Understanding Natural Movement In Hair
01 THE NATURAL MOVEMENTIN HAIR

All hair has Natural Movement to it—cowlicks and whorls; it can hug the head naturally or stand out from the head naturally; it falls forward or kicks back; the neckline moves upward, or inward, or downward or to the side; the strands have natural bends or coils or kinks, etc. We have the movement on the head and from the head, and then the strands themselves can have movement or bends to them.
THE NATURAL MOVEMENT IN HAIR
SIDE NOTE:
I know some of you are thinking, “But, the natural movement in MY hair isn’t good and doesn’t look good,” and that might be true right this second, yet from my experience, most people who are unhappy with their natural curls or movement haven’t truly met their natural curls and movement—they have just met the sad, confused version of their natural hair. Most of the negative behaviors in our hair are signs that it needs something or needs us to interact with it differently. Once we learn how to give our hair what it needs to be healthy and encourage our hair to do its thing well, then it stops looking confused and tortured, and we begin to see its beauty.
When we work with what the hair wants to do and help it look great doing that, it lets the hair do the work and minimizes what we have to do to it. We don’t have to rely on styling techniques or products as much to force the hair. Working with our natural hair movement can create a strong base for having longevity between washes with minimal effort—refreshing is easy since we are just encouraging it to do what it already wants to do. It can help the changes in weather and humidity to not have a detrimental effect on how our hair looks.
When we allow the natural movement in the hair it stays healthier, because we are not having to put stress on it to force it to do something different than it wants to do. As we move away from forcing our hair, we find that the Curl Pattern can completely change (and get stronger) and it can find its curl groups (definition) easier. The confusion and stress are removed from both us and our hair.
The biggest difference when choosing to embrace the natural movement in our hair is that our interactions with our hair turn from negative interactions— forcing, tension, redirecting, taming, fighting; to positive interactions that connect us more with our hair—checking in, helping, and encouraging. It gives us a growing understanding and acceptance of our natural, unique expression of beauty. When our interactions are working with and encouraging the hair—reading what it needs and giving it to it—then we also get to see our hair respond by becoming happier and healthier. Cooperation is relieving and enjoyable for both you and your hair.

ANOTHER SIDE NOTE:
When voicing that I help people embrace the natural movement in their hair, I sometimes get met with the response, “So, you do dreadlocks.” Let’s address this train of thought. Living with, embracing, and encouraging our natural movement isn’t leaving the hair alone and unattended to fully do whatever it wants to do. Though I, personally, love the look of well-kept locs (and have had locs myself multiple times in my life), they are not what we are talking about when discussing embracing and allowing the natural movement in the hair. Locs are a style put into the hair that has a different routine, product needs, and upkeep than free-flowing curls and natural movement. As a Hair Professional, I don’t recommend wearing locs that have formed out of the neglect of your hair. It’s not healthy. Locs are a specialized style that needs the guidance of a specialist to be done well and keep the scalp and hair healthy.
