Journey with My Hair

It was when I was around the age of 12 when I first started taking proper notice of my own hair. I had been blissfully unaware of its vices and advantages for a large part of my childhood. My mother would mercilessly oil and brush and braid my hair into plaits, whose ends would feel and look as dry as the metal wool used to scrub vessels. I also did not really use any hair products, tamely accepting the new shampoo that my mother would have bought (which would change almost every other month). No conditioner, no leave-ins, no serums, no anything. I didn’t even know what they were. I hated my hair at the time, it used to be extremely dry and get tangled by the time I could sneeze. I just had to leave it open for a millisecond before I would be wailing in pain as my mother would pull the brush hard, down my hair. I was used to the violent life, I still was until very recently, when I realised that I had been approaching my hair the completely wrong way.

As a young child, I wanted hair like the ones in the advertisements for top shampoos. I would look at a Priyanka Chopra or an Aishwarya Rai, throwing their hair around as it fell in beautiful sheets around their form. I grew up watching Sunsilk, Pantene, Loreal Paris, Garnier etc, and as I saw a new one, I would beg my mother to get the new one the next time she would buy shampoo. Of course, conditioner was still something I was partially unaware of, so I wasn’t asking for the conditioner. It was at this time that my mother would tell me two things–one, “if you are not tame yourself, how will your hair be tame?” and two, “no one’s hair ever looks like that in the advertisements, naturally. It is part graphics.” I would have gladly believed that, but I saw friends around me who had silky smooth hair, that they literally did nothing for. Some of them did even less than me, they wouldn’t even apply oil (which my mother sold to me as the miracle ingredient that would make my hair silky smooth) at times.

I had friends whose hair would just flow out of their ponytails while mine couldn’t even be left alone in one, because it would get extremely tangled. My only option to have decent hair was to have it in two plaits or a braid, and even then, the ends which were left free would be a tangled mess. No amount of brushing made it alright (and now I realise that brushing was, in fact, contributing to my hair issues), despite what everyone believed. I was asked if I didn’t comb my hair that day, had I not oiled it, questions and concerns directed at me from all circles. In a school where everyone was dressed conservatively and were very well-kempt in looks, I looked like I had been pulled through a hedge whilst someone banged my head repeatedly on the bushes by the side. While my clothes and attire were always meticulously worn, my hair on the other hand, there have been times when I wished I were bald instead.

I remember the first time I saw a curly-haired classmate, who had beautifully defined curls which weren’t frizzy. That started my desire for nicely curly hair, a desire I still harbour to this day. Every time I wash my hair, I wonder if that is the day when my dream of having gorgeous, defined and frizz-free curls will come true. There are days when I reach close to that dream, days when my hair behaved wonderfully for a couple of days and then, it goes back to square one. I remember that seeing this classmate’s hair was when I properly started wishing for my natural curls instead of the straight hair that a lot of my friends had. I was obsessed with beautiful ringlets and small, tight curls, that were bouncy and shiny. It was around this time that I was able to access the internet with a freedom beyond whatever I had ever experienced until then. I would spend hours online, looking for ways to take care of and maintain curly hair.

My grandparents’ house was my laboratory because it had everything I would ever need. From olive oil to fresh aloe vera gel straight from the plant, I could access multiple ingredients that dominated the world of DIY hair products. I started doing multiple permutations and combinations (this later became a joke amongst my friends, the girl who did P&C for her hair), with very varied and sometimes disappointing results. The problem could have been that despite making those hair masks, I did not have a good hair routine, a good shampoo and conditioner that I would have had to use, plus the freedom to leave my hair without brushing. If I did not brush my hair, it went extremely tangled and I needed to brush it out in order to save my hair was tangling up beyond repair.

This journey is by no means complete, and there are many parts that I simply did not find the space to type out here. Why did I even recollect this journey? I think a part of the reason why is because I grew up listening to people tell me that I should not be caring so much about hair. It is hair, after all, it doesn’t deserve my time and efforts, it never shall. That is quite a toxic idea to preach because it invalidates my insecurities about my own hair and personality, made me believe that in addition to feeling and looking bad and having self-esteem issues, I was, in addition, doing something as menial as worrying about something like hair. It added to my worries, it continues to do so. Even sometimes these days, I catch myself chastising myself for worrying that much about my hair, and then I immediately remind myself of what has been a tough journey, which is still a tough journey (that still suffers from a lack of support from my family). I am still plagued with my mother constantly nagging me to brush my hair and commenting on how ugly it looks, my confidence take a hit on those days, especially if I had just been feeling quite nice about my curls. It is quite a long journey so far, it promises to be an even more tough journey henceforth, I shall be able to progress here, won’t I?

And that’s my memory for the day.

Toothbrushes and The Space To Be Weird

A toothbrush is a pretty normal, straightforward, everyday tool. It is used by (almost) everyone, has a very important purpose in our life. It has saved us the embarrassment of bad breath and more. And in the morning, it does the important job of bringing us back to our senses and makes us alert. Or maybe it is the toothpaste that does that. Actually, I think it is a combo. But then, bad photography skills and poor planning has made me use a picture of a toothbrush only. But I guess I mean both toothpaste and toothbrush because after all, in these times, they exist simultaneously and harmoniously (which is more than what we can say about people).

I feel like I am being extra cynical and salty (much like that toothpaste with salt in it) today. It is a direct result of my own disappointment in my own overestimation of my abilities and the annoying realisation of reality. That sounded complicated, but I really cannot rephrase it because I don’t know how to. But nevertheless, I wanted to talk about toothpaste and toothbrushes because well, they are pretty important.

