#BlaPoWriMo: Natural Business

Black woman with afro standing with back to camera and touching wall

“Oh, your hair is different,”
the hiring manager says as she studies
my driver’s license,
searching for a resemblance
between the tiny, blurred, scratched
photograph taken five years ago
in her hand and the woman
who sits before her.

And as much as I want to,
I don’t leap across the table,
grab her by the shoulders and shake this
blond, straight-haired woman,
who can effortlessly run
her fingers through her silky tresses
without snagging a single-strand knot,
and scream, “My hair doesn’t look like that
in the morning!”

I restrain myself,
sit erect—legs crossed—smile and nod.
After years of working low-wage jobs in
transportation and fast food,
matting down a twist-out
I spent hours perfecting the night before
underneath a sweaty cotton cap,
I finally get called for
the job of my dreams,
and the first question
my potential boss asks
is about my hair.

And although my hair
in the driver’s license photo
barely came to my chin,
was riddled with split ends,
thinned at the crown from
the strong alkali-based cream
I applied every six weeks
to tame rough, nappy new growth,
had a scalp that grew more
scabs than hair follicles
from the many times I waited by the sink
for my beautician to finish gossiping
with her other clients
about who got who pregnant
to come put out the burning
flame atop my head,
it was still better because
it was straight.

I wonder if my “different” hair
would cost me this job,
if “be yourself”
was just something you told
bullied children in school.
Workroom discrimination
only meant something if
you looked like the White
women you worked alongside,
because since the day scientists
trespassed onto African savannahs and
measured the bigger
breasts, buttocks, and labia,
of the dark-skinned “jezebel” woman,
they determined that fair
skin and hair were the
definitions of beauty and purity,
never to be defiled.
So my hair must be
pulled, ripped, burned to fit
a nonexistent, unattainable
European standard of beauty
until I become a pinned-up, painted-on
android. Not White, not Black, just there,
but acceptable because of my hair.
Straight, combed back,
uniform in Stepford fashion.

From an early age,
young girls and young boys
are indoctrinated to choose
conformity over health.
Man up!
Lose weight!
Comb your hair!

It doesn’t matter that my hair
is softer than cotton,
isn’t ruined when wet,
has grown past my bra strap,
doesn’t require heat
or flammable aerosols
to hold a spiral curl,
can reach toward the sky or
hang over my shoulders,
be pinned up into a bun or
braided down my back,
twisted to resemble locs or
curled to frame my face,
picked out into an afro or
flat ironed straight.
If it doesn’t comply
with the unwritten
clause in the dress code:
No ethnic hair!
I won’t be hired.
I’ll just look for a job where
ethnicity is required.

© 2015-2023 Nortina Simmons

Originally published March 20, 2015.

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#BlaPoWriMo: Hair Crisis

Fluff up the frizz,
pull down the coils—
I’m torn.
The song tells me
I am not my hair,
but my reflection glares
back, demanding an
explanation—
Why do I think this…
lion’s mane…
is appropriate for
the corporate office?
For walking on sidewalks
behind White women
clutching expensive purses?
For PTA meetings about
strict dress codes, bans
against colors red and blue,
bandannas in back pockets,
tank tops whose namesake
promotes domestic violence,
“distracting” hairstyles?
My afro enters the room
before I do. Everyone
turns, stares, mouths agape.
The atmosphere freezes.
I float in limbo while
they decide what to call
my hair.
It’s like a hat,
like a firework,
an overgrown bush.
Chop it down with shears,
with weed whackers.
It’s unkempt, nappy.
It is defiant toward gravity,
stiff under patting hands
molding it into a shape
more tolerable. It is
the fear of militant Negros
fist-fighting the Klansmen
buried in their backyards.
It is the severed limbs
of my enslaved ancestors
rising from my scalp,
reaching up, out, catching
freedom in the wind, in
low hanging branches, in
lost Bobby pins that
cannot tame my
ROAR!

©  2016-2023 Nortina Simmons

Originally published April 8, 2016.

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Exploited

It was enough just to hold her. The curve of her hips fit perfectly in my lap. We lay like spoons. The sun rose, filled the bedroom with bright light, and we didn’t move. It skated across the wall behind my headboard, and we barely flinched. It turned a fleshy peach and sank below the window, and we were still cocooned in the sheets, naked underneath, the heat radiating from our deep brown skin to keep us warm.

It was enough just to forage my fingers through her hair, soft like cotton balls, the tickling fur of dandelion seeds. A lock coiled around my finger, tightened, like a tiny snake suffocating its prey, and I made the mistake of wanting more. Thinking that we weren’t one whole, satisfied this day and forever, before I opened my mouth and spoke. Assuming that asking her to do something so simple as to straighten her hair wouldn’t break her heart, wouldn’t consume her with images of my hating her, trying to scrub away her dark skin, seething at the natural bush that grew from her crown.

“I get that perms have chemicals. They can damage your hair. But a flat iron?”

“Heat damage.”

I didn’t understand what that meant. Like heat stroke? Like dehydration? “I just want to be able to run my fingers through your hair, pull it when we…you know.”

“That’s such a man’s answer. Exploit my body for your sexual thrills.”

“That’s not what I meant. Just forget it.”

But she couldn’t forget it. She propped herself up on her elbows, took the other half of the covers, leaving me exposed, and wrapped them around her, concealing every inch of her body from the shoulders down. It was the first time she’d been out of my arms in eighteen hours, and it felt like carving away my own skin.

“Don’t go,” I pleaded. “I’m sorry.”

“I have to feed my dog anyway.” But we both knew Atticus lived in the yard, and if he didn’t have food in his bowl, he found it in a squirrel or a rabbit or the neighbor’s cat.

No, she couldn’t stand to be by my side anymore and let the self-hatred seep into her pores. She wanted to share all of her, all that she was, with me, but all that was on my mind was what if she looked a little more like…them.

I waited a few days to call her, to let her anger recede, but as the phone rang and rang with no answer, the echo of her voice overcame me. Exploit my body. Exploit my body. What if another man had? I only perpetuated the cycle.

© 2016 Nortina Simmons

No Holds Barred Poetry Writing Challenge: Day 20

Natural Hair Haiku

winter’s ice lowers
branch disappears amongst the
kinks atop my head

© 2015 Nortina Simmons