Thursday, January 19, 2012

Luscious Locks


Although I took the class and enjoy doing Naomi's lock retightening, we usually go back to our loctician for maintenance. I just haven't done it enough to go from being painfully slow to just plain ole slow! LOL!!! And with hectic schedules, time is valuable.

We've cut the bangs twice and it didn't seem to bother anything at all. Despite compliments from every direction, Naomi's is still young and longs for the option to straighten her hair and add extensions. I keep trying to tell her that her locks are better than extensions, but she disagrees. They are not straight. I look forward to the day when she appreciates her natural head of luscious hair. I just hope I can get her to leave her locks in until that time arrives.

Ciao for now!

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Long locks


Wow! Naomi's locks are getting so long! And she is finally starting to like them more.

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Beautiful Bangs

Naomi's locks are growing fast! Even though she would like to cut her bangs, they are not locked in well enough.... and look so darn cute the way they are!


Saturday, October 3, 2009

Crazy Hair Day!!!


Sunday, June 28, 2009

Summer Lovin'

After some initial struggles we've reached a place where Naomi is much happier overall with her locs. Her hair is growing fast and she loves getting the length! It is also starting to "fall" instead of look quite so full. And if baby is happy, Mama is happy!!!



Friday, May 22, 2009

My first solo retightening

I hope I get faster as I practice locking!!! (Laughing) It took me four 'sessions' and way too many hours to do this my first time. My poor, sweet daughter.

Session 1: (One DVD long) - front section done
Session 2: (Approx 3 hours) - working at my locktician house with a help on a few locks and some mentoring - most of one back side section done
Session 3: (Another DVD) - both side back sections and part of middle section done
Session 4: (Yes, we watch allot of movies!) - FINISHED!! But poor Naomi was crying big tears rolling down her cheeks. Poor darling! I kept asking her how she was doing but couldn't see her face from the back. I couldn't get her to tell me if it hurt, she was just tired, frustrated, mad/sad at having to do this all the time, or what. So, I guess it was probably a combination of all of them.

The next retightening I have scheduled with my locktician. Hallelujah!

I think part of the slowness in this last one, aside from my inexperience, is that I really worked hard on separating. By the time I got to the back, it had been a week since I started the front and I did not re-separate before continuing. So each row and each loc took extra time.

But we are already starting to see a difference in length! So in between wanting to cut it off "like a boy" and wishing she had her "own" hair again (sigh! part of the purpose of locs is so she does have her "own" hair), Naomi is excited to have long hair! We'll get there, and Mom will get better too. :-)


Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Surviving the Sisterlocks training class

Naomi's Mom speaks:

When I mentioned I was going to take a four-day training class to learn to do the Sisterlocks myself, I was often asked -- how can it take four days to learn? I must admit I wondered that myself but I was sure that it must. They've been around long enough to know.

WOW! I've now been filled to the overflowing with information on hair type and texture and how to analyze it, health and safety considerations, locking techniques, problem solving, running a professional business, product knowledge, and styling tips. I"M EXHAUSTED!!!!

Also, in my naivety I though I could walk out of the class and start whipping through Naomi's re-tightenings. I've already run to my consultant in a panic begging to be squeezed into her schedule. We've worked it out so I'm going to start at home on my own - let's see how far we get (I was pretty okay with it until she said "and if you can lock Naomi's hair you can lock anybody's hair!") - and then go to her house to complete the retightening with her available as an overseer and mentor (with some time allowed in case she has to save my sanity and finish up for me).

The Sisterlocks Training Class:

Listening and learning ...


Our patient models!!!! Mine is front and center -- I'm gonna just have to name her too as we've spent some quality time together!


Practice, practice, practice ... we had to finish 50 locks each night. I don't know about the rest of them, but for me that was about a 4 hour process! And then on the last day we had TIME TRIALS!!!!!! Yikes!


And even more intimidating - but ever so valuable - we had to practice on a live human being. Thanks so much Martell for being sooo patient!


The May 2009 Sistas of the Sisterlocks sisterhood ... forever locked together by our experience.


P.S. If you're having trouble picking me out, just let me know and I'll give ya-all a hint!

Day to Day

Most days Naomi sleeps with her hair loose. Morning hair is tousled and wild, but a scarf or wrap leaves it too flat (and doesn't allow her hair to breath).




Braiding up for swimming -- these are box braids and then tied back into loose pigtails. It looks lumpy and clunky and make her self-conscious, but once in the pool she takes out the two ties and after her hair is soaked it hangs down nicely. But it is not attractive enough a style to leave in and too time consuming to be a workable solution for summer when she swims every day, so we're looking at other options.



Monday, April 6, 2009

What Not To Do

I am learning good lessons about "our" locs.

1. DO NOT let your daughter (or do so yourself) dunk her head under the faucet, without then separating the locs.

A spritz does not always do the trick after waking up with bed-head. Naomi had gotten into the habit of a quick soak to let her hair dry hanging down and help combat the morning messies and her natural fullness. There was no rubbing or twisting or other manipulation so I was not encouraging separation afterwards.

