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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Aibu to abandon my beliefs to get ahead. Afro hair.

369 replies

ShortFro · 22/10/2018 14:00

Aibu to abandon my beliefs to get ahead. Afro hair.

NC

The majority of black women you see in the uk do not actually have their real hair on display. Often only other black women will be able to tell.

For many reasons (I’ll expand) but largely due to setting an example to my daughter, I’ve worn my hair in its natural state for the last few years.
Obviously I’m not Lupita the Oscar winner (!) but it looks something like this.

(Lupita pic)

I have noticed that I am treated differently with my hair like this. Often ignored/ followed in shops etc. Please don’t tell me I’m imagining this. There are probably millions of posts on the internet talking about this.

I hate being treated like this, told I look ‘unprofessional now’ etc. My hair is always clean & cut professionally - it’s just not processed in the way most people are used to.

Options.

  1. Keep it as it is, be often treated badly. Miss out on opportunities. Be true to myself.
  1. Wigs = conform to the ‘accepted’ standard. But they are itchy and hot plus it is mortifying if they come off.
  1. Weaves - this is what the majority do. This is expensive. To get it done professionally = £200 every 6 weeks. I can’t afford this without serious cuts to the budget elsewhere.

Plus: using human hair, I find the thought of having somebody’s hair in my head repulsive and skin crawling. On the ethical side, many women are exploited to get that hair.

There is synthetic hair but this often looks ‘wiggy’ and fake, like a barbies hair.

When doing weaves on a long term basis the hairline is often damaged.

Even if the photos of Naomi are doctored, I have seen in real life hundreds of women in salons with this problem. The ‘baby hair’ along the airline cannot support a weave, resulting in tension alopecia.

  1. Braids. You are facing the same hairline issues as with weaves. You are looking at £50 every 6 weeks plus around 6 hours. In addition I find that they look TO ME silly and overly fussy.
  1. Relaxer. This is a process where you take the contents of a box that says ‘caution, use gloves, do not allow to touch skin’ and put that on your head. You can do it yourself like with hair dye or pay around £200 every 6 weeks for professional maintenance. That looks like this

Also, make sure you never get rained on or sweat or it will become Afroish.

  1. Long natural hair straightened with straightners... hours and hours of work weekly plus any time it happens to get damp...

What the fuck do I do?

Aibu to abandon my beliefs to get ahead. Afro hair.
Aibu to abandon my beliefs to get ahead. Afro hair.
Aibu to abandon my beliefs to get ahead. Afro hair.
OP posts:
Thread gallery
15
Mummyoflittledragon · 22/10/2018 17:15

Noviceoftheweek
I’m a disabled woman. I am very ill and spend much of my life bedridden. Of course I can only begin to imagine how it is to be black or the complication of Afro hair. However to say I can’t empathise is strange. I can empathise even if I don’t fully understand how it may feel in the same way that able bodied people cannot fully understand how it is to be me / disabled. Empathetic people can still empathise.

anniehm · 22/10/2018 17:47

Natural! I love Afro hair, why on earth would it be discriminatory? I refuse to dye my hair so my (European) hair has grey streaks - tough on anyone who thinks it's wrong. Chemicals are all wrong

teaandtoast · 22/10/2018 18:00

I'd stay true to yourself. Easy for me to say, of course. It's horrific that women are damaging their hairline.

ChocBix · 22/10/2018 18:18

I bet your natural hair is gorgeous. 

AngelsSins · 22/10/2018 18:23

God sake, how depressing that this is a problem in 2018, but I’m also not surprised.

I can empathise, I think women in general often have to eat shit (sorry for the phrase!) to get somewhere in this world, but of course, being white, I can’t claim to understand the ins and outs. Personally I think it looks beautiful too, but that’s irrelevant, hopefully this thread at least shows that not everyone is judging you badly for having Afro hair.

I would love to say you should do you and be proud, but that’s easy for me to say. I therefore hate to suggest this, because you shouldn’t have to, but could you get a wig to wear on the days that you just don’t want to deal with the worlds judgements?

SoxonFeet · 22/10/2018 18:26

I think natural Afro hair is beautiful and I think you’re doing a wonderful thing by showing your daughters how lovely it is.

I think it’s horrendous that people treat you differently due to how you wear your hair.

Softkitty2 · 22/10/2018 18:32

Is your natural hair long enough or can you grown it enough to be able to do a chignon/low bun. Its not exciting but will conform to what is perceived as 'professional'.

