September 8, 2010

My head is a quilt.

I saw a woman the other day who was so obviously brimming with positivity that the sun was leaking out of her pores. Beautiful skin, shiny hair, a smile that could make even Mel Gibson love Jews, she was pure radiance. I asked her secret.

“I am grateful for everything in my life,” she beamed.

Well, good for her.
Good for freakin’ her.

Since seeing the third world and meeting people who’ve never even heard of pizza (probably the biggest tragedy in poor countries), I’ve also been on a quest for gratitude. I wake up in the morning and listen to the birds and smile at all the things I’m lucky to have and know (friends, family, toast, a good brain, tea, pumpkin pie, a hot shower, etc.).

And then I look in the mirror.

I see stringy hair and boring. I know I’m not hideous. But it’s just how my brain works. When it comes to myself, I see the negative first. My mission for this year of being thirty is to fully and completely accept myself, mind and body. It’s so hard. Because part of being human is to be hard on ourselves. It’s how we get better.

We can deliver a heart-wrenching motivational speech that rivals that of MLK Jr. People will cry out from the audience. Old ladies will faint in their wheelchairs. The country will finally feel united. And we’ll get off stage and say, ‘It totally sucked. I messed up two words in the third paragraph.”

Our immediate focus is always on the negative. I can take anyone else’s situation and see the positive in it: You got pushed off a cliff by your fiance and broke your spine, but at least now you know he’s not right for you. But when it comes to myself, I’m too harsh. I’ll look in the mirror with gratitude, and my ego, Lawrence, will appear and tell me how my hair is too thin and my skin looks like that of a confused teenager. (Lawrence is a dick. You can read about him here). I’ve worked so hard this year to accept these two last parts of me. I’ve used affirmations. I’ve meditated. I’ve accepted my anxiety, my control issues, my man problems. But this whole hair and skin thing is a real pisser.

The tragedy of how unimportant my skin and hair are in the grand scheme of things is not lost on me. This is why it’s all so frustrating. There are people in the world who have never heard of PIZZA! There are Indians who are sleeping in train stations with flies all over their faces, and all they want is a pair of clean underwear and a sip of clear water. And here I am bitching that none of the expensive cleansers in my medicine cabinet has made me beautiful like promised. Gross. I want to punch myself. But that would just be anger towards myself for not accepting myself, and that would mean even less self-acceptance.

My friend Katie came over the other day, and we were talking about ourselves, like prima donna narcissists often do.
“I hate my hair. It’s too thin.” she said.
“I hate my hair. It’s too short.” I said.
“Your hair’s great,” I said.
“You hair’s great,” she said.

Then it donned on us. We’ve known each other for five years, and each time we see each other, the conversation is the same (after the very important social commentary about globalization and other such paramount themes). We’ve always hated our hair. Even after accepting so many other parts of our selves, we can’t get over our hair.

“Let’s finally do something about it,” I said.
“Extensions,” she said.

I am not one to get fake things. I had fake nails throughout high school. I have banished such fakeries. Yet we did research. We made appointments. We sat through pain. We now have hair.

We have hair! We have hair that’s long and silky. And we can look in the mirror and love it. But it’s fake! And it’s sewn into our scalps.
That’s right. We can only look in the mirror and love ourselves now that we have another person’s dead hair painfully sewn onto our heads. How odd is that? Humans are so strange.

After looking at all the options, we decided that weaves were the way to go. It took us an entire Saturday in a no-frills hair specialty spot with the worst logo ever. Seriously. Why make a ‘before’ picture your logo? That’s like making an empty plate the logo for a restaurant. Or some really sweaty man the logo for an air conditioning company. Not smart. BUT… We don’t judge a hair place by the logo, so we walked in for a day of fun. It was seriously fun.


You know those stereotypical black barber shops where all the men sit around and talk about life? This was the female version filled with women getting weaves while watching ‘The Best Man’ and commenting about Morris Chestnut’s private life and Hugh Jackman’s abs. I felt very welcomed into the weave community. And what a community it is. Holy mackerel. The women told me how to spot a weave, and man alive, so many women have weaves! I have been comparing my shitty hair to the luscious locks of plenty of women for so long and it was all for naught because so many are fakes.

What exactly is a weave, you ask? Well, besides a shortcut to self-acceptance, it’s a bunch of human hair that’s been dyed to match yours. D’Lisa, the weave specialist who only books appointments through text messages, finds the perfect spot on your head for the weave. She marks it with a Sharpie and then twists your own real hair into a tiny braid. Once that’s finished, she takes a thick, curved needle and sews the hair onto that braid. Like she’s making a quilt. Like your head is a big fucking Afghan blanket. And then it’s done. Then you have long hair that you can love for at least 6 weeks.


