sunshinelady
New Member
Hey y'all,
I know this is going to be controversial, but I'm going to say it (ala Kanye West).
I just got set off by the Aveda salon using different relaxers and it just strikes me that we are treated as afterthoughts by many of these major cosmetology companies. I think there is a lack of innovation in our hair care products. I feel like if others had the issues that we have with our hair, then they would have been solved. Instead, they classify our hair as a problem and assign it medical terms like "wooly hair syndrome." Are our dollars not green? Do we not deserve innovative products that are actually spelled correctly (WTH is a rhelaxer and why do I need doo-gro)?
I feel like this problem extends to state cosmetology boards as well. Why are there dual curriculums in beauty schools, that allow white stylists avoid learning about how to do our hair? Seems like we get our hair done more than other folks?
Did Pantene actually test their Relaxed and Natural line on anybody? Why does it have the same exact ingredients as its other products?
If the majority population needed something to straighten their hair, they would go to Mars looking for rocks that had the perfect PH to do it.
I'm tired of this ish! Thank you! (steps down off my soap box) That's all I have to say about that.
Sunshinelady Douglass

I know this is going to be controversial, but I'm going to say it (ala Kanye West).
I just got set off by the Aveda salon using different relaxers and it just strikes me that we are treated as afterthoughts by many of these major cosmetology companies. I think there is a lack of innovation in our hair care products. I feel like if others had the issues that we have with our hair, then they would have been solved. Instead, they classify our hair as a problem and assign it medical terms like "wooly hair syndrome." Are our dollars not green? Do we not deserve innovative products that are actually spelled correctly (WTH is a rhelaxer and why do I need doo-gro)?
I feel like this problem extends to state cosmetology boards as well. Why are there dual curriculums in beauty schools, that allow white stylists avoid learning about how to do our hair? Seems like we get our hair done more than other folks?
Did Pantene actually test their Relaxed and Natural line on anybody? Why does it have the same exact ingredients as its other products?
If the majority population needed something to straighten their hair, they would go to Mars looking for rocks that had the perfect PH to do it.
I'm tired of this ish! Thank you! (steps down off my soap box) That's all I have to say about that.
Sunshinelady Douglass