Or how about a twistout--all you need is time and a suitable product for definition.

straightjeans · 22/10/2018 18:51

I say afro. Even though I recently buzzed mine. It was so much work, my hair is extremely thick and I despised wash day. But you should try it at the very least.

anitagreen · 22/10/2018 19:01

I like natural hair my close friend used weave constantly and her natural hair is really bad now but she's in the cycle of constantly covering it with weave again so it's never getting to actually repair itself.
If I was you'd I'd stick with natural it's just shit that other people think the way they do. My husband is black and we was followed around a shop once I can't remember where it was and it was really embarrassing for him and made my blood boil. Doesn't happen often anymore but it has and that was enough for me.

Easylay · 22/10/2018 19:07

I'm a professional with natural hair. I often do a French plait or low bun. I'd never relax my hair.
My hair is quite long too

DunkandEggAgain · 22/10/2018 19:09

I love Afro hair, why on earth would it be discriminatory?
Racism, historic social conditioning, othering.

I hear you OP. I'm black with afro hair. I know what you mean - every word of it.

My own personal view and knee jerk reaction on your dilemma is you should pursue your natural hair. Can you rhino skin the snotty comments, the bad attitudes from ignoramus individuals, the prejudice actions of morons though? Will the enevitable weekly shit you'd receive from wearing your natural hair bring down your mental well being? If you know you can ride it out, then wear your hair as it grows from your head. Our hair IS beautiful. Alot of people just haven't cottoned onto the fact yet.

HermioneWeasley · 22/10/2018 19:19

I remember seeing Michelle Obama with her natural hair a few months after Barack left office. I was shocked at my own naivety that I hadn’t realised she’d styled her hair all those years to conform and be more acceptable.

I’m so sorry Shortfro. As other have said, I don’t think there’s anything “unprofessional” about your style, or almost any styles (maybe obscenities shaved into your hair?). It’s incredibly sad that in this day and age it’s even an issue. Anyone telling you your style is unprofessional is racist and I’d complain.

Faultymain5 · 22/10/2018 19:25

Right on @DunkandEggAgain

legwarmers · 22/10/2018 19:27

I have sister lox and it's the best decision i made. I am in London and It is not as expensive as you quote but agree it is expensive to start and maintenance is about £70 every 2 months- - I love this style and wished I had done it years ago - I am now in my 5th year and can style as I like. If ever I cut them off - then it will be for a low maintenance short Afro 

RoboJesus · 22/10/2018 19:30

Just tie it up for work, it isn't professional to have it down regardless, and no one is treating you differently because of your hair is down you just feel different. Just don't make a thing where there isn't one

Dickybow321 · 22/10/2018 19:36

*RoboJesus

Just tie it up for work, it isn't professional to have it down regardless, and no one is treating you differently because of your hair is down you just feel different. Just don't make a thing where there isn't one*

Your statement shows you know bugger all and shouldn't be commenting. Afro hair doesn't grow down so shows how much you know.

ginghamstarfish · 22/10/2018 19:36

Sorry to hear people are behaving badly towards you OP. I recently watched a film on Netflix about this topic - 'Nappily ever after' - the title is a bit crap but it was about a gorgeous young black woman who let her straightened hair go back to its natural state, and the reactions of those around her. I'm white, with the straightest straight hair possible (which I don't like!) and found it really interesting - and a bit sad that some women seem to have that pressure on them to look a certain way.

RomanyRoots · 22/10/2018 19:37

I too think natural afro hair looks lovely.
Mine is very curly for a white british person and I've been told to smarten up in the past. I too always kept mine in a good style, neat and tidy.

People need to be proud of their locks, straightened hair is so boring anyway, everybody has it straight.

You are a great role model to your daughters, please don't be dictated to.

RoboJesus · 22/10/2018 19:38

Dickybow321 ... "Down" is just the opposite to up. We don't change our words based on the upness of the down hair 😂

DunkandEggAgain · 22/10/2018 19:41

Afro hair grows UP and OUT, you uneducated twerp. RoboJesus - one of the ignoramus I referenced not even an hour after my post Grin

mmgirish · 22/10/2018 19:44

Who said your hair looks unprofessional? I think natural hair is lovely. The other styles are lovely too but very expensive and time consuming.

RoboJesus · 22/10/2018 19:46

Oh Christ you can't be that stupid

KennDodd · 22/10/2018 19:46

Do black men have this problem? I don't just mean with discrimination, does their hair also take loads of maintenance? I can't imagine they do in which case the problem is sexism as much as racism.

RomanyRoots · 22/10/2018 19:47

I saw this the other day, will explain some things about afro hair.
As I say mine is very curly, but not like this. Mine is 4 inches longer straight than curly.

MNMH · 22/10/2018 19:49

RoboJesus

You have no idea what you're talking about, so how would you know what is and isn't professsional? With such ignorant statements, you are the last person to be calling people stupid.