It sounds great. There’s just one tiny drawback: you have hair sewn into your scalp! It feels like I’m wearing a bathing cap made for a 3-month-old. Sometimes I want to rip it out of my head, but I saw her sew that shit in there and I know I’d be pulling out scalp skin and possibly exposing brain matter. So I suck it up and leave it in. Just so I can have long hair.

Just so I can have long hair!

One day I will get to the point where I don’t need this hair, the point where I can look at bare me in the mirror and love everything about what I see, including every single one of my real and short split ends. It will be a glorious day and sunlight will shine from my pores. And then Lawrence will come around and say, “Man, you have a lot of pimples.”

I’m not only the president, I’m also a client!

{ 33 comments }

Rahul September 9, 2010 at 10:53 am

First comment! I remember those days.

I like your "before" hair even though you refused to show it to me. But I'm also a short hair enthusiast.

I will now think of every weave place employing Queen Latifah and saying things like "ooh child". And snapping. Lots of snapping.

Hollye Dexter September 9, 2010 at 11:00 am

oh lordy child.
news flash: your before picture looked beautiful.
you better get that Lawrence in check before you get to your forties, because then you will be pushing that boulder up an everlasting hill and you'll be very, very tired. And you might end up looking like Mickey Rourke.

Self acceptance is the lazy girls way to happiness.

Jimmy September 9, 2010 at 11:14 am

The problem is bad haircuts. Like mine right now. Bad haircuts can ruin your mojo.

Hipstercrite September 9, 2010 at 11:59 am

i like how "lawrence" is the male equivalent of "laurenne". why is he male?

Lindsay September 9, 2010 at 12:39 pm

This?

You got pushed off a cliff by your fiance and broke your spine, but at least now you know he's not right for you.

Love it.

laurenne September 9, 2010 at 12:58 pm

I actually think the before is not bad now that I put it up there. Man, this blog helps me in so many ways.

Rahul, I did say 'ooh child' several times during weavement.

Hollye! I'm not gonna look like Mickey Rourke! I stop at fake hair. No botox or surgery. SWEAR!

Jimmy – your hair is hot.

Hipster – i don't know! I really feel male sometimes. Not sex-change male but masculine. The long hair helps! ha.

Lindsay – hi! well, you'd at least know, right?

Povill September 9, 2010 at 1:40 pm

This was a great post.

Last line was perfect.

alonewithcats September 9, 2010 at 3:45 pm

Did anyone there say "OHNOSHEDIDNT?" If so, who was the she, and what did she do? I've always been curious.

I think you look lovely, before and after. And during. And yesterday. And tomorrow.

Also, I have a warning for Lawrence: "OHNOHEDIDNT."

Big Mark 243 September 9, 2010 at 4:03 pm

I understand how you may beat yourself up over your appearance. I have solved that by 'being what you tell me' when you see me. For me, it gives me more information about you, your assesment of me and my looks than I could ever tell you about me.

You are beautiful. And that is simply that with that.

Whenever I learn about someone having 'this or that' done to them, it really shines a spotlight on their character, becasue I need to find out what kind of human being I am trying to relate to. Not that there is anything wrong with getting tracks put in your head… black women have been doing it so long that it is ubiquitous that someone who has 'good hair' must have bought expensive stuff and see their beautician every six weeks on the dot!

I will prolly get to why your posts about your dad made me cry soon enough… maybe NPR weekend will lift my spirits enough to where I can make a coherent post about those emotions that came to boil on that day… it was my birthday when I read your posts and that played a factor, I am sure, in my reaction.

Be well!
L&R
Mark

Monica Prelle September 9, 2010 at 6:22 pm

I am pretty sure I remember you getting extensions in 1999. You had it braided with the extensions and your real hair stuck out of the braids where the extensions started…right?!

Vodka and Ground Beef September 9, 2010 at 11:01 pm

Where have you and your blog been all my life – I love it.

My favorite f'ing line (besides the honest, heartfelt one about pizza in third world countries):

"You got pushed off a cliff by your fiance and broke your spine, but at least now you know he's not right for you."

I feel we're kindred souls.

NeonRaine September 10, 2010 at 5:35 am

Oh I can totally relate to the skin thing (I find that only looking in the mirror as you're getting washed and avoiding all reflective surfaces helps one forget). The voice that says 'people have it worse than you, idiot' just doesn't help…

Sosidity September 10, 2010 at 10:09 am

How adventurous of you! Glad you were happy with the results, it could have been disasterous if you weren't. Good job D'Lisa! Black girls do the best weaves (and the most entertaining)! It is a way of life for us!

Sabrina September 11, 2010 at 7:25 am

Am I shallow if I say that I love it?? It looks so REAL!

If it makes you feel any better, here I am in India with the men in the train stations and the lack of pizza, and I keep thinking about how I can't wait to go on Weight Watchers when I get home cause I am TOO FAT!!

