getting out of a funk
29:44
2 ай бұрын
starting the journey to confidence
12:49
yall don't like natural hair.
4:52
Пікірлер
@dariapio1502
@dariapio1502 2 күн бұрын
Trini massive 🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹
@edithchinyere7387
@edithchinyere7387 2 күн бұрын
My mom wears her natural hair 😊 and It is not long cause she did a big chop .
@misslori9725
@misslori9725 2 күн бұрын
I have natural hair, but I would NEVER wear my unstretched hair in public. To each their own.
@markellrivera9643
@markellrivera9643 2 күн бұрын
Girl we are 7 months in and you tell me these things now?!…no fr I really appreciated this video as someone who is just turning 20 and only started his natural hair journey a year ago, I’m definitely subscribing 🫰🏾 6:41
@gwms1102
@gwms1102 3 күн бұрын
I like natural hair, and I like relaxers. Both are beautiful. I’m natural and I’m thinking about growing out my natural hair and going back to relax. I like my hair long, not high like an Afro. So, I may go back to relax. That’s just my preference. If I could train my hair to go long and down instead of up in a fro and be natural at the same time I would probably keep it. I say probably because I like no fuss too. I admire what you say. I just think people should just do what makes you happy. I’m mentally disabled, and I think it’s important for people to just forget outsiders. Think about it and do what puts a smile on your heart. Not just your face. Much love.💗
@tommiegreen
@tommiegreen 5 күн бұрын
I love how you articulate your thoughts. That is all.
@Ase-sb1hk
@Ase-sb1hk 6 күн бұрын
Hey Saiuri, thank you so much for this video! How do you then style your hair everyday in between washes? I did this today but now how do I "freshen up" my hair tomorrow morning?
@chart3963
@chart3963 8 күн бұрын
We are all on the journey to self love and it’s a long road because we have been stopped so many times along the way and told that we are not enough in our natural state. That said, some of us are further along than others. I encourage others by wearing my natural hair loud and proud. Hopefully, it will give others the courage to do the same until it becomes the norm.🙏🏾
@chelseasmith2943
@chelseasmith2943 10 күн бұрын
I love you, your videos, and your content, and I'm so happy I found your channel. Thanks for migrating to KZfaq. We need you over here. You are a real one, super funny, smart intelligent, and cute as a button. I'm definitely a fan.
@chelseasmith2943
@chelseasmith2943 10 күн бұрын
I love natural hair. The people around me dont. For example, I have 4 daughters, and we range from 3c-4c type hair. My mom has type 2 hair. She could not get an afro if she tried. When I let my girls wear their hair in a ponytail with the natural puff, she shames us and says their hair looks, dry, and that it needs to be combed. When in reality it is detangled and very soft. All the Negro girls at school wear weaves, braids, twists, or wigs. The other are bi-racial and have a different hair type. My girl dont see a reflection of their type of hair among their age group because it's always covered up with artificial hair. I strive every day to encourage my daughters to embrace their natural hair. They rock sleek natural ponytails with a natural puff. I wear low buns with a middle part. Murray beeswax edge control and clear gel are my go-to.
@sigh_yuri
@sigh_yuri 10 күн бұрын
ion have a substack no more, sorry. 🤣
@laladesy7352
@laladesy7352 12 күн бұрын
That ending is so real because I have family members who do this. The bark about not having a relaxer and shame women who are but the keep wigs of that look nothing like their natural hair 🤔. I love my natural hair but the natural hair community is screwed up and highly texturist.
@kayla3972
@kayla3972 14 күн бұрын
@rosezenamilloy8618
@rosezenamilloy8618 15 күн бұрын
Hey Saiuri, Thank-you so much for this video, it’s been an eye-opener for me! I feel for us as black women because we’ve been miseducated in so many ways that are hurtful to us especially when it comes to our hair. Whether it’s to line the pockets of cooperations seeking to make a dollar off us or those of our own desperate to make a come-up off our ignorance. Which is why it’s so refreshing and such a relief to see honest videos like these. I had a couple of questions on things within the video I was unclear about. What is a hair topper and why is it needed? And do you use the daily conditioner listed in your description everyday?
