This sums up my feelings *exactly*.
I know there are plenty that say it doesn't take them much time to do thier hair.. but i'm soo used to relaxed hair and the manageability of it. For instance, every morning, i could just slap my hair back into a ponytail or pin it up and keep it moving.. I can't do that with natural hair.
This sums up my feelings *exactly*.
I know there are plenty that say it doesn't take them much time to do thier hair.. but i'm soo used to relaxed hair and the manageability of it. For instance, every morning, i could just slap my hair back into a ponytail or pin it up and keep it moving.. I can't do that with natural hair.
I only had a perm for a few years, so I knew what my natural hair was when I started wearing it nappy (for me this is when I count myself as being "natural" - I burned for a long time). I actually thought 95% of black people had my hair type . So I thought that while I didn't have a coveted texture, that it was pretty standard and I didn't think it was "bad" so much as just really common so no reason that should discourage me.
The followup question I wonder about is, for people who went back to relaxing, if they didn't know their texture before they went natural, if their texture influenced their decision to return to relaxing.
I sure am not about to beat down on someone though who, in part, decided to not perm again because they had curls and appreciate the honesty, in fact.
Looks like you have type 3 hair. Although, I haven't mastered the ponytail yet, I can go days without touching my hair. That's so nice when I'm in a hurry.It takes me 2 minutes to slap my hair in a ponytail each morning. I spritz it with water, put in some leave in conditioner, some oil and decide if I want it on the top, in the back, the bottom or on the side and how loose I want it. Then I put it up. 2 minutes. I don't comb or brush it and I go on about my business.
It takes me 2 minutes to slap my hair in a ponytail each morning. I spritz it with water, put in some leave in conditioner, some oil and decide if I want it on the top, in the back, the bottom or on the side and how loose I want it. Then I put it up. 2 minutes. I don't comb or brush it and I go on about my business.
It takes me 2 minutes to slap my hair in a ponytail each morning. I spritz it with water, put in some leave in conditioner, some oil and decide if I want it on the top, in the back, the bottom or on the side and how loose I want it. Then I put it up. 2 minutes. I don't comb or brush it and I go on about my business.
I didn't know what my curl pattern looked like--I had no memory of it, since I'd been relaxed for over 20 years and pressed 10 years before that.
I went natural primarily because I was tired of going to the shop and getting retouches. I figured that I might have some type of curl on my head, but wasn't sure, because I was more focused on just going natural. I could never have guessed that my hair would look like it does.
When deciding to go natural or transition out of a relaxer, how much of an influence did your curl/wave pattern or lack thereof play in your decision? If you have a defined pattern does that make you any more likely to want to transition/be natural? Or does the natural pattern of your hair have no bearings on your decision?