How to: "My Save An Entire Curl" Process
(I love creating different processes and process titles!)
In this first photo, I have just taken out my braid. My hair has been braided the entire week. As much as I love hair, I dislike doing my own hair daily, except when I am on vacation! So as expected, the hair is in three (3) somewhat distinct sections.
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Here's another view and you can see the ends and the three sections. Those Cobra Curls may be cute but they
EAT UP my length because they tangle badly.
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Now, here I'm pulling the hair up to show you how this section of hair is in the form of a curl. Before, I would just smooth this into the section and call it a day. Nope! Can't do that. This curl will continue to twist around itself, within my braid. Then, it will flatten, tangle and get matted.
Prior to my "AHA!" I thought finger detangling was good enough. It is not. I have to intentionally remove the hair and deconstruct that curl until it is broken down and the three distinct sections have been broken down as well.
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Here, I am trying to give a closer view of the hair sectioned out in one of three sections, having just been unbraided.
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Here's one more view of that innocuous looking curl that is DEADLY for trying to gain length. This is a slightly larger version of the 'Entire Whole Curls' that I can lose. It is clear [
NOW !] that I must de-section and break down this curl before re-doing my hair. Otherwise, it
stays like this and it gets tangled near the root and the Entire Curl breaks off!
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Now, I've gone in and de-sectioned the pieces on dry hair. I don't even consider this detangling because I used to do that to the tune of a BIG FAT FAILURE. I have to make
sure every single curl or section is separated and that there are NO sectioned off curls.
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Next, I wet my hair from root to tip with warm water. It tries to go into those separate sections and clump together. Clumping hair is gorgeous, especially for women who do braid outs and twist outs. BUT clumped hair within a braid, for a week, is an invitation to lose an entire, whole curl. No thank you!
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Here, I saturate the hair with oil. I used some Moringa oil and Castor oil, from root to tip. You can see that my hair is still trying to clump. The saving grace is that the oil will help my hair to slide and separate easier. Without the oil, it could get dry and matted. Dry, matted hair is a horrible combination for hair,
unless it is your goal, as in the case of developing beautiful dreadlocks.
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Once the hair is oiled I put it in a bantu knot. I do this the day before I want to re-braid my hair. I will leave these bantu knots in all day and go to sleep in them.
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Tomorrow, I will undo these bantu knots. I will re-wet the hair, add Scurl and slather and bathe my hair in Shea butter. Then, I will re-braid and put it in a baggie. Except for wetting and making my hair neat each morning, I will not unbraid and do this until the next 7 days.
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Conclusion: I trade 26 hours over the year, to save 6 years of growth of a curl. I'll take it!
- It does take longer to do my hair. I would say it adds a minimum of about an extra 30 minutes per week.
- BUT, it takes me about 6 YEARS to get my curls/hair at the current length.
- 30 minutes, over a 52 week period is about 1,352 minutes. That's about 26 hours total. I can sacrifice approximately 1 day [ 26 hours] of time, over the course of the year, to save a curl that took me 6 years to grow. I think it is great investment of hair time.