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.

Singing Shows and Wishes

Image source: Screenshot taken of a scene from Super Singer Season 5, from Hotstar.

The picture is from one of the most popular singing TV shows on Tamil TV channels. It is a singing show called Super Singer and I watched it with a passion ever since I knew about it. It had two versions, Super Singer and Super Singer Junior (for kids aged below 14). Eminent singers were brought on the show as judges, along with many famous music directors, actors and other famous personalities. The show was the epitome of bling and wonder, each of the participants never ceasing to wonder and awe the wildly appreciative audience (me included).

There were or rather, are many such shows on TV these days. Across languages, across age groups, crossing and overcoming the barriers of music from belonging to just an elite group to something that could be opened to the public. The promise of the stage and the fame obviously drew many people and their aspirations to the crowded city auditions, zonal auditions, etc. And what a crowd it was, line after line of people, all eager to meet the famous judges, to get a chance to sing in front of them and get their few minutes of TV time.

I was also one of the people very taken with the bling and the promise of the stage. I, a child, one who had always wanted to train in music but never got the opportunity to. I keep on telling myself that I never learnt music. What for? I do not know. Maybe it is my way of reassuring myself that whatever I sing right now comes from my own persistence and will and not because I ‘learnt’ it from someone in the traditional sense. There is a sense of pride in being self-taught after all. Or maybe it is because that I have grown to derive comfort from feeling sorry for myself, like the attention seeking little girl that I am. But I guess, I will never know the answers to those questions.

Each of those aspiring ‘singers’ get the chance to be on TV, get to sing in front of great and famous judges while being promised a chance to sing with them someday and so on. Add in the PR tactics, promos to increase TRP and every other manipulative trick used to increase viewers and gather support. After all, people run the entertainment industry. And I also wanted that chance, I wanted the chance to get to sing there too. In my mind though, I told myself that I wasn’t good enough and that I will not be able to sing half as good as those on TV. After all, they all got a voice coach who would work with them and help them build and develop their singing. Somehow, my brain only saw myself as being alone against what I believed to be an unfair competition.

But my parents were busy, working doctors who could not spare the time to take me to these auditions. I never nagged them about it much too because I was far too afraid of the stage, why I even wanted to get there in the first place, I do not know. I never got the chance to get there. Add to it, the fact that there was this girl in my school who I was jealous of. Her father was a famous musician and she was always the one and only person who sang in every school event. My school never had an official music team, it was understood (unsaid) that she ran the show. This girl got the chance to go on these shows and I used to spend my evenings watching her on TV, extremely jealous but still fascinated and slightly rueful.

I recall, with shame, the time when I was delighted because she got eliminated in a round. I felt that she had got in the first place without deserving it. I will not try to justify myself because I know it is not justified. Whatever I thought, I thought out of spite. A spite, I desperately hope, will never show in this (hopefully) grownup me. And it is difficult, especially when you feel you have been wronged by someone who goes on to become ‘successful’. She is currently in the 6th season of the singing show and to my (surprising) delight, she is doing pretty well. I still have grudges toward her but I think I have grown enough to appreciate that she does sing well. Well, she was trained, you see. And I guess, somewhere, I still feel rueful for not getting the chance to learn to sing or not having the opportunity to sing on that stage. I am still terrified of the stage, but a wish does defy logic many times. And I guess, just because it is not logical or exactly realistic, I shouldn’t stop wishing right?

And that’s my memory for the day.