And the reason they hate their texture is they decided before they transitioned what they wanted their hair to look like and behave like. You cannot do that. Your really have to ignore other textures and focus on your own. Indeed, it helps to have an idea of what your hair looks like. If you've always been relaxed, that can be hard to do, but if you have photos of back when you were natural and hopefully pics of hair that isn't pressed, and you were not an infant, then that sort of gives you an idea.
I knew my hair was 4B just from its general appearance and Andre's weird description which seemed to describe hair that looked like this:
See the enlarged photo here:
Beautiful African Girls | Photo
I grew up around people with hair like that, which resembled mine. I knew when you washed it, it shrunk and looked like this:
And I knew that if I didn't keep it braided, it'd turn into a compact mass that could not be combed. (Think of those doormats you scrape mud on.) This foreknowledge from years of having natural hair helped me when I transitioned to know that things like WNGs were clearly so foreign to my hair that I didn't even want to do them. I grew up seeing how my hair was worn (braided, in a pulled back puff/pony) and those styles were beautiful to me. My type of hair was most beautiful when combed and styled, not left to do it's own thang. My type of hair was most versatile when long coz it could be shaped into so many different looks. I knew it coz I'd seen it in people with long hair. And I dreamed of one day being able to wear elaborate styles like them because I'd one day have hair longer than 3 inches.
What I didn't know about my hair was that its strands actually had a uniform pattern. Years of wearing it stretched to keep it from turning into a compact mass (the smartest thing I ever learned, BTW!) kept me from seeing the uniform, spirally coils that form this beautiful mane:
So Andre's definition went out the window as far as I was concerned in terms of describing my true texture once I found that out. What Andre's 4B describes for me is the state you're most likely to find my type of hair on any head that is trying to grow long hair. Keeping it stretched keeps tangles and knots at bay. So I wear it mostly like that. But when I
give it free, and wash it allowing it to return to rest, watch it coil back to its natural mass of coily awesomeness.
Learning of this coily state also taught me how to handle it so that I don't ever yank a comb through it without first stretching out the coils with one hand to open them up, even when drenched in conditioner. Yes conditioner does make a comb glide through without the stretching, but it's likely the coils will hug and contract above the comb and you'll hit a snag. So the image of springs stretched out, creates for me the image of a comb gliding through and proves true to form when I do it.
Trust me, get to know
YOUR hair and yours alone. Don't believe the hype about products that others swear do wonders to their hair if you already have something that is working for you. I don't use any of them or buy into it because I listened to my hair and found what it liked. And I couldn't be happier for that. People ask me why I don't do WNGs when they see the cute spirals from wetting my hair.
It's simply because I know what is "normal" for my hair and WNG isn't it. Why would I do WNGs if I'd only end up dealing with hours of detangling and single strand knots later? Just to pull off a style that isn't "normal" to me? A style that doesn't even look right from afar? A WNG looks like uncombed hair on me, which I find not cute at all:
I'd rather have a nicely combed out puff coz that looks good on my hair IMO:
When you know your hair so well that no one can tell you what is good for your hair and be surer about it than you, and so that you're not fighting it, but just seem to have this wonderful marriage with it where you just get it, then you will be truly happy with it.