It was what my perception of beauty was and had been for all of my life and then I look at myself in the mirror and I'm like, 'That doesn't look like what I thought was beautiful.'"
HuffPost Style also asked Parris if she thought white women belonged on #TeamNatural.
"Natural is natural," she said, mentioning that everyone has their own "natural" hair. "But that is not to take away from the part of our journey that's specific to being a woman of color, and what it means to accept who you are. We tried for a while to measure up to a level of beauty that we see depicted in the media and so I do think that it is a very specific journey and experience for women of color, when you’re natural."
Watch the rest of Teyonah Parris' heartfelt HuffPost Live segment above, and tell us about your natural hair stories.
Wrong. I remember picking my mom up from the airport while wearing my hair in a twist out. It was the first time that I had worn my hair "out" or "down", because I usually wore a variety of updo's and buns. When my mother saw me, she yelled at the top of her lungs to the attendant pushing her wheel chair, "What has my daughter done to her hair?! She used to have such pretty, long straight hair, but now it's in a short, nappy afro!!! Why did she do that?"" It took everything that Jesus and I had for me not to go off. Today she swears that she never did that. However, this is only because it is longer and I get tons of compliments. She gets the perpetual side eye from me regarding natural hair. Of course she had an Afro in the 70's, but "that was different".
That's cool, but that totally implies that they would not have fallen in love with their hair if it looked like mine
... and the sad truth is that so many who DO come to find out they have my texture have the hardest time accepting/loving it and/or the worst reactions from others 
She went ahead with it anyway and is so in love with her natural hair now ... her self esteem has soared and I am so proud of her for not letting the naysayers scare/shame her into remaining relaxed when she didn't want to...especially at that young impressionable age. She loves her reflection in the mirror with her natural hair and the so-called "tough African" texture and that is something that can take years to embrace, and for some, it never happens

She cut all her relaxed hair off and be rocking a bad a** fro sometimes. Walking around like she know she the ish. I smile everytime I see her or when she comes to show me what she has done to her hurr.