I have never been to Brazil, but yesterday’s blog underscored the kinship that I feel with Brazilian women. Wait, let’s enlarge that: with women of African descent around the world. Actually, I feel a bond with all women who’ve felt that they somehow didn’t measure up. I think most of us at some point have looked in the mirror and been dissatisfied. When you have those experiences, do you share them with the women in your inner circle? Or, do you close the door, sigh at yourself in the mirror and privately make yourself “presentable”? Why aren’t we more open with each other about our beauty struggles? Are we embarrassed? Ashamed? Or, is it because we don’t want even our close friends to see or hear about our naps, dark roots, tangled ends? Would this be too big of a challenge to our public identity?
Second, the poem illustrates the resilience of natural hair because as potent as lye is, it is not as strong as natural hair which has to be “tamed” every six to eight weeks.
Finally, the poem connects using a relaxer to beauty standards that emanate from notions of White beauty (think blond hair, blue eyes and straight hair). I often wonder if women who are naturally blond and blue-eyed feel excluded from such discussions as this ones. Honestly, there are a whole host of challenges that arise from the pressure experienced when one is held up as a model of beauty. I would love to hear your thoughts on this.
by Sharon Harvey Rosenberg
Don't slap
My head
With that
White lye
I know the truth:
It's creamy crack
(my private addiction,
a six-week fix)
straightening my roots
with the cool press
of sodium hydroxide
It's a relaxer
leaving me
tense, my head
on fire
melting, melting
under chemical burns, plastering
my scalp with scabs
(my private track marks,
a six-week fix)
shedding and oozing.
Don't slap
My head
With that
White lye.
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