Aug 312009
 

I’ve straightened my hair for most of my life. My natural hair falls somewhere between wavy and curly. I have more circular-curl action than those who just have wavy hair but less ringlet action than, say, the Munchkin.

I’ll be honest, I wasn’t raised to know how to properly care for my hair. My mom’s hair is stick straight. In fact, before my mother even realized that I had natural curl, she permed my hair. It was the 80′s. Everyone permed their hair. However, despite adding curl to my hair, she didn’t teach my how to do my hair. It wasn’t until a friend who was already in middle school made fun of me, in church no less, that I learned I wasn’t doing my hair the right way. “You don’t brush a perm!” I still remember that day in the parking lot, her frizzy blonde permed hair looking like everyone’s 80′s prom night dream. My brushed, brown crimpy hair blew in the breeze. I vowed that no one would make fun of me again for my hair… after it grew out.

I wore my hair straight (after that perm grew out) until one day during my senior year of high school. I was running late for musical practice one Saturday morning. I decided to just leave the house with my hair wet, having no time to put my straightening cream in it or dry it ever-so-carefully. By the time I got to practice, it was curling. Friends of mine were in awe. I began wearing my hair curly or straight on an alternating basis whenever I so chose, proud of my ability to have chameleon like hair. I did this through most of college except for those times when a boy would break up with me and I would chop it to well above my ears. (I suppose that’s a post for another day.)

I can say that I have straightened my hair almost everyday for the past six years. My husband always loved when I would not have the time or effort to straighten it, claiming that it looked lovely curly. I didn’t believe him, that teasing comment from my elementary school days sticking with me. When the humidity hit earlier this month, I couldn’t straighten my hair. Even with the most expensive straightening cream and far too long with a hair dryer in a hot bathroom, it would begin to curl. Even as the lady cutting my hair would spray my hair wet, the curls would be popping up in the middle of the haircut. I gave up. I have, for the past month, worn my hair curly.

But it’s not only because of the humidity.

I learned that someone in my daughter’s life made a comment about her curls in a negative manner. She was apparently told that she would look “beautiful with straight hair like everyone else.” I wanted to spit nails when I learned of this ridiculousness. She has the most gorgeous hair I’ve ever seen, even though I’m slightly biased. It’s just gorgeous hair. Who says that to a child with curly hair? I can’t imagine saying to the boys, “Gee, your eyes would look better if they were another color.” Or, “I bet you’d look much cuter if you had curlier hair like that boy in your class!” Why should we teach our kids that they need to be like everyone else? Once my anger subsided, I didn’t think about it.

Until I was angry with my own hair for curling.

And then it smacked me in the face: wasn’t I sending much the same message by constantly straightening my own hair? I’ll be honest: I’m not sure the Munchkin even knows that I have curly hair. In all of the pictures I have with my daughter, my hair is straight. As I thought of this and the statement that had been made to her about her hair, I started to feel guilty. Have I contributed to the problem? Will she look to me at some point and say, “Well, she didn’t like her curls either so why should I?”

I often think that I am exempt from the issues that plague our growing girls. I have never read the book Perfect Girls, Starving Daughters: How the Quest for Perfection is Harming Young Women by Courtney E. Martin even though so many other moms of daughters have read to prepare themselves for what’s to come with regard to raising their daughters. I thought I didn’t have to read the book because, well, she won’t turn to me or look to me for advice on such topics. Will she? Or will she? I don’t know. I haven’t thought much about my constant struggle with food and weight, my issues with my own hair type and my tendency toward self-hatred and how they will affect my daughter because, well, she’s not under my roof. Surely she won’t pick up on the fact that I hate my thighs, am constantly on a diet and don’t really like my hair in its natural state. Will she? Or will she?

As I pondered these questions over the past month of curly hair living, I felt pretty bad. Have I been setting a poor example of a strong, independent woman for my daughter? Have I been setting a poor example of a strong, independent woman for my parented sons? I felt that was the case. Add on the guilt of Things I Have Done Wrong as a Mother.