2. DO NOT forget about the bundling and banding - and heaven-forbid - separating when going to the pool for hours of hair being wet and floating around freely.

The kids were on spring break recently and I was at work. "Can we go swimming?" Sure! Did bundling her locs even enter my mind? No!

3. DO NOT go for several weeks without separating just because you haven't "officially washed" the hair.

Up to this point, separating had been relatively easy and we have had few tangles. In fact, I wondered how it happened that people talked about locs combining together. Well! Last week we were scheduled for our second re-tightening. I had only washed and separated once since the last time, so the night before our appintment I dutifully got ready to wash and separate. Old habits may die hard, but new ones "live" hard! Can you believe I popped her in the tub without bundling and banding! I realized it as I was soaking down her hair. Too late! I washed gently and then we started the separation process.

It was horrible! The combination of all of the above had created mattes and tangles between almost every loc. It took us forever and there were several -- especially down by the nape of the neck where her hair is the most curly and it gets the most "rubbing" -- that I actually had to snip the locs apart! I think it will be okay, but it gave me a stomach-ache thinking about the damage it may do to the integrity of the locs in the future. Argh!

A valuable lesson in proper loc care.

Sunday the kids went to the pool again. I carefully braided and banded Naomi's locs. But even with taking great care, they were difficult to unbraid and had many tangles - though they came out fairly easily. Up to that point I had hoped that for summer when they swim every day, I could just make smaller braids and leave them in for a week at a time. I don't think so! The motion of the water causes all of the hair to float around into tangly patterns it would not ordinarily do, even with a shampooing. A swimming cap has been suggested, but it is difficult to get her to wear one as it pulls on her hair, is hot, and bruises her 9 year old ego.

Additionally, I am disappointed with how frizzy and fuzzy her locs get. Right after tightening they look really nice, but a few nights sleep or one trip to the pool and we are dealing with the same issues that we had with cornrows and braids. I think (and hope and pray) that when they are more mature and "locked" that this will not be the case.

I'm really looking forward to the consultant training in a few weeks when I can not only become more infomed, but can pose my questions to the professionals and hopefully leave with solutions. Don't despair, we still love the locs and just needs to get through these lumps and bumps (pun intended, which those with locs will understand)!

Sunday, March 8, 2009

P-a-t-i-e-n-c-e

I've been very happy with the locs so far. It is so much easier to manage on a day-to-day basis. It is literally wash and wear -- or sleep and go as the case may be. Maybe a quick spritz with water or pulling the front up into a loose top knot. Wow! Sometimes I think I am not happy with larger size in the back but I think it will work out fine as they mature and I get used to the look. I'm also pleased that once we washed all of it and the hair had a chance to dry naturally (vs the stiffer look of freshly installed or tightened locs) the unevenness of cut is much less noticeable.


Naomi goes back and forth between whether she likes them or not. I think she pictured them longer and is disappointed that they are not (most of the other girls she saw before getting them already had longer hair). I also think she is just not used to sporting a looser look, and her hair is very full! We have had many a talk about p-a-t-i-e-n-c-e.

Normal separating after a shampoo, soaking, or swim only takes about 15 minutes! I had done one quick recount where I got 388 locks, but when I washed it last night to get it ready for today's retightening, I counted slowly and carefully and got 390 locks. Separating today took about 35 minutes, but according to our locktician I wasn't getting close enough around the base as there was still some tangling. So I guess my record time will increase. Oh well! Still isn't nearly as difficult as I had imagined.

Here we are shampooed, separated, and ready to tighten



And after retightening . . .


And then adding the front done in nice loose cornrows and beads, all ready for school!

Monday, February 16, 2009

YIPPEE!

Here's a happy Naomi with her happy Sisterlocks-tician . . .

Monday, February 16

We're done!!! We had two mini-sessions today and finished with 404 locs. I'll do a re-count next time we shampoo and separate, just to make sure our notes were correct. We spent a little more than 35 hours with our loctician, and with stretch breaks and other interruptions, the Sisterlocks probably took around 28-30 hours. Some small fussing aside, Naomi did great with the long periods of sitting. We watched allot of movies!!!

Since it took so long to finish some of the first sections are almost ready for retightening. In fact, our loctician did a few of the front ones today, and we will go for our first re-tightening session in a couple of weeks.

Naomi's locs are still a bit fuzzy at the tip due to her hair texture, and even though the locs are done as close to the tip as possible, a bit at the tip is left a little looser to encourage the locking process. The whole tendril will "lock up" from the tip to the scalp and get more "mature" as time goes on.

I was upset to find that Naomi's hair, especially a section on the left side, was cut very unevenly. Several months ago I took Naomi to an Ethiopian salon for a trim, thinking they would be familiar with her hair type and able to do a good job. I wasn't happy with it at the time, and now that I see that it has such a huge snafu, I am even more unhappy. But what can you do? I am only sad that once the locs are mature and we are able to trim it and shape it up, that we will have to lose allot of length to make it even.

Lovin' our locs . . .