Better Than Good Hair: The Curly Girl Guide to Healthy, Gorgeous Natural Hair!
By Nikki Walton and Ernessa T. Carter
3.5/5
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About this ebook
The fresh new handbook on how to achieve and maintain stylish natural hair, from the savviest and most revered expert on coils and curls
These days there's a revolution going on. Relaxers are out. Weaves are so yesterday. Tired of damage from expensive chemical treatments and artificial enhancers, women of color are going natural thanks to Nikki Walton of CurlyNikki.com, the natural hair blogger and online hair therapy expert.
In Better Than Good Hair, this gifted "curl whisperer" educates women on how to transition from relaxed to completely natural hair, with advice and styles for every length—from Fierce Braid-and-Curls to Fancy Faux Buns. She also counsels those considering the "big chop"—cutting it all off at once to sport a bold and beautiful "teeny weeny afro." Here, too, is essential guidance for parents of mixed-race children dealing with new and unfamiliar hair textures and styles.
Combining Walton's expansive knowledge with tips from other experts in the field, Better Than Good Hair includes:
- Product recommendations
- Home hair care recipes
- Advice for parents on how to manage their children's natural hair
- Tips for using henna on gray hair
- Guidance on dealing with detractors
- Step-by-step illustrated directions for nearly two dozen hairdos, from frohawks to twist-outs
Full of indispensable information, as empowering as it is accessible, and with a foreword by actress and comedian Kim Wayans, Better Than Good Hair is a must-have natural hair care bible that will help women of all ages and styles achieve their natural beauty.
Nikki Walton
Nikki Walton is a bestselling and NAACP Image Award-nominated author, TV personality, podcast host, and licensed psychotherapist. In 2008, she launched CurlyNikki.com, which became the #1 natural haircare and beauty blog in the world, and she is also the host of the daily spiritual podcast GoOD Mornings with CurlyNikki. As a leading expert in inner and outer beauty, Nikki has appeared on The Dr. Oz Show, The Today Show, The Steve Harvey Show, Nightline, The Tyra Banks Show, and Katie Couric, and her work has been featured in major publications including the New York Times, Forbes, USA Today, The Washington Post, The Guardian, Huffington Post, Ebony, InStyle, Essence, and Parents Magazine. Born in St. Louis, she now resides in Florida.
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Reviews for Better Than Good Hair
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Book preview
Better Than Good Hair - Nikki Walton
Prologue
Dear Curlfriends,
I often get stopped on the street by other black women. They tell me that they love my hair and want to know who does
it. It always gives me great pleasure to tell them that I do it myself. And it gives me even more pleasure to refer them to CurlyNikki.com to find out how they, too, can achieve fabulous, healthy, natural hair on their own.
But of course I didn’t come out of the womb with the magical ability to do my own hair, nor did I have a fairy hair godmother. I grew up in St. Louis, Missouri, and though I had amazing parents, I suffered through an awkward adolescence plagued with self-esteem issues tied to my not-so-hot hot-combed hair. Before I turned ten, my mother and grandmother took wonderful care of my hair by simply washing and conditioning it and keeping it in braids. It grew to waist length. But I wanted bone straight hair, and my parents had banned relaxers. So between the ages of ten and sixteen, I went to a salon every two weeks to have my long hair blown out and combed straight. However, my hair never looked the way I wanted it to. It would revert almost immediately and end up in a frizzy, greasy, poofy mess.
Finally, late in my junior year of high school, my younger sister and I began going to a different salon. This place had young stylists and brand-new-to-us technology called flat irons—no grease required. When my new beautician turned me to face the mirror, I felt like my hair had been transformed. Awkward old me had been replaced with a much better version of myself. My hair was silky and flowing in the wind, and nobody could tell me nothing. I went back to school with a new attitude, feeling pretty for the first time in my life.
I soon became addicted to getting my hair flat-ironed every two weeks. My beautician washed my hair with a very stringent, moisture-stripping shampoo every session and didn’t use a leave-in conditioner to give it that silky look. As a consequence, much to my confused dismay, my once healthy bra-strap-length hair began to disappear right before my eyes. As it turned out, my old system of sporadic press and curls with lots of lubrication was much better for my hair health than regular flat-iron sessions on product-free hair.