@xXJade_AssassinXx
@xXJade_AssassinXx 16 күн бұрын
So Im an afro-punk girl, 4a-4b with some 3c on the bottom lol and my non-stretch hair is at 12" fluff / 20" stretched - I agree with some points but want to share: 1.) Hair Grows Best Greasy In primal times, humans didnt wash their hair often, its exactly like how animals don't wash their fur often. Stripping hair impacts it's integrity because it relies on an oily environment to retain water. Your hair shouldn't be full of product, but it should feel kind of lush with product tbh. Notice how white ppl complain about greasy hair, but struggle with dryness and breakage due to over-washing. Hair should be somewhat greasy like how leaves are waxy to protect the water inside. 2.) Products With Water DO Moisturize If your hair is not moisturized, it will never "feel" moisturized. The main ingredient in most butters is water; butters deposit water molecules onto your hair strands and the oil in them helps retain the moisture, which is why your hair feels moisturized by a product. Its just osmosis in a jar. That said, some products do this better than others - thats the diff between good quality and bad quality. 3.) Genetics Play a MINOR Role Science wise, hair grows an average of .5" a month world wide. Sure, some ppl grow slower or faster, but that's rare af. Africans do not have slower hair growth as a race - the physics of our hair is the difference compared to other races. Physics wise, a bent object is weakest at it's bent points; one strand of our hair can have dozens of weak points. Our fight is not genetics, its physics 😅. Reducing breakage as much as possible increases length retention. 4.) DO NOT CUT YOUR HAIR I can not stress this enough during growth time. There is a weird idea that split ends will somehow ever do enough damage to stop growth, but as professional explained: "Afro hair is prone to breakage, so usually split ends come off long before they're a problem." Makes sense because if the hair splits, its going to hit a bend in the hair, weaken it further and snap off at 0.0001cm 😂. Thats why she recommended *waiting until you reach your growth goals before trimming off and split ends still present.* No need to lose your 0.5" or more of hardwork. 5.) Finger Detangle Always The "snares" or ridiculous balls of tangles that decide to just exist at the end of our hair, is normal. The natural way of human grooming is finger detangling. Do not cut them off, do not rake them to oblivion with the comb or detangle brush - take your time to pick them apart. 99% of the strands in that snare are healthy hair, they just snagged at some point and decided to not let go 😂. Oil helps a lot with preventing this - drier hair snares a LOT more than moisturized hair, and being a bit greasy helps the strands slip n slide rather than snare. 6.) Wash Day Aint A Thing Burn me at the stake, but I have almost 21" of hair, a very lush fro and it takes me 1 hour to wash, condition and dry. We do not need to take any of the multitude of additional steps shown on social media. Our hair does not to washing well like other hair types because of the shape. Our hair doesnt get "dirty" as easy because of the shape as well. Afro hair has a ribbon shape with less sulfuric bonds to facilitate very efficient heat dissipation off the head. *Water can insulate heat* (think a boiler system,) not good for protecting us from the hot azz environment in which our ancestors came. Our hair feels "thirsty" because it is optimized to actually get rid of excess water. I wash my hair once a month, 1 hour wash time. It smells like a fruit salad and no, it does not look greasy or dirty. I still moistiurize it daily 😂. Our hair will naturally evaporate off a lot of excess product & water. It will hold what it can, and by its shape, basically send excess off into the universe. That said, you'll learn your hair's product & water balance, to where you are not blowing money on too much product, or over using it. I say all this not to undermine, it was a great video just made me want to discuss is all. I recovered from 6" of hair length after my hair was melted by a relaxer. Hit 12" of fluff last month and 20" stretched just not listening to the natural hair (sponsored) community. We need more wholesome girlies like you not pushing products but sense and science honestly. Growing afro hair is not hard once you know why it is how it is.
