Braids and Upgrades
I offered my reflections in print on my friends’ permanent tattoos recently. Researching and interviewing the ladies about body art gleaned another tab in my file of respect and cherished connection with our kind and thoughtful employees at My Cup of Tea. Most of the people I work among have skipped tattoos, and with that choice, the pain and expense as well. They aren’t fretting with permanent ink on their skin.
As long as I can remember, choosing to frame and reflect the “real me” or the “who I want to be” for most Black Women has been associated with grooming hair and styles that originated in African roots. Absolutely on trend now are waist-length colored micro braids.
For health standards, ladies cannot work in the tea production rooms with their elegant coiffures unharnessed. The employees with the microbraids that number in the hundreds and reach their waist must twist them into a bun and tuck them under our required hair nets. It often takes two. The resulting teetering turban can add several inches to her height.
Several of our younger employees have arrived with new micros in spring hues this month. “How long did it take?” I query, never asking the cost. I’m told “Well. Ms. Carey, 8 hours is average.”
The once purely cultural tradition of braiding African hair has become high fashion, and what was once a communal and family practice exercised by mothers, sisters, and grandmothers has exploded into a mainstream art form.
Licensed salon technicians in large cities like Vegas, LA, NYC, and Chicago charge by the hour and offer benefits. Products and hair extensions are additional, expensive, and required. The benefits might include champagne, a massage, and live music. Research suggests that the installation is often split over two days and totals reach into the thousands.
Meanwhile, on our block, the tradition of the “kitchen beautician” is still the salon of choice, and she is our local answer for hair fashion trending in Orange Mound. The benefits in her boutique far exceed the expensive temporary ones described above.
Her fee is reasonable and firm, but the local, mostly family, unlicensed psychological counselors and therapists don’t charge for their services here. The social, practical, common sense, and biblical tutoring is offered free and fun by the friends and family who gather around the table while the Kitchen Beautician weaves her magic.
The kitchen provides the obvious friendly space for snacks, the best lighting, easy-to-clean floors for the hair clippings, accessible water for shampoo, and several chairs for the onlookers. Tradition holds for the culture here, and the kitchen remains the favorite site for the ritual passed down for generations. The process is deeply social, and it’s rarely just about hair.
Hours spent braiding are filled with conversation, gossip, but most importantly advice-giving. The techniques, like cornrows, box-braids, and twists, are preserved, while innovative entrepreneurs access TikTok and free step-by-step tutorials. The new instant experts quickly gain respect and customers. The “new do” evolves from a party among friends and can be refreshed or replaced at the next weekend party in the familiar family kitchen, or the one of a best friend on the next block.
The term “kitchen” has a double meaning in Black hair lingo. There are tricky short hairs at the forehead and the nape. A skilled braider “tames the kitchen” with cream to what appears to be calligraphy on the skin. It is impressive and elegant.
My first impressions led to incorrect conclusions when the microbraids began appearing at The House this year. Beyond curiosity, I was appalled at what the elaborate coifs must cost them.
Once again, I have been reproved and have discovered their choice is virtuous, good stewardship, and time well spent. The older are teaching the younger family stories, values, and morally weighted lessons. The hair appointment provides one lady to sit still in the center of the ring of friends for hours well spent.
As Jesus told us in John 7:24, we must not “judge by appearance, but judge with right judgment.”
Our employee appears on Monday morning with a strong smile, a proud nod, a kick in her step, and refreshing confidence all day. Every woman I have ever met appreciates a good hair day.