As I’ve spent the past month embracing my curls, I’ve been wondering how I can better show my children, all of them, how to be content in your own skin. Or hair. I’m not quite sure what the balance is on these things. How much time is too much time at the gym or exercising? When does it cross the line from being healthy to being obsessed? When does straightening your hair for a different look cross the line into trying to deny who you really are? How much makeup is too much makeup? When does a diet stop being a quest to being healthy and an unhealthy obsession with food? And how do I raise my children or, in Munchkin’s case, show my children from afar to be comfortable with themselves?

I ponder all of these as I slowly reteach myself how to work with curly hair. I am so thankful that my daughter’s mom did the research and has taken such wonderful care of the Munchkin’s hair. I’m sure she will teach her to do her own hair well as she grows and becomes more independent. I hope when she asks me why I straightened my hair for all those years that I can come up with an answer that makes sense. I hope that by working toward becoming happy in my own skin that I can show her that she’s beautiful just the way she is. I hope that I can teach my sons that they are amazing the way that they are and that beauty, their own or a partner’s, is more than skin deep.

By the way, Perfect Girls, Starving Daughters: How the Quest for Perfection is Harming Young Women is on sale for $6.00 on Amazon right now. Bargain price, indeed.

Aug 282009
 

Sometimes I doubt myself. I wonder, at times, if I was the only one who was stupid enough to get caught up with an unethical agency. I wonder if in my sheltered naivety and inexperience, if I wasn’t just too blind to see the way that I was being treated by my agency wasn’t exactly right. While I accept my blame, though that isn’t the right word, in the course of everything that happened, I sometimes feel downright silly for not noticing the red flags. I mentally berate myself as I go over everything with the hindsight of six years and think, “Why were you so stupid?”

And then I read this article, the best of its kind in my opinion, and I realize that I’m not alone. It wasn’t just me. I’m not completely stupid (though I was very naive). Others have been taken advantage of, their children caught up in the unethical business of coercive tactics. I’m not the only one.

Of course, at the last line, my heart breaks as I realize the ultimate truth: I’m not the only one. Agencies are taking advantage of scared, naive mothers without support. At that point, I get out of my egocentric pity party type zone and get riled up about the need for reform in adoption. I get so frustrated that things like this are still going on. I get so frustrated that my unethical “agency” is on the sidebar of that particular article, brought in by Google ads. It’s ironic and depressing at the same time.

I am, however, encouraged that the article was written. Something like that would never have been written six years ago. Not that I would have had access to find it at the time. Nor would I have likely believed it as my agency made me believe that they were concerned for my well-being. They weren’t, of course, as made evident by their refusal to provide post-placement care or, you know, provide me with the proper information necessary to make an informed decision. My story aside, I’m hoping people are reading this: mothers of children who are still in diapers, still in elementary school, still in high school, just entering college. Mothers of sons who aren’t yet sexually active but someday will be. Women who aren’t yet mothers. Men who aren’t yet fathers. Perhaps to them, at this moment, the article will just be another in long list of currently “unimportant” articles that they will read today, tomorrow, next week. It will pass through to sit somewhere in the back of their mind. To be honest, I hope they never find reason to pull it to the forefront of their memory, to ask themselves, “Wait, what did that one article that I read in 2009 say about agencies and pregnancy centers and something about coercion?” But, if they do, I hope they believe it.

This isn’t pro-abortion (whatever that is) propaganda. I’m sure the woman who wrote the article doesn’t want every woman experiencing an unplanned pregnancy to rush out and abort her baby. It’s not propaganda at all: it’s the blatant, hard-to-read, in-your-face truth. It’s the truth whether you happen to be pro-life or pro-choice. It’s the truth whether or not you know which side of that line you fall on. It’s the truth whatever religion you identify with, whatever political party you side with or whatever you gender happens to be.

Don’t read me wrong: I’m not anti-adoption. We live an example of what good can happen even in spite of a broken, unethical system. We are evidence that good does still exist as long as families are willing to put in a lot of work. (Though, one might argue, that any family has to put in hard work just to keep the wheels moving. No?) Despite the good of our story, the truth is that reform is needed. The truth is that agencies and attorneys need to be held accountable. The truth is that birth and adoptive families need to have counseling made available to them not just in the weeks or months after relinquishment and adoption but in the years and decades after that initial legal paperwork. The truth is that we need change.

I can only hope that this article and those yet to come will not only educate… but inspire.

 Posted by at 4:40 pm