@duckman2480
@duckman2480 5 күн бұрын
What hair type is the majority of your hair? That’s your hair type. Stop the 4A/4B shit.
@WilliamsPinch
@WilliamsPinch 17 күн бұрын
Licensed cosmetologist here (10yrs+)… and you pretty much nailed most of this. Have patience with your audience, as some of these truths are hard learned.
@WilliamsPinch
@WilliamsPinch 17 күн бұрын
Roll those eyes into next week 💅🏽
@stephniay
@stephniay 17 күн бұрын
Now, I'm seeing a lot of people stressing length when the point of her video is about hair health. Honestly you can do whatever you want but just because it works for you doesn't mean it won't work for someone else. I've done no oils and i saw my hair health was better than when i was using oils. Does it mean using oils is bad? Yes if you aren't doing it properly and No if you're doing it properly. Its all about moisturising that hair at the end of the day. The hair has to stay moisturised. A lot of you seem to think she's talking out of her ass like as if she hasn't gathered this information from experiences and facts from the same licenced hairstylists you went to. If you don't agree with it fine, but don't make somebody out to be a villain just because she said something you don't agree with and omg someone here said "im not going to take advice from someone with shorter hair than me" 😐 lets continue black people hating each other shall we?
@smelly1060
@smelly1060 Күн бұрын
"im not going to take advice from someone with shorter hair than me" - this statement is fucking deranged, all the greasy gremlins came out the woodwork for this one and it's so sad that even when natural some of our people will do the most just to still reach the 'beauty' standards we tryna get away from by staying natural. long hair ≠ HEALTHY HAIR, shiny hair ≠ HEALTHY HAIR, stretched hair ≠ HEALTHY HAIR. This might seem unrelated but this is damn near the same exact issue with fatphobia and toxic diet culture an all that, instead of focusing eating the right things getting the right movements and enough sleep and water they do everything else to lose weight but once you're healthy you'll be at the right weight for YOU. Once you focus on your hair's health fundementally it'll be whatever length it needs to be
@mlen7149
@mlen7149 18 күн бұрын
I agree that some ppl don't hv the straight up love for natural hair of all natural colors, grains, lengths, curl patterns, etc. We must encourage our naturalistas to understand that ALL natural hair is beautiful ❤
@Jasmine-uu2xo
@Jasmine-uu2xo 19 күн бұрын
Ancient Africans knew how to take care of their. This "anti-stretch" liberation comes from trying to combat eurocentrism but stretching in the form of braids locs twists and threading has existed for thousands of years before that. Wearing the hair unstyled or unkkempt in some peoples cases (because we have a bad habit of neglect) is not the ultimate symbol of black pride. These anti-stretch girls really want us to walk around with 2 inches of hair on our head to validate their "pride" There are black people with hair 2x the size of their body because they love it and take care of it. Locs twists braids and threading are black styles designed to maintain/retain hair as well as a form of expression and identity. How is doing black styles= self hate?. This girl makes valid points but leaves out the reasons why many black women feel uncomfortable with their hair. There a lot of women who hide from their texture at all costs but can you really sit up on your high horse and blame them? As black women we get judged 10x harder for existing and have to endure racism and conditioning over our hair. You're leaving out the obvious reason many of us don't want to see our hair and it's the texturism + racism we receive from it. Being denied jobs, having people think you're homeless, made to feel less feminine, treated poorly etc..... We can't stop our obsession with comparing our hair care practices to other textures. We want to be like the girls who "don't have to do anything" to their hair. Those girls still have to maintain and take care of their straight/wavy hair. Our texture is tangle-prone and is more difficult to keep moisturized due to its parallel growth. Sebum can't travel upwards with our hair so our routines revolve around stretch, moisturize and protective style to prevent breakage. It has nothing do with not wanting to see it and everything to do with wanting to take care of it. Different textures require different routines. Black women are women too and most women desire traits that are deemed feminine. Why are we being demonized for wanting to grow it out? Ya'll are not happy until we are all bald and rocking fades or super short hair. The new generation of black women are disconnected from that past due to years of colonization and programmed self hate to the point where we believe long hair is not in our DNA and it's eurocentric to take care, maintain, and grow it out. Stretching is not self-hate it is maintenance
@africancoils
@africancoils 19 күн бұрын
Stretching afro textured hair helps to prevent knots and tangles, which can lead to breakage. Stretching our hair can also help us to keep moisture in our hair for longer. Oils can be extremely beneficial for the hair. Coconut Oil has been found to prevent hygral fatigue. Rice Bran Oil can strengthen the hair and Brazil nut oil can help to prevent split ends
@RAJOHN-ke7mc
@RAJOHN-ke7mc 19 күн бұрын
You speak so assuredly about these chemists. These are the same people who barely acknowledged black hair. You seem to be very bothered about people wanting to diy as if the time and money are yours.. I cannot undee any circumstance use harsh sulfates on my hair. On the other hand, my daughter can use them withoit issue As for trimming, i only trim twice a yeae and that is enough for me. Every three months is absolute over kill Youre thr typical natural hair militant that people cant stand.
