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Each head of hair has beautiful things that it naturally does. When we work with and encourage the hair to do its natural movements well, then we end up with easier hair that looks great and gets healthier and happier over time—equaling less stress for us and less stress on the hair.

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HOW THINGS BEGAN

SIDE NOTE:

This isn’t even getting into the damage that has been done by mainstream salons not understanding or addressing the needs of curly hair. The traumatic salon experiences that people have suffered through; the segregation of salons; the messages sent that your hair isn’t “normal”—it needs a specialist; the destruction of hair from repeatedly forcing it to do things; feeling like you are on your own if you want to understand your natural hair; and Hair Professionals’ fear when a head of curls or coils walk through the door. How have we made it this far with this still being the reality for most people with natural movement in their hair? It needs to change! What we have been doing isn’t working—curls don’t fit in, even if we are trying to force them to. Let’s change it!

Throughout the ages and the world, we as people have grown hair (okay, not everyone, but this is a very general, summed-up telling of history). As people’s hair had some length to it, they were faced with wanting to keep it orderly, so they would put it into a style (braids, updos, etc.); or they would cover it up (scarves, bonnets, hats, sometimes even with fake hair (wigs)). We as people are good at getting creative with things—especially our hair.

 

The hair industry started from the approach of “how do we manipulate the hair into the style you want”—for the styles you couldn’t do at home, you would go to a hairstylist, who was better at it, to get your hair set into the style, and then return to reset the style or set in a new one. For a lot of people, this is still their exchange with their Hair Professional. Over the years we have developed and improved techniques, products, and tools to manipulate hair so that we could set hair into all kinds of styles.


Then hairstylists moved into focusing on cutting the hair into styles that make setting the style easier for people to do themselves (or upkeep at home)—thank you, Vidal Sassoon®. For training Hair Professionals, we came up with great steps to follow to do the cuts—“You want this style, then you follow these steps to get that outcome.” This made the knowledge easier to teach and quickly apply to the hair in the chair. The reality though (that most Hair Professionals realize as soon as they leave school, if not before) is that every head of hair is a different starting point, so those learned steps don’t have the same outcome for every head of hair. We’ve solved that by forcing all hair to the same starting point and then we manipulate it with products and tools to give us the desired results. It works ... kinda ... at least for hair that doesn’t have any strong desires (or movements) of its own. The challenge is that the more we have hair that strongly wants to do something different, the better we have to be at forcing it to do what we want. This might work fine for Hair Professionals, who love interacting with hair and spend most of our time doing it; yet building the skills to force hair to do what we want it to do doesn’t fit what everyone likes or wants to do with their time—and it turns their hair into a frustration. This approach has really marginalized and disregarded the needs of a lot of people for a long time.

The other solutions that have been implemented for hair that has a strong natural desire to move (and for some, even stand up from the head) can be just as harmful to the strands, Curl Pattern, and scalp over time as forcing it to be straight can. A lot of people have felt like their only option is to use styles that really contain or cover up the natural hair—hiding it and trying to “tame” it. This, again, sets people up to have a negative view of what their hair naturally wants to do. The truth is, that when hair is healthy and given what it needs to do its thing well (this site and the book, Understanding Natural Movement in Hair: Curls, Coils, Kinks, Waves, (& Straight Hair) will get into the details of this), it does beautiful and amazing things naturally.

We’re now at a time where the needs of curly hair are being given some attention. A lot of new discoveries have happened and a lot of new products created. There are a lot of groups getting it right for curls with certain combinations of elements and yet there isn’t a cohesive approach addressing the needs and understanding of all curls (and really all hair). The information out there has become a tangled mess. It continues to leave people frustrated with their hair as they attempt to figure it out on their own—my desire is to detangle that information so that people can understand and enjoy their hair, and Hair Professionals can be successful at working with the natural movement in hair.

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