By the time I left for college at Truman State University (location: middle-of-nowhere, USA), my hair had broken off to a shoulder-length bob. But as long as it was bone straight, I didn’t care. I loved my silky hair, and I could not quit the flat iron. I might have kept going on like that until it was Halle Berry–short, except for two things.
First, like many black girls raised in the salon, I had never even washed my own hair. I discovered that I had no idea how to moisturize it or even how to deal with it between sporadic visits back home to St. Louis, over three hours away.
The other thing that happened is that I met a young man named Eugene during freshman orientation. It was love at first sight. Gene was smart, handsome, and sensitive. Most of all, he loved me despite the fact that my hair was turning into an absolute wreck.
But as it turned out, it was more than my hair that was turning into a wreck. Two years into our relationship, Gene sat me down and told me that my mood seemed to be directly correlated to the current condition of my hair, and he thought that was unhealthy. He suggested that I start doing my own hair and wearing it in its natural texture.
Here I was, a psych major receiving a hair intervention from my boyfriend. And the worst thing was that I knew he was right. It wasn’t healthy to obsess over my hair the way I did, to feel terrible when my hair didn’t look good. But in the words of R&B group TLC, I felt unpretty
when my hair wasn’t perfectly straight, and since it didn’t grow out of my scalp that way, I just couldn’t take his advice in full.
I met him halfway by purchasing my own Solia flat iron. But then, what was supposed to be me taking back my hair
became an even bigger obsession. I found myself hitting the flat iron once a week, sometimes more. Finally, with Gene’s continued encouragement, I started using the flat iron less and experimenting with natural styles more. By the end of my senior year, I had begun two-strand-twisting my hair, rocking twist-outs, and even wearing my hair in puffs. At first I felt very self-conscious about wearing my curls out in public. But as time went on, I actually began to prefer my hair in its natural state. I didn’t have to worry about Missouri’s notorious humidity, and natural styles were easy to do. Plus, my curly hair made me feel special, like I stood out in a crowd.
In 2005, Gene and I moved to North Carolina to attend graduate school at UNC Chapel Hill (Go Heels!) and Duke. That’s when I discovered NaturallyCurly.com, and my hair obsession switched from flat-ironing to learning how to achieve healthy, natural hair on my own. By late 2006, I had stopped flat-ironing regularly, and with the help of the women on NaturallyCurly.com’s hair forums, I nursed my damaged hair back to health.
Gene loved my natural hair. He proposed after we moved to North Carolina and actually requested that I wear my hair natural on our wedding day. I almost cried when he asked me that. He had been nothing but supportive, and truth be told, he is the reason I found the confidence to go natural. He made me look inside myself and see that the cause of my psychological distress was my irrational belief about how my hair should be. My hard-found self-awareness coupled with the education I’d received from other women inspired me to start CurlyNikki.com in 2008.
As of this writing, CurlyNikki.com is the most popular natural hair care blog in the world. We’re presenting this book to you as a compendium of the knowledge we’ve gained these last few years.
Now that I’ve told you my hair story, I’ll tell you what this book is not.
This book is not a political manifesto intent on shaming you into giving up your relaxer. We respect your hair decisions, and we support you in whatever path you choose to take with your own hair. If you want to keep your hair straight but are curious about wearing your hair natural, we’re here for you. If you haven’t decided whether to give up your relaxer, we’re here for you. We don’t even have one of those harsh relaxer vs. natural hair sections in this book. We only want to provide you with the information that you need to take the next step in your own hair journey, and we do not want to bully or shame you in any way.
We’re also not antihairdresser. Though I love the freedom of doing my own hair for work, play, and formal events alike, I understand that many of you enjoy going to the salon. Feel free to share our tips and hairstyle guides with your beautician so that you and your stylist may continue on your natural hair journey together.
One more thing this book isn’t: a memoir or a you-must-do-exactly-like-Nikki guide. The natural hair community is just that—a community of women; our coworkers, mothers, sisters, and friends who are embracing their natural hair and sharing their frustrations and triumphs. One of the things I’ve enjoyed most as a natural hair blogger is fostering that sense of community and providing a platform for folks to share. I’ve had the pleasure of meeting tons of beautiful, successful women, and for this book we’ve chosen to include a diverse group of real-life natural community members as our models, stylistas, and advice givers.
You see, most of all, we want this book to be a friend to you. Inside you’ll find product guidance, lifestyle advice, hairstyle tips, and frank discussion—just as you would in any hair salon across America. We want you to know that you are not alone in your hair journey. We’re here for you, and we can’t wait to compliment you on how good your hair looks.