@RAJOHN-ke7mc
@RAJOHN-ke7mc 19 күн бұрын
Girl i ageee about the stretched vs unstretched. A woman asked me to stretch my hair and asked her , why She was embarrassed which was the plan I disagree with you about oils and butters. I use them sparingly and I use grease.
@ch3rries724
@ch3rries724 21 күн бұрын
Mmmm I don’t know about this take… personally my hair feels best when I oil and grease my hair and leave it in a protective style for 2/3 weeks.
@MissWyatt
@MissWyatt 21 күн бұрын
You have really beautiful eyes! You're dangerous girlie!! ❤😊
@wontoms
@wontoms 21 күн бұрын
I just realized that all the oils, butters and creams I was using for the longest time didn’t actually moisturize my hair, it just made everything greasy. If my hair strands feel dry and brittle yet my scalp feels oily, itchy and sticky, that’s my hair basically suffocating and screaming for help. My hair feels and looks the best after I wash it with a clarifying shampoo and follow up with a deep conditioner since the water can penetrate the follicles and properly moisturize them without that barrier of product. The build-up issue wasn’t due to “harsh”chemicals either, as I used 100% pure shea butter and castor oil. There’s no reason why I detangle my hair using the LCO method in the morning and get a full afro that feels as soft as a cloud only for it to feel like a dead bush by midday with my split ends clearly visible.
@Kay-Renee
@Kay-Renee 21 күн бұрын
it never sits right with me when someone with much less hair than me claims that everything i'm doing is wrong, then state their (not suggestions, not personal experience) straight up "facts" on the right way. Well you said it best, black hair isn't that hard to take care of, you're just taking advice from people who don't know what they're talking about.
@shanyam12
@shanyam12 20 күн бұрын
so just because her hair isn’t long what she’s saying can’t have any true to it? that’s so dumb 😂
@shanyam12
@shanyam12 20 күн бұрын
like the short hair comment was so unnecessary
@stephniay
@stephniay 17 күн бұрын
I agree, what does hair length have to do with this?​@@shanyam12
@xXJade_AssassinXx
@xXJade_AssassinXx 16 күн бұрын
Yes and no - she prob started her hair journey but it getting results and shared her tips...er facts I guess lol? I stop taking advice from short naturals after it's been 8 mos and no change in length, because it means too much breakage still.
