
I. hate. hair.
I hate combing it. I hate styling it. I hate hot combs, relaxers, weave, grease, brushes, blowouts, hooded dryers, sponge rollers and hard rollers. I hate getting it braided, twisted, cut, shampooed, conditioned, wrapped, rinsed, dyed, fried and laid to the side. Why can't we all just rock a baldy?
2008 Deaths
Odetta Holmes
"The Voice of the Civil Rights Movement" was a singer, actress, guitarist, songwriter and activist.
December 31 1930 - December 2 2008.
Ray Tamarra , Getty
Bernie Mac
Comedian, Actor
Oct. 5, 1957 - Aug. 9, 2008.
AP
Isaac Hayes
Singer, songwriter, record producer, composer and actor.
August 20, 1942 - August 10, 2008
Reuters
Miriam Makeba, "Mama Africa"
South African folk singer and anti-apartheid activist.
March 4, 1932 - November 10, 2008.
Reuters
Jennifer Hudson's 57-year-old mother, Darnell Donerson, brother, Jason, and 7-year-old nephew, Julian King, were killed in 2008.
AP
Shakir Stewart
The Island Def Jam executive who became head of the legendary rap label following Jay-Z's departure, killed himself on Nov. 1. He was 34 years old.
Getty
George Carlin
Stand-up comedian, actor and author.
May 12, 1937 - June 22, 2008
Getty Images
Madelyn Dunham
Barack Obama's grandmother
October 26, 1922 - Nov 3, 2008.
Getty Images
Levi Stubbs
Oct. 17: The iconic lead singer, second from left, who gave voice to Four Tops classics like "Reach Out I'll Be There" and "Baby I Need Your Loving" died at 72 from complications of cancer and a stroke. Abdul Fakir, far left, is now the sole living member of the original quartet.
Corbis
Dee Dee Warwick
Oct. 18: The soul songstress died after months of declining health. Warwick, the sister of soul legend Dionne, also achieved a great deal of success, both as a solo artist as well as with her sister.
Corbis
Why can't we place an emphasis on who has the shiniest dome? That's a style I could compete with. But, alas, beauty and hair have been intrinsically linked since the beginning of time, much to my chagrin.
As soon as my mom left me the responsibility of doing my own hair, I was free. And I hardly ever touched it. I would throw it back in a ponytail or braid it into two cornrows, and keep it moving. When my mom got tired of seeing me looking a mess, she'd send me to Revelations on Bloomfield Avenue in Montclair, and Sarah would hook me up. After a week, my hair was being pulled back into a ponytail again.I just couldn't be bothered.
Hair was dead matter that managed to grow out of my head at alarming rates. And it was something to keep out of the way. Not something to obsess over. And then boys came along. And suddenly, if my hair was done, I got a second glance. Sometimes. From that moment on, I've grappled with my hair. Do I wear a style society accepts? Or do I chop it down to a brush cut -- the only style I can manage?
I wore dreadlocks for years before rocking a TWA, (teeny weeny Afro). And then it started to grow into a wild, kinky halo of curls and naps. I loved it. But it was very hard to maintain, and I didn't have the money to get it styled regularly.
I wore an elaborate braided style to my wedding, (with the most beautiful sterling silver beads threaded inside). But by the time I came back from the honeymoon, my beads were at the bottom of the Pacific ocean, and my hair was a fuzzy mess.
I parted my hair down the middle, gave myself two braids. And that was that. For years.

I cringe when I look back at pictures of myself. Two cornrows? With rubber bands on the end? Really? For someone who is 30-plus? Shameful. Then I got knocked up and gained a whopping 60 pounds. Thanks to the hormones, my hair started growing like crabgrass. I finally decided to find a hair stylist and make some sense of my hair.
I found Lynn, at Shades Hair Studio in Livingston, NJ. She blew out my hair wile I was big and fat and very pregnant. And she made me look like I had some sense.