Later Gators,
Chapter One
The Big Chop
Mama, Friends, and Significant Others (How to Transition Without Losing Your Mind)
For those of us with relaxed hair, the hardest step in the natural hair journey is most often the first one: actually deciding to go natural. Since Madam C. J. Walker picked up that first hot comb in the early 1900s, black women have been building culture around hair. And we hesitate to step outside of what we’ve grown up with. We fear that our loved ones won’t support our decision, that we’ll regret our big chop, that we’ll miss our relaxers, that our significant other will hate our new do, that we won’t be able to pull off natural hair, and that we won’t be able to take care of it.
big chop \'big 'chäp\
[noun, verb]
Cutting off all your chemically treated hair in one fell swoop. Some women do it themselves. Others have a significant other, family member, or barber do it.
We won’t insult you by dismissing these fears as myths. They are all valid fears, and for many of us—even those of us who never had a relaxer but developed a flat-iron dependency—this makes going natural one of the bravest things we will ever do. Going natural means facing many of our fears. It also means standing up for ourselves and learning a new skill set.
But if you’ve ever faced your fears head-on, you already know how wonderful it feels after you’ve vanquished them. Make no mistake: going natural will require a full-on hair fear confrontation. You might also have to learn to deal with negative comments and to take care of your hair from scratch. But here are three pieces of good news: (1) You can do it. (2) We can help you. (3) You’re going to come out of this transition looking amazing.
So let’s get started.
Though many curlfriends refer to getting rid of their relaxed or locked hair as the big chop, there is more than one way to go about big chopping.
THE SPONTANEOUS BIG CHOP
A favorite move of college students, artists, movie characters, and New Year’s resoluters the world over, spontaneous big choppers cut their hair within a few days or weeks of deciding to go natural.
I was looking at my bank account, and I had to get my ends done, but I only had, like, fifty bucks to get me through to the end of the month, so I walked into a barber shop and told them to cut it all off. It only cost fifteen dollars.
—Rhonda
I had some heat damage, and I wasn’t pleased. Also, I felt that hair held on to a lot of energy, and 2010 was a rough year. So I decided to chop it all off. My mom cut my hair.
—Cassie
My hair and I just didn’t get along—it was always frizzy, and I was tired of straightening it every day on top of getting relaxers. It wouldn’t stay straight; it wouldn’t hold a curl. That’s when I realized I was ready to get rid of it. I wasn’t thinking about going natural, I just wanted to get rid of that stupid hair. I was twenty-one, a junior in college, and very spontaneous.
—Khalia
I only transitioned for about two and a half months due to damage and breakage at the line of demarcation. My natural and relaxed hair were not playing nicely together!
—Song Bird
None of my transition styles held up well in humidity. My permed hair turned against me and started to fall out. Frustrated, I said, Let’s do this.
—Dominique
Photo: Charnele A. Hylton
I decided to have a barber cut my hair in January 2011 after realizing I wanted to save some money and was tired of sweating out perms at the gym.
—Charnele Ashlee
NIKKI’S THERAPY CORNER
when you’re forced to big chop for health reasons
Even those who have the luxury of taking the time to research and learn about the beauty and versatility of natural hair may still have hesitations and have to deal with confidence issues. So being forced into a short haircut and learning to work with your natural texture can feel daunting and overwhelming. Do your research, just as you would have if you chose to big chop on your own. Find support in your community and online, find pictures of women with gorgeous short haircuts in magazines and online, and take things slowly. If you’re truly uncomfortable, don a wig and ease into your natural hair more gradually. It’s a huge step to take, and it can be a difficult one if you aren’t able to do the upfront prep work involved with a slower transition. Remember that the way we feel about ourselves plays into our health, too. It’s all connected. If you experience depression or anxiety, it may not be a bad idea to see a therapist about it. People can grieve for their hair, especially if it is a big part of their image. Don’t be afraid to reach out for as much help as you need with this sudden transition. For more tips on how to manage your new style, go to chapter 2.
There are a few reasons to opt for a spontaneous big chop. Some women love adventure and would rather begin their natural hair journey sooner than later. Some women would rather not deal with the gradual transitioning process. And some women are forced into a spontaneous big chop for health reasons (see Nikki’s Therapy Corner).
But be forewarned, while there is no universal right or wrong time