@Bl00m02
@Bl00m02 21 күн бұрын
🌻 Listening to Ariana and Newjeans in the shower is the sweetest feeling to me ☺️💙
@kokomel23
@kokomel23 21 күн бұрын
I read the comments before watching the video and I was expecting nonsense, but I’m glad I watched! I agree with everything you said. I never considered the part about the length of my hair when it’s curly vs straight but that, too, makes sense! Also, a couple people mentioned you sound militant about some of the things you said, but I didn’t notice that. You’re teaching/sharing info! Straight and to the point. I appreciate this information. Thank you! New subscriber here! 🤗
@sigh_yuri
@sigh_yuri 21 күн бұрын
im glad you liked the video! the militant comments get me; im literally just talking 🥸
@fortress1677
@fortress1677 21 күн бұрын
Thank you. I just finished my sophomore year in high school. All sophomores are forced to take aquatics. Because of this, i had to swim in chlorine for an entire two months. I did my best to preseve my hair by conditioning, washing, and oiling it before and after every swim. However, it destroyed the confidence i had in my hair. As soon as the class ended, I hadn't worn my natural hair out since mid december. Its almost mid-july, and i still havent worn my natural hair out as it is (without extensions or anything) since mid december. I was just about to do a crochet style today, when i put my comb down and decided that i will wear my natural hair out again. I didnt realize until today how scared I was to wear my hair as is. I'm only 16 and i dont want to feel like this. its because of people that i get a little insecure of my hair. its the "oh your hair is different today" "is it real?" "Can i touch it?" "I thought your hair was longer" that made me never want to wear my hair out. Recently i have just been wishing my hair was straight- which was the final blow for me to realize i need to wear my back in its cute little afro puffs.Natural hair is beautiful, and the opinions of others do not negate that. ❤️
@zara1883
@zara1883 21 күн бұрын
You are fierce beyond your years.
@nae990
@nae990 22 күн бұрын
wild poppy is one of my favorite scents
@lorraine70
@lorraine70 22 күн бұрын
Maybe it doesn't have anything to do with liking their hair or not but the bigger picture
@SunflowerScentedFro
@SunflowerScentedFro 22 күн бұрын
REAL!
@qetsiyah1766
@qetsiyah1766 22 күн бұрын
I get confused when people say genetics are needed for hair growth. In my personal experience, I’ve had family members struggle to grow their natural hair, but once they get locs, their hair growth takes off. What gives?
@domraonix
@domraonix 22 күн бұрын
Locs are less likely to break than loose hair. It is basically healthy and dead hair pacted together really tightly. Thats why it appears that their hair grows faster. They are just retaining length
@CoilyCode
@CoilyCode 22 күн бұрын
@@qetsiyah1766 all healthy human beings either healthy hair practices, no matter the race, can grow long hair. What is genetically determined is the rate at which it grows
@qetsiyah1766
@qetsiyah1766 21 күн бұрын
@@domraonix That definitely makes sense. For naturals without locs, I feel like moisture is key. I’ve been using castor oil lately, and I’ve had a lot less breakage and have thereby retained length. I guess people need to find the product that keeps their hair and scalp moisturized. For me, it’s castor oil.
@notwwwansik
@notwwwansik 22 күн бұрын
You beautiful🥰
@AlsoKnownAs-to1xc
@AlsoKnownAs-to1xc 22 күн бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@nay2670
@nay2670 22 күн бұрын
Girl…. I was so prepared to enjoy this but girl what are you talking about 😭 half of what u saying not adding up Idk who gave you this information lol
@lunamufon
@lunamufon 21 күн бұрын
BGC😂😂
@scarsscars2424
@scarsscars2424 22 күн бұрын
YES GURL. This has had to be said for a loooooong time. Let's normalize our own hair, like it's OUR hair? Why is it such a topic? Please. We have been brainwashed by the media and western world unfortunately. Girls just let your hair be! Fall in love with it please I promise you what God gave you is beautiful.
@lynch8418
@lynch8418 22 күн бұрын
Unfortunately I’ve noticed over the years the “genetics” talk gets people very upset. I think because there was so much misinformation for the sake of content creators wanting views and selling products or sometimes their ignorance. I have kids, two of them are on both sides of the spectrum. Same mother and father but one hair grows very quickly dense and thick. Grows quickly without doing anything, barely if ever moisturized and his hair grew extremely long before cutting it when he was four. I would braid his hair and it would reach his diaper. And now he has to get cuts frequently. Now my daughter remained pretty much bald until she was four. And now has fine relatively slow growing hair. We always have to take genetics into consideration. And embrace our genetics.