I finished out my pregnancy feeling a little more put together, which is important when you feel like a foreign prisoner in your own body. I gave birth a few days later:

Since I don't have a perm, the least amount of moisture converts Lynn's blow out to what you see above. But who cares? I had a brand-new baby girl to dote on. Looks be damned! For the next several months, I focused on nursing, diapers and working-- sometimes all at once.
Sidebar: It's true. I often nursed Tog while interviewing Faith for the book if my sitter couldn't make it. Tog would give off a loud burp when she was done, and Faith would laugh.
I would go see Lynn whenever I could, but it wasn't a priority. When I did go, I got a blowout that eventually became a ponytail within a day or so.

After Tog was off my boob and in day care, I started putting myself back together. Now, I know this will sound very politically incorrect, but I decided to get my look together mostly for my husband.
If it were up to me, I'd get the smooth shiny baldy and wear a potato sack every day. But my husband is a man. They are visual creatures. If I want him to look at me every day until I'm 80, shouldn't I try to make sure I'm put together a bit?
I do want my partner to look at me and think, "Wow!" For that matter, I want perfect strangers to say the same thing. We all care about how people perceive us whether we want to admit it or not. We have a natural desire to feel attractive to others, whether we're single, dating or married. When you get yourself together in the morning, you're not doing it for you. You're doing it for the world. Many of you will protest. You will say, "No way. I dress for me."
Lies. It's all lies. You didn't come out of the womb with lip gloss on. You weren't born with highlights, or dreadlocks or stilettos. You've learned over time what look you want to adopt. We're all sheep. We make ourselves look the way we want society to see us. Period.
My next two years as a sheep were a whirlwind of experimentation:

I got my hair pressed, and Lynn added some tracks. I came home and my husband said, "Wow! Your hair really grew a lot!" And TG said, "It's a weave dad."
I flew out to L.A. the next day for a story and whipped my horse hair all around Melrose Place. I carried myself differently with long, swingy hair. It felt like I was wearing a costume, pretending to be someone else. And I was.

The Rapunzel look was a bit much for me. When I came home, I asked Lynn to cut it down a bit. This is mostly my hair with a track or two in the back. I liked the bob look. But because I didn't have a perm, my own hair would shrink up in moist weather and I'd be a mess. Quickly.
Why couldn't I have long hair that was curly? Why you can, said Lynn!

Can you say, Sideshow Bob?

I was officially done with the weave. I knew I wanted to wear my own hair for better or for worse. Back to Lynn. Chop chop. I asked for a sensible haircut. With some bangs. Something easy.

Perfect. My hair wasn't as thick as before, after all the blowouts, press'n'curls and weavation. But it worked for me. It wasn't pow-pow glamorous. Kind of felt like a Mom Cut. Maybe I could tweak it just a bit? Cut off the back. Give me more umph in the front?

Yes! This was it. The cut I'd been looking for. I even used this picture for the contributor's page in Essence. (Me? In Essence! Can you imagine?!) I was very happy with this haircut, except on Thursdays when I had to sit in Lynn's chair and get it done. The wash is heavenly. They do a hell of a scrub at Shades, but then comes the 30-minute blow out with a scalding hot dryer. And then the press. And then the curl. It takes all day. And I'm a hot, sweaty mess at the end.
Oh, and it ain't cheap.
I found a style I could live with. But I still wasn't happy. It looked nice, but it didn't feel like me. I noticed that when Lynn washed my hair and it shriveled up, I actually liked that better. I asked her if we could come up with something that was more wash and go.

We were getting somewhere. I woke up in the morning, ran my hands through my hair, and I was done. I think my husband secretly prefers long hair though he'd never admit it. But he seemed to approve, too. I didn't get as many double takes in the street, not like I did when I was swinging my hair up and down Santa Monica Boulevard. But the time I needed to spend in Lynn's chair (and the money) was going down. And I still felt like a presentable grown-up.
It wasn't exactly a wash-and-go style though.
After many years of blowing out, my natural curls were obliterated. The back of my hair was happy to be nappy, but the front was bone straight. Lynn had to roll it up and put me under the dryer to get it to curl up.I hung on to the bone straight pieces of hair. If I cut them off, I'd have an official very short cut. I went to see Lynn faithfully and got my wash-and-set curly style. It lasted for two weeks. And then the top would start to unravel and you would see my two-tone nappy-straight hair.

