December 30, 2010

White People Raising Black Children.....

.....that don't properly take care of the child's hair make me want to scream.  Literally.  It makes me genuinely angry when I am out in public and I see a white family that is raising a black child and the child's hair is a hot mess.  I had this experience again today while shopping with the Hot Little Number at a local jewelers.  A white couple came into the store with a black daughter, probably age 10 or 11. Her hair was nappy, unkempt, uncombed and altogether terrible looking.  A black family with any standard about personal appearance would NEVER allow their child in the street looking the way this young lady looked. Other black people observing such a child within a black family would regard them as trifling in the extreme for taking such poor care of the child's hair.  I assume the white families I see like this love their children and want their children to of course look their best and always present their best face to the world. I also assume that as incredulous as it may seem, they simply don't know what or how to appropriately take care of a black child's hair and quite possibly live within a personal circle devoid of other black families who would be a resource to them in this regard or from which they would get a clue on the issue of hair care.  You have to make that assumption when you see a black child out with their parents and their hair looks that atrocious, because there is no other way to reconcile it. In lieu of a picture of the family I saw, I included in this post a picture of Angeline Jolie out with two of her children (for the record, I think both Zahara and Shiloh's hair look a mess, so Jolie catches a break from me for being an equal opportunity unkempt maternal hair stylist). This pic generated serious discussion at the Love Isn't Enough blog, with some people making the case that we need to get past cultural strictures about black hair care and embrace the natural hair look. To those arguments, I say, I hear where you coming from, but that's a bunch of hooey. Just like you can't roll into a job interview with your pants sagging, you can't roll through the world with your hair a hot mess.  Going natural doesn't mean going uncared for or going unkempt.

It makes me angry at the parents, because I feel like they don't have a good excuse not to know better.  This is especially true where middle class and affluent white parents are concerned.  You see other black people and their children. You can buy a magazine like Ebony or Essence and look at the pictures and see black women and girls with attractively styled hair.  You can investigate how to get your child's hair taken care of appropriately. There are white parents who have done this, so there is just not an excuse to be so neglectful in this area.  In some places, local stylists have taken a proactive approach to this issue and God bless them.  There are resources out there to consult.  White parents who have CHOSEN to raise a black child have no excuse to not be educated on this front.

I have to confess to cowardice in the face of this issue.  Every single time I have encountered such situations, I have wanted to approach the couple in question, broach the issue with them and offer to connect them to a hair stylist who could appropriately care for the child's hair.  I have never done so out of fear of giving offense and because I felt at a complete loss as to how to even begin such a conversation without giving offense.  In every case, I come away feeling the way I do right now, a hour or so after this most recent siting; angry, embarrassed (for myself and on the child's behalf) and that I have failed this black child, that I have left her in an esteem destroying situation because I didn't open my mouth. Particularly for a black female child being raised in a white family and in a predominately white community (this child was from Carmel, In), to be permitted to walk around with her hair unkempt and uncombed is simply not acceptable.  People are judged on their appearance and those judgments have consequences and generate behavioral outcomes. That child is being shaped in part by the responses of the people around her and her hair is an important part of her personal presentation.  Its a woman's crowning glory for Pete's sake.   All of which seemed lost on the parents I saw this evening.

Think I'm out of line? Well, give me your take. Assuming this situation makes you feel the same way, how would you handle it, or if you did handle it, what did you do?   I need a protocol, a way to broach this issue with total strangers in public where my window is probably 120 seconds or less.  Because I just cannot bear to fail another black child growing up in a caring, loving but clueless white family in this way.

Comments (32)

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I feel you on the potential trauma but know that many people would welcome the feedback. i have a dear friend who hooked me up with her friend who adopted a black daughter for hair care help. The mother was fearful that she would be judged if she asked for help. Its all in the approach. if you roll up on someone saying your childs head is a hot mess do not expect a welcoming attitude. if, however you approach it with " I know a style that would look so cute on your daughter- my daughter loves it and my stylist "Lisa".... Maybe you can say, is your daughter at that stage that she wants to be pampered in the hair salon yet? The possibilities of the approach are only limited by your imagination.

I would be remiss if I did not point out that the hot mess hair can happen even between biological parent and child. Hair extensions at age 2, and koolaide colors on a five year old qualify in the hot mess category as well. Many of us want to live by the each one teach one philosophy so I say take a chance, pray about the approach and do the right thing.
1 reply · active less than 1 minute ago
There's another thing to think about -- to most white people, kids hair doesn't need upkeep. Their kids. If it's clean and not getting caught in heavy machinery, it's fine. If anything, the mothers who do worry about styling and take their kids to hairdressers are seen as overly fussy and stuck up. Like you said, both of Jolie's kids have unkempt hair.