@qetsiyah1766
@qetsiyah1766 22 күн бұрын
Yeah the genetics thing confuses me. People in my family have struggled to grow their natural hair, but once they get locs, their hair growth takes off.
@WilliamsPinch
@WilliamsPinch 17 күн бұрын
Yep! Terminal length varies from person to person. So not everyone can have long hair.
@WilliamsPinch
@WilliamsPinch 17 күн бұрын
@@qetsiyah1766 locs keep shed hair. So it’s not an accurate representation of how long your hair can grow.
@qetsiyah1766
@qetsiyah1766 16 күн бұрын
@@WilliamsPinch how do you know if you are at your terminal length? do you have to get a genetics test or something? I find that my hair grows, but I don’t realize it until I straighten it. I only straighten it once a year. I’m like “my hair isn’t growing” then I straighten it and I’m like omg what is this hair. So idk, shrinkage is frustrating. I just want to grow my curls long enough so they’ll be as long as they look when straightened. I don’t have locs, so I can’t mimic the lack of breakage, but I’ve found that keeping my hair moisturized allows me to retain length. So we’ll see.
@cyberspace7208
@cyberspace7208 22 күн бұрын
When I wash my hair with striping shampoos, drench it, braid it, its bone, bone dry in three days. Some of this doesn't hold truth to any part of the body, not even skin. Drenching your body in water without a sealant will result in faster evaporation, dry, flaking, ashy skin. The same goes for hair.
@lunamufon
@lunamufon 21 күн бұрын
If you use oils, creams, butters, moisturizers or conditioners, that's fine. You have to do what works best for your hair... The nonb messed up a lot of people's hair, it made their hair dry and crispy... resulting in breakage, velcro ends, midshaft splits.
@randomafricana
@randomafricana 22 күн бұрын
Not me watching this whilst sealing my leave-in with coconut oil 😊😃
@notwwwansik
@notwwwansik 23 күн бұрын
I don't wear wigs at all, I don't braid my hair, I wear my natural hair.
@NPhilome
@NPhilome 23 күн бұрын
Appeal the authority gets old. Ppl lie.
@SkyeID
@SkyeID 23 күн бұрын
"babe, wake up! Saiuri just dropped another video!"
@Non-random_Earthling
@Non-random_Earthling 23 күн бұрын
Your tone is militant especially when talking about oils and butters. Many naturals use them with success, and others not so much. Regarding stretching hair, some may do it to get an idea of the "overall " or "general" length of their hair and that can be validating for them. That is perfectly fine. Others like me find that it makes the hair more manageable and less susceptible to breakage. It also provides the choice to rock my hair in a coily state, or smooth it down for a different look without the use of heat (using the African threading method). So yes, naturals should do what makes their own hair thrive whether u agree with that concept or not.
@kunarii5671
@kunarii5671 22 күн бұрын
This! 👏
@kunupinyana
@kunupinyana 23 күн бұрын
🥰tysm for these hair videos.
@gotgreaseafterdark4404
@gotgreaseafterdark4404 23 күн бұрын
Genetics & water?!? 😂you have a long long hair journey ahead of you 😂 Lmaoooo
@lunamufon
@lunamufon 21 күн бұрын
😂😂😂
@EgertonGrant
@EgertonGrant 23 күн бұрын
oh no 2.5 hours plus shower,😂.
@CheekyLovesCheeseCake.
@CheekyLovesCheeseCake. 23 күн бұрын
Butters and oils work for me. I avoided them for the longest because I just don't like the feel of grease/oil based products but my hair has been flourishing ever since 😫
@ratdog6317
@ratdog6317 22 күн бұрын
same thing for me i stopped using them for a while and my hair became very hard to manage
@memonos
@memonos 22 күн бұрын
Same thing with me my dermatologist told me to not use them because my skin might break out but last year I started mixing my own hair oils and butters and it helped with the frizz and dryness even my hair grew a lot more than I expected.