Note the nappy roots. And the straight ends. Ugh. And still I resisted. I didn't want to go the full route and cut out the straight pieces and rock a true TWA. What if my husband hated it? What if I hated it? What if it didn't grow back? I've had a TWA before, more than once. But it was usually an act of defiance. A way to broadcast my political statements.
My hair isn't the way I do that anymore. It's just an extension of my outfit. I don't think that a woman who has a perm or a weave or a Jheri curl is any less black than a woman who is happy to be nappy. I know women who grew long dreadlocks just to have swingy hair and top knot ponytails. I know women with weaves who work in industries that make it impossible to get their hair cared for properly. (Underneath Beyonce's weavorama is a healthy head of unprocessed hair.)
So what to do?
The TWA was calling me. I answered.


Am I happy with it? I'm not sure. I don't have a forehead. I have an eighthead. And this cut just emphasizes my huge noggin. So hopefully, it'll grow in and take a little attention away from the projector screen I've got going on up there. But I do know I was out of Lynn's chair in record time yesterday.
And when I woke up this morning, I felt like...me.
TWA-The One & Only Way, as featured on AliyaSKing.com.


Comments: (28)
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By: autirose on 6/19/2010 2:32PM
I love it, your natural features are beautiful. I pray you grow into your true spiritual beauty. The forehead is a mark of beauty and intelligence. Over 35 yrs I've worn my hair natural, fro and locks. I've always loved who God made me. In the 80s, after 7 years, I cut and unravelled my locks but later missed them and regrew. My stylist could be a millionaire if he had marketed what he did to my hair. He lossened my natural wave pattern. He figured it out and did it. My hair was below my shoulders and natural. To straigthen my hair or a jehri curl just didn't make sense. Decades later we learn those chemicals damage hair and brain + cause permanent baldness. Natural hair is alive, an extension of the nervous system. Himalayan Masters, African wisemen o/ spiritual people never cut or change it, note Solomon in the bible. We must express our uniqueness and reveal our natural beauty to the world for them to enjoy. I love the beauty of various races. African-Americans are a unique people, we are diverse in appearance. To know your true self is to truly love yourself. To be yourself means you have triumphantly overcome the illusionary forces that held you psychologically bound. I see so many sporting the natural and I am so proud of you all, I am beaming and my heart is filled with joy. Thank you, my young sister. Mother Wit.
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By: ahsaki2 on 8/30/2009 3:08AM
One thing's for sure, a woman is never done with her hair. She will change it again when she get's bored. As for me, I'll never go back to any form of unnaturalness with my hair. It's what God gave me. I'll only care for it, groom it, but never again strain at changing it's texture or essential nature.
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By: Sylvia Biu on 8/30/2009 3:11AM
One thing's for sure, a woman is never done with her hair. She will change it again when she get's bored. As for me, I'll never go back to any form of unnaturalness with my hair. It's what God gave me. I'll only care for it, groom it, but never again strain at changing it's texture or essential nature.
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By: rena on 8/30/2009 1:09PM
oh my, my problem is worse. I'm all natural after years of weave, braids and perm . I still have color to hide the gray. I don't know what to do how to style it, I have a big four head . My hair is shoulder length and nappy.
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By: rena on 8/30/2009 1:10PM
Aliya, you are gorgeous, I like the style you are rockin, my head is too big for that cute style
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By: SexyMamiChula on 9/13/2009 3:09AM
I love your article, your honesty. It was incredibly enjoyable and true. I have never had the confidence to leave my natural curly mess of hair down, I always feel like others wont like it, and that straight hair is always more beautiful.
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By: Bridget on 9/14/2009 10:15PM
You're gorgeous. Every single one of those pictures looked great. I'm kind of the same way. I've always hated my hair, but I don't have the guts to shave it all off.
If I had your bone structure and complexion, maybe.
The curly short style is ADORABLE.
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By: Aliya S. King on 11/12/2009 6:48PM
Thank you all for your kind words. I really, really appreciate it. My hair has grown--a LOT since I completed this article. It's definitely time for an update. Stay tuned.
-Aliya S. King
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