I am the daughter of 2 doctors. Naturally, I grew up listening to horror stories of people who maintained poor hygiene and ended up in very bad situations. It started from things like not pooping at proper times to not brushing your teeth twice a day to not showering every day to drinking coke and so on. I grew up following most of it, I didn’t drink coke and I never developed a taste for it. In fact, I don’t like most of the packaged drinks and beverages. I never got into coffee either, surprisingly, because I was told that college makes everyone a caffeine addict. I still don’t see the point of coffee (touch wood) and I still haven’t drunk coffee in college. And I hope I never do. I have seen friends who live on coffee and they’re not the type of people I would want to emulate in my own life.

But then, I am digressing. To get back to brushing and toothbrushes, one habit that I never followed though was brushing twice a day. I was told to do that by my parents, by my grandparents, hell, even my textbook said that I had to brush twice daily. But try as I might, I never could bring myself to follow that routine. And it was weird because I could follow all routines but that one. Well, I pushed through it and I started again when I was in 12th standard and thankfully, I am still going strong with it. It has now come to a point where I cannot sleep if I haven’t brushed my teeth at night.

But toothbrushes and toothpaste remind me inevitably, time and time again, of travelling. We used to take the morning train or the night one. For the morning train, we would leave our house at around 5am in the morning to catch our 6am train. We would bathe so early in the morning when the weather would be cold and I remember, quite distinctly, how I would shiver near the washbasin as I tried to brush my teeth. Showering was easier because we had hot water but brushing was very difficult. And it would be a chore to do it.

But the worst parts were night trains. We would wake up and the washbasins in the train were almost always extremely ill-maintained. They would be dirty, sometimes have no water and so on. They would be outside, near the compartment door and it would be extremely awkward to brush my teeth there because everyone could hear me and see me. It also meant that I couldn’t make half the wierd noises that I normally make while brushing. Brushing was a very calming and awakening exercise. The weird sounds I made would help me stay awake and also set the tone for the day. I normally ended up feeling more happier if had my dose of weird noises for the day.

In many ways, even college and shared bathrooms in hostels feel like the train. We brush in plain view of each other is shared washbasins. What I spit out (sorry for the disgusting images) is basically visible to everyone who is standing next to me and brushing their teeth. I cannot make the noises I would make in my home, hum from the bottom of my throat, blow my nose loudly or do anything that will be considered socially unacceptable. It again goes back to my craving for personal space and freedom. I am my own person here, away from family and people I am familiar with. But I am still bound by societal rules of polite conduct. And I think, I can never completely be away from all these at all times. But that surely doesn’t mean that I cannot seek out a private space for my toothbrush, toothpaste and I, does it?

And that’s my memory for the day.

NCC Routines and Finding Hell

This is a very early post because I really needed to get this done so that I will not be sitting with this at night. I will be having practice early in the morning for the next two weeks and I need to start sleeping early. It is a mess. But this whole early morning practice reminds me of my days spent in an NCC camp. I was a part of my school’s NCC for two years, during my eight and ninth standard. I held the highest rank in my school when I was in ninth standard. It was called CQSM- Cadet Quarters Senior Most and I also cleared the A certificate exam.

But don’t get me started on the sham that was the A certificate exam. It was honestly horrifying to see the amount of malpractice that went with it. The question paper was out a few days before the exam, the invigilators helped the students with their answers and it was a poor excuse of an exam. But I did try my best to do my best in it, I did work hard to study for it. But the taint of the cheating that went with the exam, I guess, will never leave my certificate. And it is not a very comforting thought, trust me.

But anyway, I am digressing from what I started with. The camp was of 2-week duration, in a school campus in Katangalathur. The facilities were terrible, we all had to stay in classrooms, some 20 of us in each classroom. The toilets did not have lights and most of the time, they didn’t have water either. We had strict routines and it was very difficult at first to get used to it all. Our day started at 5 am. All of us bleary-eyed girls and boys (strictly separated, mind you) would have a morning run from the campus to a ground 2 kilometres away. Once we reach there, the time would be 5:30 am and we would spend the next one hour there. There would be exercises and activities and then at 6:30, we would start the run back to campus. We would then get an hour of respite in which time we would have to take a bath (most of us didn’t because it was useless) and eat breakfast and clean our plates and utensils and then report back for marchpast. The day would then be divided between marchpast, interacting with officers, lecture sessions, everything out in the open under the scorching sun. Finally, our day would end in the evening when we would have an assembly and then reports would be read out, attendance taken, the NCC song sung and the NCC clap sounded and then we would be let free to go and change into night clothes and take a bath and report back for dinner.

Phones were not allowed, we had to deposit our phones with the officers. But of course, most of us didn’t. Our NCC teacher (?) helped us and we all managed to escape unnoticed. The phone was my only source of comfort. I could talk to my parents and grandparents (who were in Singapore at that time) and especially when I fell sick, they were my source of comfort. The days spent in the camp are days I will remember for a lot of time. It was a time where I learnt a lot about how to handle things by myself and how to take care of myself. When I fell sick, I learnt how to take care of myself even more. I learnt to adjust to problems. And I realised that I had pretty fond memories of the place. There is a saying that even hell gets comfortable once you stay there long enough. But then, I guess staying there long enough made me realise that it wasn’t really hell in the first place. And I think, that is something I should keep in mind for a long time. And maybe, once I start realising that the ‘hell’ I seem to inhabit is not actually ‘hell’ in the first place, I will stop my search for the devil?

And that’s my memory for the day.