Sigh.

stopthemadness September 11, 2010 at 1:45 pm

fucking hilarious. i watched Good Hair the other week, and i kept thinking "why do some black ladies think inferior hair complexes are unique to them? white ladies got the complex too!"

my mom often complains that her hair is too thin. (come to think of it, she may have adopted a black child just so she could have some (my) black hair to play with. she wouldn't let me get a relaxer until i was 12!)

hell, my gay friend (who is so not black) told me he uses relaxer in his hair.

@rahul- how do you know about the snapping? seriously, how do you know?

i gotta go make a phone call… there's a mole…

Kelley September 13, 2010 at 8:16 pm

That is hilarious!!! First, I have always thought you were beautiful! You are so thin and your face is so pretty! What are you talking about, girlfriend? Second, I love the weave! It truly does look like your hair. You made me laugh about the weave feeling like a 3-month-old's bathing cap (or something like that). I think it is great that y'all did that. So much fun!

Cata September 14, 2010 at 8:20 am

You are movie star beautiful in ALL your pictures! Hilarious as always!

Hippest Snippets September 14, 2010 at 4:42 pm

We got a weave once but instead of regular hair we put in dreadlocks. It was during our reggae phase. It was also during our "not showering" phase.

Your blog is hilarious!

bernthis September 14, 2010 at 9:04 pm

yeah, I'm like Debbie Downer over here when it comes to me. my skin is what I hate so much, especially on my face. The wrinkles, the redness. I can't stand to look at it sometimes.

I think your hair looks AMAZING!BTW

free website April 16, 2011 at 1:47 pm

Hello there! Do you know if they make any plugins to help with Search Engine Optimization? I’m trying to get my blog to rank for some targeted keywords but I’m not seeing very good results. If you know of any please share. Thanks!

Free Xbox 360 April 16, 2011 at 2:05 pm

Please let me know if you’re looking for a author for your blog. You have some really good articles and I feel I would be a good asset. If you ever want to take some of the load off, I’d really like to write some articles for your blog in exchange for a link back to mine. Please shoot me an email if interested. Kudos!

Berna Gebhardt April 16, 2011 at 4:24 pm

Nice blog here! Also your site loads up fast! What host are you using? Can I get your affiliate link to your host? I wish my website loaded up as quickly as yours lol

Edward Kubilus April 16, 2011 at 6:06 pm

Howdy clever points.. now why did not i think of these? Off topic barely, is this page sample merely from an abnormal installation or else do you utilize a custom-made template. I take advantage of a webpage i’m in search of to enhance and properly the visuals is probably going one of the key issues to complete on my list.

Enoch Ferkel April 16, 2011 at 8:04 pm

Just killing some in between class time on Digg and I discovered your article . Not normally what I want to examine, but it surely was absolutely price my time. Thanks.

Pokerstars Marketing Code canada April 16, 2011 at 9:02 pm

Very nice post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted to say that I’ve really enjoyed surfing around your blog posts. After all I will be subscribing to your feed and I hope you write again very soon!

buy vigrx April 17, 2011 at 11:31 am

I must admit that this is one great insight. It surely gives a company the opportunity to get in on the ground floor and really take part in creating something special and tailored to their needs.

sizegenetics April 18, 2011 at 9:08 am

What youre saying is completely true. I know that everybody must say the same thing, but I just think that you put it in a way that everyone can understand. I also love the images you put in here. They fit so well with what youre trying to say. Im sure youll reach so many people with what youve got to say.

Conrad Kauffman April 18, 2011 at 9:29 am

My brother suggested I might like this website. He was totally right. This post truly made my day. You can not imagine just how much time I had spent for this info! Thanks!

Angele Paula April 18, 2011 at 1:45 pm

This site appears to get a large ammount of visitors. How do you get traffic to it? It gives a nice unique twist on things. I guess having something real or substantial to talk about is the most important thing.

william hill poker April 24, 2011 at 11:27 pm

Thanks so much with regard to giving me personally an update on this issue on your web site. Please understand that if a brand new post becomes available or in the event any adjustments occur on the current article, I would be thinking about reading a lot more and knowing how to make good usage of those strategies you write about. Thanks for your efforts and consideration of other men and women by making your blog available.

titan poker bonus code April 25, 2011 at 12:33 am

Excuse my stupidity, but I can’t for the life of me find your sites rss feeds. Can you tell me where it is? Thanks.

mariage April 25, 2011 at 2:23 am

I have a lot of admiration when I see content articles by other people who tend to be of an expert as compared to me on this topic. The audience might think it looks effortless, but there is so much going on behind the curtain. Your work is a result of study and knowledge from you and you were very good enough to share these with people like me. Thank you.

htc evo view 4g April 25, 2011 at 5:17 am

Just added this blog to my favorites. I enjoy reading your blogs and hope you keep them coming!

{ 3 trackbacks }

Previous post:

Next post: