A response to Curly Nikki’s Food for thought

mixed race mother and daughter
Straight Hair.

I’m am one of many people who probably read this post on curlynikki last week.

Right now it’s closing in on mother’s day in the UK and this post makes for some uneasy feelings for me.
I think when you add the element of being mixed race to this idea of “straight hair shame”, particularily if it’s your mother who is white, it gets even more complicated. Growing up, little girls want to be like their mothers. Imitate them. Dress like them. Look like them. I did too. I tried on my mother’s bright pink lipstick, her dresses, her high heeled shoes. And I tried to make my hair like hers. Of course I did, she’s my mom.

Yet at the same time, you have this other argument, from the other half of you, pointing out that straightening your hair is psychological self denial of who you are.

And yet part of who I am is my mother.

I’m not sure how to bridge this kind of divide. I’m not even sure if anyone else see it this way.

What I do know is right now I don’t want straight hair. I haven’t wanted straight hair for a really long time now. Even when I had extension, they were curls. I just never seemed to believe that what I wanted would just grow out of my head, without changing it with chemicals or heat. I don’t know where that belief came from. Certainly not my mother. She always wanted me to leave my hair the way it is. Many commenter on the CN post mention how straightening our hair is a reaction to pressure from white culture in order to “fit in”. In my personal experience, I’ve never met a white person who required me to “assimilate” myself. So where does this ideology come from?

For me this journey is about discovering my hair and, to be honest, I am amazed at the flexibility it has. Surprisingly, more flexibilty than my mother ever had.




What I said…

Beauty Supply

I wanted to address something that I said a few days ago. In my Lustrasilk post I asked if anyone else hates going into the ethnic beauty supply stores, or if it was just me.

I received a pretty vile comment in response, which I refuse to post. A reader called me the most racist name I have been called since being on the playground; the short form for a raccoon which I think means a “sellout” or “race traitor” when used by another person of color. According to the reader, I prefer to go to Sally’s or Boots rather than a Black beauty supply store because I am “c**n”. The comment was very hurtful and has been preying on my mind for days. Such comments take the fun out of going natural and writing this blog. Since I started this journey, I have felt truly embraced in a community of women who have had similar experiences to me and have felt similar pain and frustration to my own. When I read this comment I suddenly felt utterly alone.

My whole life I have felt alone when it came to things like hair, makeup, race and what it means to be “of color”. After stumbling onto this community of curly, kinky women it was like a light being suddenly switched on. Returning to that feeling of solitude is so much worse than never having been embraced at all.

I know it was just one person, and their comment points more to their issues than my own, but I still wanted to address the issues that urged them to write in the first place. There are a couple reasons why I feel the way I feel about beauty supply stores and after much thought, and asking other bloggers for guidance, I thought I would list the reasons for my feelings.

1. Nearly every product in the black beauty supply store screams ‘there is something wrong with me’. Your hair is too kinky!; here, a relaxer to make it straight; Oh, relaxer didn’t work? Here is some silky straight Indian hair to sew onto your head to cover up your own; Your skin is too dark! Here is some bleaching cream at £30 a pop to lighten it up. Shelves and shelves of products telling me I need to change.

2. Every single beauty supply store that is “near” me is owned by men. Asian Men. And while I appreciate that Black beauty is big business, and respect them for trying to get their piece of the pie, the last time I checked Asian men (and women) have straight hair. So, if I have a question about any of the products, and believe me, I have many questions, they not only don’t have the answers, but also cannot begin to understand. Because, they don’t use the products. The man behind the counter has no idea what it feels like to have a relaxer burn his scalp or a hot comb burn his ear, or how it feels to watch helplessly as his hair breaks off in clumps as a result of that relaxer or what it’s like to have his hair braided so tight that it gives him a headache for days, or what it’s like to sit for hours while having hair glued or sewn to his head.

3. I deserve better than this. A trip to the beauty aisle should inspire and excite. I should feel like I’m pampering and treating myself. Most of the products in these stores were created to change me. Which is not a treat. It’s not inspiring nor exciting. It’s depressing. It makes me feel like I need to wash the shame off me when I leave. Yes, the products have smiling black faces on the packaging. Yes, they are marketed exclusively to girls that look like me. That doesn’t mean I have to like them.

And that doesn’t mean I’m “denying my color”. I’m mixed race whether I shop there or not.

Now, you may disagree with this. You may walk into a shop and see the rows of hair, bleach creams and relaxers and see numerous possibilities and styles. You may use these products and feel beautiful when doing so. You may be lucky enough to live near a shop that is black owned and has knowledgeable staff behind the counter. Good for you. But, I do not.

I do feel beautiful, inspired and encouraged by ‘the possibilities’ whenever I buy products from someone like Anita Grant. I want to support women of color trying to make it in this industry and buy products that enhance my God-given beauty. I want to be the best I can be without changing me as I am.

I also want this blog to be a place of positivity. I understand there may be times when you do not agree with something I say or do and that you may want to express it. Please do. That’s what makes this form of communication so great. However, in the future I will not address racist or colorist comments. Such comments spoil the process of documenting my journey.




Taking a few classes…

Mixes of homemade products

I thought I mentioned this before but going over my posts I see that I haven’t. I’ve really gotten into this hair thing so I decided a few weeks ago to look into some classes in product making. Now these are not chemistry classes, (I’m not becoming scientist, just classes on product mixing and learning about ingredients) still, I think it’s a good starting place to learn more about what I put in my hair. My first class is on Monday so I’ll be posting what I learn from that day forward. If you’re interested…

Stay Curly!




My story of transition on CurlyNikki.com

Afro Attitude by tilô_ô
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If you haven’t check out Curly Nikki’s awesome blog yet – you are missing out. CurlyNikki is a total Hair Idol!!

Nikki featured my story: check out my answers to her natural hair journey questions here




Let me introduce myself…

I was born in London, Ontario, Canada, a product of a interracial relationship. My mother, from Ireland had smoke during her pregnancy- it was the 70s, and as a result I was born under weight. So it was in the hospital that I had my first traumatic hair experience when only a few days old. Born with black curly hair, the doctors had to shave the sides of my head to reveal the veins in my temples. They were the only veins strong enough to insert feeding tubes. I was to small to leave the incubator.

Baby Cherry Lola

One year later my father, from Malawi, Africa, had to return to his birth country after his student visa ran out. I stayed with my mom and it was the two of us for a while, until my mom meet and married a great man, whom I call dad. His family lineage is from Malta, so my sister’s was too when she was born a year later. My hair as a child was generally in a little fro with bows in it or in two little pigtail puffs and was dry as a desert. My mother never knew what to do with my hair and I think she was afraid to ask. I can’t remember there being anyone around to ask anyways. My childhood was good, fun and a pretty much carefree but as adolescence approached things changed. I became aware of the fact that I didn’t look like the rest of my family around 9 when in the school yard a fellow classmate ask why I was brown when the rest of my family was white. I responded with such innocence. “I guess it just happens that way”

Cherry Lola and sister

Hair issues and hair problems inevitably followed. I was envious of my sister’s long flowing Mediterranean locks. So at 10, I went in for my first relaxer. I still remember it burning my scalp. I remember the stylist asking if it was burning and my response being “it’s okay” with tears in my eyes. Partly pretending, so I wouldn’t offend the stylist-part of me thought something was wrong. But part of me thought that the more it burns the straighter it would be. I returned the school and there was a fuss between the two grade 6 classes that everyone came out of their classrooms to see me when someone shouted “her hair is straight!” But of course relaxed hair doesn’t look like the pictures of the girls in the magazines, so disappointment unavoidably followed.

The products I used to maintain my pre-teen relaxed hair were so toxic that they made my skin breakout in huge purple blemishes along the hair line. They were so terrible that even the dermatologist suggested I try another hairstyle. At 11, I decided I wanted to have curly hair like a blond model in a magazine and so I head to the salon alone, picture in hand determined to get what I wanted. The stylist explained to me that I couldn’t have my hair like the model, but if I wanted to be curly I had to start all over again. I smiled and said okay- not fully understanding what she meant and still thinking that if it was even a little like the picture I would be happy. She sat me in a chair near the wash basins, no mirror in sight, and fussed with my head and then shampooed and condition. Then she walked me over to a styling chair . The reflection that greeted me was shocking. She had cut ALL of my hair off. It was within an inch of my skull. I didn’t understand. No one explained that this was what I had to do. I ran from the store, took the bus home and cried all the way.

My hair grew back pretty fast so by 13 it was around shoulder length and relaxed again. I had no idea how to maintain it. I was very athletic, basketball, volleyball, track and as a result of all the sport my hair was fuzzy and just swept back. The first year of high school I discover the curling iron. My signature style for that whole year was to pull back my hair in a bun except for two tendrils at the front which I curled and hairsprayed into ringlets every morning. I still wasn’t happy. TLC had come out with Crazy Sexy Cool and T-Boz made me green with envy with her straight platinum blond uber cool cut. I couldn’t look at Chilli without wanting her ultra long black hair. I feared my hair looked like Left Eyes. Mary J, Eve, Faith Evans and all the video girls plagued me until I realized something- yes a little late. It wasn’t their hair! It was a weave! But this time my mother put her foot down.

And then I saw Poetic Justice. Janet Jackson and Her Braids. It was like a revelation. I watch the film and the next day I was at the salon. I had a sore bottom after 8 hours of sitting, asthmatic lungs from breathing in the smoke from burning the ends, and slightly blacken fingers from rolling the melted yaki hair between my fingers to close the braids. But I had what I had wanted for so long. Hair down my back. Those first braids-oh how I swung them!

Cherry Lola Braids

It was a braided life high school was, almost exclusively, except for a dalliance with a curly weave in 11th grade. I wore that so long that my father (who never said a word about my hair) had to say- “your hair smells kinda funny”. Needless to say I didn’t do that again. Braids were the thing until I moved to Toronto after graduation and discovered for the first time in my life: A Good Salon. One that KNEW ABOUT BLACK HAIR. That explained that relaxers should be put on the scalp. that you should only do a little at time. You should never relax the hair twice. Etcetera . I found them online and their site was detailed with information. I book an appointment and enter the days of texturised hair.

(I will say here that if you are to use a relaxer- which is totally up to you, then google Jazma Hair salon and learn a little something about relaxers. No lye is actually no good.)

I came home that evening with my hair curly. I stood out on my balcony and felt the wind blow my hair around. I wore a wash and go for about a 3 months and then went back in for a touch up. This time they styled it straight. With a hot stove and a curling rod. I was shocked. It moved. I could run my fingers through it. It was shiny. I was ecstatic. Until the next day when I step out of the shower and although I hadn’t washed it the steam had made it fuzzy again. I thought “this sucks”. But I knew what I needed. I needed a hot stove at home! Off to the Black Hair Supply store, 200 bucks later, I had my very own hot stove and 2 different sized barrels. Plugged it in, heated it up, separated a piece of hair and immediately burnt off a large piece of my bangs.

I got better at it, but it took so long that most days I just wore my hair curly. I put blond streaks into it myself, using Jolen because I thought that was gentler. I rocked a semi fro until I went to school out West in Vancouver. Then I found a cheap salon and had girl straighten my hair once a week. I lost the curly pattern almost entirely because of the heat damage. I held out on texturiser touch ups for as long as I could. I used a store bought texturiser that i applied myself around the hair line and waited until I went home to visit the folks to have the rest of my head done. At least- I did for the first year. Then came I time where I couldn’t wait any longer and head to the cheap salon explained what she had to do and trusted she understood.

She didn’t. I am still not sure what happened. All I know is that my hair starting breaking off in huge clumps. Devastated, DEVASTATED I tell you. I swore off salons forever and tried to make do with what was left. Then I put braids in again – but they didn’t look stylish to me anymore. Then one day a girl with amazing looking hair walk into the store where I was working. I knew it wasn’t her real hair but I couldn’t tell what it was. So I asked her. “Interlocking” she said. She gave me the name of the stylist. I called her the next day.

6 years I wore this style. With hair that was black, brown, I even mixed it up with a little blond for a while but this time no one, absolutely NO ONE saw me with out the weave. I graduated with this hair, started my first job with this hair. Moved to other countries and still I had this fake hair. I was constantly told I had beautiful hair. People believed it was mine. I let them think it was. It was easier. But inside I felt like a fraud.

Blonde Interlocking

Black Interlocking

I live in London England now. I live with my incredibly supportive and loving partner. We live on an adorable street right, dead centre of the city. He was the first to bring up my hair when one day I took out the extensions preparing to get them done again the next day. He put his hands to my hair and said “I love your real hair. You should wear it like this.” I laughed because I thought he was kidding. But a seed was planted. Later that same year an apartment on my road came up for rent. A friend at work was looking for a place with her boyfriend and I knew she would love it. But I hesitated to tell her. Why? Because I thought to myself “What if she sees me heading to the salon without the extensions”
I was scared for her to see my real hair.

Then I thought : Something’s Wrong Here.

And there was. There is something very wrong with the idea that I should be ashamed of my hair.

So I started to contemplate taking out the extension. I started wondering why I felt the need to put them in. I thought about going back to the salon in Toronto on my next visit home. I though I would try to find a similar salon here in London. I thought to look on the web. I googled black hair London. And the search returned a video.

That was the beginning of a obsession with natural hair vids and journeys. I could feel the courage growing with every story, every blog every picture of natural hair. I vowed that in the new year I would discover what was underneath all this plastic on my head. Find out what the heck I’ve been hiding all these years.

And I did.

Which brings me here. To this blog. I made my first scissor cut into the extensions on youtube. Check out my first post on this blog if you missed it.

I hope this will be a stepping stone, a ripple in this revolution. This revelation. I hope my stories, postings, pics help you to go natural too.

Because you know what else I’ve discovered?

There is nothing to be ashamed of.

what is your hair story?

Just after extensions

Just After Taking out the extentsions

Cherry Lola after cut

After cutting about 4 inches off
After cut




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About

  • Cherry Lola went Natural Jan 2 2009. She has lived in London England since 2006, but is a Canadian through and through. Follow the journey or better yet share your story with her by emailing hi@cherrylola.com

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