TWIGS: reflections on locking my hair

Since cutting off my permed hair a few years ago I rarely take hair advice from my mother. She’s the one who brags about having never worn her hair natural, let alone in the style of an afro. She recounts this bit of information to me smugly, as though this fact is an indicator of her high standards of social respectability and class. This used to upset me until I realized that for many women in my mother’s generation, politics of social respectability, the body, and class are all tangled up in their ideas about hair. When I came home for the holidays with a short afro, one of the first questions my mother asked me was, “Will you promise to grow your hair back for your wedding?” Never mind that I was single and not even dating anyone at the time.
These days my mother has given up on any hope that she will ever see her daughter with a perm again. But that never stopped her attempts to convince me to grow more hair on my head. And I continued to refuse her pleas…that is, up until 6 months ago when I started getting restless with my ‘fro and began thinking about growing my hair out. It was then that I thought about a comment my mother made after she saw one of my sistafriend’s locs. Unable to recall the proper name of the gorgeous “ropes” of knitted hair that hung from my friend’s head, my mother said to me, “You should grow you some twigs like your friend.” Though my feminist-black-consciousness-higher-educated self wanted to cringe, I couldn’t help but laugh out loud at her use of the word “twigs.” After all, my friend is quite tall, very stately and has an aura of “deeply rooted-ness.” Kinda like a tree.
I always knew that I would eventually lock my hair but somehow my mother’s statement sealed the deal. So hear I am, finally taking my mother’s hair advice: like a tree, I’m growing some twigs.
Truth be told, I’ve always been fascinated with locs. Even when I had a perm I often had to resist the urge to stare at friends and total strangers who had them. But after starting the process of growing my own, my fascination soon abated. Locking is not so much a pesky hassle as it is a test of my patience and control, not to mention a quest into redefining my ideas about beauty and what’s attractive. Anyone who has ever gone through the beginning stages of locking with short hair will tell you: it is a TASK of sheer mind and will to convince yourself that it’s still possible to get ya sexy on when you have hair that looks like small worms standing straight up on top of your head.
I had plenty of exercises in deconstructing (western) norms of beauty when I went from wearing long permed hair to a short natural. But locking has presented even more of a challenge. Yes, it’s still been about deconstructing beauty norms, but locking has also been about trust. My close friends can attest that I was faithful, borderline obsessive, about getting my hair lined EVERY week when I had a short ‘fro. Not so with locs! I couldn’t shape them or neatly prune them…especially in the beginning stages. I’ve just had to trust my hair and whichever way it chooses to grow and knit itself together. Sometimes I take a look in the mirror and want to take a razor to my head and be done with it. And then there are the mornings when I wake up, slap on a favorite pair of earrings and walk out of the house looking FIERCE.

It dawns on me now that I’m locking my hair at a time in my life that is in itself filled with uncertainty, possibility and frustration. I find myself not only having to redefine and deconstruct my ideas about my self worth, but now, more than ever, I’m having to trust myself. Trust that though a lot about my life and sense of direction is vague and an utter mess, I will eventually figure some things out. And hopefully I’ll grow comfortable with the ambiguity of the things that I don’t.
Yeah, I’m like a tree alright. I’m sinking my roots into who I am authentically and trusting that my twigs and branches will come along just fine.
December 5, 2007 at 2:06 pm
Thanks for sharing your journey and if that is a pic of you, your locs are beautiful.
December 16, 2007 at 7:25 am
thanks, maturenatural! and no, that pic is not of me. however the woman’s hair in the pic looks a lot like mine did in the earlier stages of my locking process.
August 3, 2008 at 5:24 am
Like your reflections on locking your hair. I too am a black-conscious highly educated woman. I wear my hear in a short afro for 5 years now. It started at a time when I was studying in the UK for my masters and wanted to be strong in my ‘blackness’ and as a woman in a new city. It was natural at the time, but I was not sure what to do with it. I wanted locks but the process to me would be too long. I certainly didn’t want to perm it. Then one day -like intuition, I did it -cut my hair and peirced my ears the same day. It has been a signature hair-do for me-love myself and the confidence it portrays. Now and again I spruce it up with some colour but it remains short.
October 11, 2008 at 10:42 pm
I am a white mother of two black children and three white children. Coming from a white background, and a generation that is generally much more accepting of diversity I have never known the stigmas associated with ethnic hair. So it has been somewhat of an interesting journey for me to read, listen to, and come to understand this realm of which I used to have nothing to do with, but now do. I see a black woman with short cropped hair, or locks, or a fro and I feel a bit jealous that they get to wear these cute do’s. Strangely, I see them as classy, hip, and stylish. I have no preconceived idea’s about what is “beautiful” on a black person and what is not. I was not raised in the era when the western definition of beauty was pushed. I’ve also grown up in Utah, where for the most part, people have no conception of black hair care do’s and don’ts because, frankly, they don’t know many black people. That can be a good and a bad thing. I came across your site while looking for pics of locks. I have toyed with the idea of locking my daughters hair, but not having any exposure to how that will be (care, maintenance, look, etc.) I decided to either wait until she’s older and see if she wants to do it, or to try them on my son, and see how we like them. That way, if it doesn’t work out, we can just cut his hair. Then we will have some “experience” in the area of locks and can decide whether we’d want them on my daughter. Thank you so much for sharing your story. And I just have to say, go for it. Do what you want to do. You’re beautiful, and so is your hair.