This is 100% a cultural thing. I don't think most white people would even notice if a black kid's hair was in good or bad shape. The only time I've known anyone to take a kid to a stylist for any particular work is when the kid him/herself specifically wanted it. (Two cases -- a mohawk for a boy, yes, a mohawk on a white eight year old, and a shirley temple perm for a girl.)
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2 replies · active 740 weeks ago
I agree with Phelps. Most Caucasian people are more concerned with whether their hair is clean, as opposed to whether it's styled or not. That's not to say they don't do anything with their children's hair. I've seen many Caucasian kids sporting ribbons, ponytails, braids, berets, etc., and adults with various hair styles.
Unlike the hair of Caucasian, Asian, Native American, and South Asian people, Black hair is very different in appearance and texture. I honestly don't think that many White parents would know how to take care of it, or how it should look. They might even think themselves racist for trying to make their child's hair do something it wasn't meant to do. For instance, most African people never straightened their hair until recently, as hair straightening mechanisms are a newer invention. If someone has to straighten their hair using chemicals or various mechanisms, they are trying to make it do something it's not meant to do. A White person might think that doing something like that is foolish, is not culturally sensitive, and goes against their child's racial heritage. However, I do think braids are worn by some African groups, and the parents should look into having their Black child's hair braided.
Aunt Christy's avatar

Aunt Christy · 710 weeks ago

The children in my life are my sisters three boys. Bless their hearts they were born into a family of straight blonde hair. I must admit when they come back from spending time with their father's mother the hair looks so much better. The oldest and the youngest boys hair is cut short but the middle child is holding out with his curls ( " he is never getting his hair cut") The middle child is 10. I could use some advice on a product or simple idea on how he can maintain his own hair. He is aware of how his hair looks and I know it gets to him because people do make comments like "hot mess".
When I see it is more about the damage that person is doing the child's hair in the long run. It's not just about it looking unkempt (although that's bad enough) it is more about hair breakage. I think it should be something that is talked about when their is a difference in races because it is important and to say that it isn't is delusional. I work in a elementary school and have witnessed mixed race, foster, and adopted kids being made fun of because of unkempt hair. Does this mean that their parents do not love and care for them...No, it just means that someone in the household needs to be educated on how to care for the child's hair properly. Even if they let the hair be natural it still needs some type of moisturizer to keep it from breaking off at the root. It is a matter in how you approach the person that will make all the difference.
Thanks for this post. I'm a white dude, and my wife and I are raising a black child-- a boy. I've always felt like if we don't get his hair cut regularly, take care of not only his hair but his beautiful, but sensitive skin, we are disrespecting every black person we meet . I too have noticed other adoptive families, or white parents with bi-racial children, tend to have no idea how to take care of their kids hair, or skin. The person who said white people don't care about fixing their kids hair is so true. We also have a white child, he is three, and we have never brushed or fixed his hair. We only make sure it's washed. That's how I handle my own hair, so, you know. . . White man's hair doesn't really do much. But this also speaks to the fact that white parents tend to want to wash their black children's hair too often. We only shampoo our son's hair about once per week, and otherwise just use conditioner. I feel it is disrespectful to the black culture if we don't take proper care of our son's hair. Other white people have told me "aww, who cares, it's just hair". But no, it's not just hair. It's a statement about bi-racial multi-racial and trans-racial families. We are either saying "we care", and "we get it ", (or at least, we want to) or we don't. We have to acknowledge that our black children are not always going to have the same experience as our white children, just because they grow up in the same house with the same parents. That begins with hair and skin, but unfortunately, will most likely continue with the way they are perceived and treated by *some* others. Many white parents of non-white children believe racism will cease to exist if they pretend it does.
1 reply · active 596 weeks ago
On an interesting note, I had to recently teach some friends of mine how to care for white girl hair. They are a black couple raising a little white girl (yes, that's right. They were her foster parents, and the girl's biological parents relinquished what parenting rights they had left while she was in their care. They had fallen in love with her, so they adopted her). But when I was visiting them a month or so after the adoption went through, I noticed that the little girl's long brown hair was very greasy, tangled and unkempt. After I casually pointed it out, her mother admitted she actually didn't know much about white person hair-- such as that it needs to be washed more often than black hair but can still get really frizzy and "poofy", and the longer it gets, the more tangled it gets if not brushed regularly. I just thought it was really interesting, since everyone's always talking about how white parents of black children don't know how to care for their hair.
1 reply · active 625 weeks ago
Thanks for this. If my baby black girl needed hair help I would very much appreciate it (as a white man).
1 reply · active 606 weeks ago
Not only add resources for white people, but also get this site out there better. I've been researching how to care for children's African American hair for 2 years and there's not much there.
As a white person with well kept black children, I would like to put out there that many black women seem unapproachable and judgmental because you probably took those poor black kids from their home, just put your head down and push forward with your inquiry. Especially if you love your black child. As white people, we need to remember that racism is very much alive. As black people, you need to remember that not everyone is a racist. It's scary world for many people.
Let me add to this conversation, whitey here speaking. You have got to get off this deal about hair, greasing it down and not washing it for a week or so does not mean you provide your hair with better care. Look at that little girl again, she is perfect, her hair is fine. Be proud of what you have and stop trying to make yourself look like others. I think her hair is perfectly fine and we should all be so lucky to have Angelina for a mother. Dont worry Angelina will have the resources to care for her hair and probably is making her be proud of her hair anyway she wears it.
I have to confess to cowardice in the face of this issue. Every single time I have encountered such situations, I have wanted to approach the couple in question, broach the issue with them and offer to connect them to a hair stylist who could appropriately care for the child's hair,Great,thank you so much for sharing this post

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