I can't begin to demonstrate the extent of my frowsy history because these are photos that I have relegated to the trash without anyone seeing them, but here are some that survived the cut:
I started out with little hair at all, and after Suzanne's baby head-full of beautiful dark hair, that must have been a disappointment to my parents, but eventually I had white curls and was nicknamed, "Blondie," by Grandpa Sargent. And Blondie I was until puberty darkened and coarsened my hair to wiry waves. After a childhood of ponytails I resigned myself to short hair since the alternative was bushwoman, and there I would still be if not for chemotherapy and baldness.
Following chemotherapy, I was just happy to have hair |
Curly Hair Lessons were a revelation. "What? I can't wash my hair every day?!" "What? I shouldn't be brushing my hair?!" "What? I can't use just any old shampoo?!" "What?! I use an old t-shirt to blot my hair dry and not a towel?!" "What? I need products?!" "A diffuser?!" Weirdest of all, they don't cut wet hair by pulling sections away from the head and then cutting it geometrically--no, they just snip away at it when it's dry, like trimming a hedge. Yes, I am a bush woman.
I threw away my hairbrush and have had neither brush nor comb in my hair for a year and a half. Grandma Hattie bragged about her wash-and-wear hair. Now I've got it. I can't say I always look good, but when I don't it's because I totally forget my hair and that it needs an occasional cut.
You're a beautiful bushwoman!
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