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Curly vs. Straight

To look extra fly for her cousin's wedding, Mariel Concepcion decided to put a little oomph in her hairdo. The gorgeous, 28-year-old associate editor of Dominican descent normally wears it naturally curly with tight ringlets, but she decided to kick it up a notch and put a hot curling iron to it to further define the look. "I thought, 'I look fabulous,'" she says, "but as soon as I walked in, the first thing one of my cousins told me was that he had a bottle of gel in his car to lend me if i needed it!"
Over the years, Mariel has had to get used to comments from her family like pajonua or monua (someone with rowdy or unmanageable hair). Meanwhile, her identical twin sister Maziel, a school teacher in New York who has exactly the same hair texture, wears her hair bone straight. The way they are perceived by society, family, friends and the opposite sex is dramatically different. "I've had plenty of men—mostly black and Latino—ask me why I don't make my hair straight like my sister's cause they think it looks better," says Mariel.
Is this phenomenon unique to just the Concepcion twins, or is the preference for straight hair prevalent in society as a whole? According to recent articles in the New York Observer and a segment on "Good Morning America," the texture of your hair can mean the difference in attracting a guy, landing a job or even appearing beautiful to children.
"Unfortunately, I think society does consider straight hair to look more professional or appropriate, but that has to change!" says Marian Barragan, a 32-year-old photo editor who is half-Cuban and half-Ecuadorian. "If my hair is curly or dreaded or whatever, I hope that my professional attitude speaks for itself." Marian refuses to straighten her thick and wavy hair, choosing instead to flaunt the texture she was born with.
"If having your hair straight makes you feel confident and sexy, you will give off that vibe and people will pick up on it," says Marian. "It's confidence men are paying attention to, not your hair texture!"
But 29-year-old publicist Gina Torres isn't willing to take any chances. Every week, she goes through an elaborate process to transform her tight curls into silken tresses. "I usually go to the salon—Dominican ones are the best because they really understand coarse hair—and get a wash and set. Then they put my hair in large curlers and sit me under the dryer for about 45 minutes," says Gina, who is Puerto Rican. "After I come out of the dryer, they blowdry with a large round brush. I upkeep it during the week by wrapping it with bobby pins."
And for Gina, the advantages of having her hair straightened are many: she gets more attention from guys, the maintenance is as easy as taking down the bobby pins and running out the door, and most of all, she says, "Wearing my hair straight gives me a more polished look, and in turn, that gives me confidence to do my job." When she does wear her hair in its natural state to industry events, nobody recognizes her.
Laura Alcantar, on the other hand, believes that one's hair texture is a glimpse into their personality. "People with curly hair tend to be bouncier, sweeter, outgoing, and personable," says the 29-year-old loan officer of Mexican descent. Alcantar usually wears her half-curly, half-wavy shoulder length hair in an updo for work. "Females who straighten their hair seem more serious. And it's funny because I tend to get more attention from guys when I wear it curly." Although she does admit that she's straightened her hair for a job interview.
While curly hair has its diehard fans, like Laura and Marian, the message from society is clear: straight hair is the preferred texture. So why does Mariel insist on embracing her curls? In addition to being easier for her to maintain and a better fit for her face shape, she sees her identity in her hair. "I think at one point it freed me from the constant twin comparison thing. My curls gave me my own personality." And after some thought she adds, "I also think a lot of Dominicans forget they have African in them, not just Spanish--for me, the curly hair is an important part of my culture and a symbol of our struggles." And that's something no flat iron could ever erase.
—Serena Kim
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LaDyPiCaSsO
09.19.2008 8:26am |
I have really boricua curly hair lol! I've always been noticed because of my unique hair. People a mile away can look at the back of my hair and say oh yeah thats Gabby. I've had only negative comments from girls with really straight hair. i think they are just jealous. when i have straghtened my hair no one has noticed. i feel weird and naked without my curly hair. it's what defines me. i dont think its fair that she would be judged in the workplace because of her hair texture. straight or curly its still hair and if you have curly hair u cant help it, its part of your culture like your skin. i think discrimination based on hair texture is actually hilarous. its just hair. idont i embrace what God gave me and all other curly fries should to.
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Libbylauu
09.19.2008 12:03am |
While I think the contents of this article and comments made by the women in it are certainly valid, I think there is a huge oversight here. American society tends to value beauty standards that are in line with European beauty standards. Similar to the 'light skin/dark skin' battle many women of color face, the texture of a woman's hair falls into this same category--one that is mainly controlled by what society values as beautiful and/or professional, which unfortunately tends to be Eurocentric traits (read: straight hair, slim, light skin, light eyes). Granted, these standards vary with every culture and every person. I'm just saying, it's not that straight hair ACTUALLY makes one look polished or whatever it is you associate it with, it's that we're taught (by the media, TV, you name it) to identify certain physical traits with certain personality traits (i.e. straight hair = more professional, curly hair = fun and bubbly). I thought the ‘bigger picture’ needed to be brought into this argument, as I think it is important to remember where our associations with things like hair texture actually come from (the images around us that we are taught to perceive as the ultimate truth).
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Ancosiju
09.18.2008 3:26pm |
Curly vs. Straight - Why not both? Mariel and Maziel or the twinners as they are affectionately called by family and friends, look great no matter how they style their hair. My wife has curly hair and when we started dating she always had her hair curled. Then one day she straightened it, and I was blown away; she looked great. I have a preference towards straight hair but she has the option of going either way, so I get the best of both worlds.
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