Look, before I go in as deep as I'm about to go, I'm really going to need you guys to understand a few things.
Yes, Yeezus/ Kanye is an amazing artist, he experiments and honestly takes his music craft as an artist would with their paintings or other mediums. Pushing the limits, testing new styles, and personifying themselves through each piece done.
I respect Kanye musically.
However, after witnessing his garments from the Yeezy Fall 2016 Ready To Wear collection at NYFW, I've finally garnered an unpleasant taste in my mouth.
Yes, Yeezy is new to the game of being a fashion designer and putting on runway shows. Kanye's first official NYFW show debuted in the Fall 2015 RTW season.
But, absolutely. but to the tenth degree, I've seen close to no improvement or fresh adaptations in his design skills.
Yes, as Rihanna said "Yeah, I Said It".
My social media has been bombarded with praise for Kanye's collection and I can't scroll for less than 2 minutes without seeing his models in his tried and true same as before vision.
Now, I'm not just speaking out of my ass while writing this. I actually took the time to investigate his garments from this NYFW, watched the show, and sat and really thought this through.
And I've decided.
The only reason why people are freaking out about this collection is because Yeezus did it. Honestly, if another designer did the same old designs he did, the fashion world, fashion journalists, and style lovers would be dragging him through the dirt and laughing their asses off while they strut those said asses off to watch another show.
Though, I will say this. I did enjoy the strong, silent, and slightly intimidating style of modeling Kanye went for. Travis Scott with his crazy adorned braids, the utter amount of diversity with various melanin shades, and the energy in the air for die hard fans of Ye.
But, how many times are you going to adorn female models in spandex/panty hose-esque/ jumper material? Who are you selling these moth eaten, more than just distressed, practically destroyed sweaters for?
Damn Yeezy...is your aesthetic homeless man on the street?
Is your aesthetic always gonna be like this?
Here's the pictures from Kanye's recent NYFW and his first one:
Can you tell which is from his Yeezy Fall 2016 RTW and his Yeezy Fall 2015 RTW?
Shit, I thought I was seeing the same thing so much so, I just thought Ye recycled cause he couldn't be bothered making anything new.
In any case, the top two are from his first 2015 RTW, and the bottom his recent showcase.
However, I will say this, Kanye's strong points seem to reside in outerwear/ jackets. The structure, design, and personality of his jackets are appealing.
Kanye's jackets are surely something I can see people wear as they're walking down the streets of NYC, or even something I can see myself wearing. Shearling coats, with an edge and air of "don't you dare fuck with me" is Yeezus' calling card and greatest design strength so far.
But this?
These damn body suits are tired, those ratty dumpster thrifted sweaters are beyond unwearable, and his aesthetic needs major revamps.
I also want to point out how tired it really is to hear people ride Kanye's coat tails just because he is Kanye. It is so evident people are not truly dissecting this collection properly.
I'm not saying I'm an expert.
But I am saying I majored in Fashion Design, I do regularly watch and digest every Fashion Week around the globe and watch each show through the available sources, I do read other fashion journalists' work and take their perspective into consideration, and that I take the world of fashion very seriously and don't care for hype. I care if a collection hits the spot, if it delivers, if it shows progress or advancement on the part of the designer, and basically if it lights something inside me that forces me to have some sort of soft spot or sweet taste in my palette.
Yeezy Season 3 don't do any of that shit.
At all.
People need to stop d**k riding, start thinking for themselves, stop kissing a celebrity's ass and eat whatever they put out just cause it is them.
Follow a designer, praise a collection, or support because it inspires you or calls out to you in a way. Don't do something just cause it's "cool" cause so and so did it.
Look with neutral eyes, and block out the rest of the mess.
Sure, I know there are people out there that genuinely like Kanye's collection, and that's more than fine. Like it cause you really really like it. Taste varies from person to person, that is evident. And hell, all I'm saying is my opinion. So fuck yes, like it cause YOU like it based on your OWN impressions.
Don't like it because it's Yeezus did it, without properly analyzing the garments with a critical eye.
Hmmm, can't help but think if Kanye spent more time really trying to evolve his fashion designs instead of having petty arguments with Wiz Khalifa on Twitter, and slut shaming Amber Rose, who he DID have sex with so it kinda makes him look like a flaming hypocrite, and talking crap about their small child, maybe his collection would have been better. May I also note it is funny to me Kanye is slut shaming Amber when Kim Kardashian was FILMED having sex with Ray J, and got her "career" and fame from porn, while Rose got hers from just being Kanye's girlfriend at the time. Haha, but whatever right?
That's all this bitch gotta say.
XoXo, Razz
(photos aren't mine)
Friday, February 12, 2016
Sunday, February 7, 2016
Y'all Heard it Here First America
Beyonce said "I like my baby hair with baby hair, I like my negro nose with Jackson 5 afro"
In front of white cis males, and anti black mainstream audiences.
Hallelujah.
All hail Yonce.
p.s., peep how her dancers look like Black Panthers, with the leather and berets?
Yassss, hunty got message.
JUST BREAKING NEWS:
NOW SHE IS GOING ON TOUR, TITLED "THE FORMATION WORLD TOUR"
XoXo, Razz
(pictures aren't mine!)
In front of white cis males, and anti black mainstream audiences.
Hallelujah.
All hail Yonce.
p.s., peep how her dancers look like Black Panthers, with the leather and berets?
Yassss, hunty got message.
JUST BREAKING NEWS:
NOW SHE IS GOING ON TOUR, TITLED "THE FORMATION WORLD TOUR"
XoXo, Razz
(pictures aren't mine!)
SLAYONCE STRIKES AGAIN!
Surprise! Guess Who's Back!
YONCE BISH!
Last night she did another surprise drop, similar to her album that caused a massive heart attack across the globe, with her new video "Formation".
Beyonce's video is the epitome of Pro-Black, Black Feminism, Protection of Black Childhood, Unapologetic Black Woman, Black Girl Magic, and Social Awareness.
Beyonce address Katrina, police brutality, the beauty of black female naturalness, attacking that "illuminati mess", and being black and so so so proud of it that she declares she got "hot sauce in her bag, swag!".
Yonce goes further by stating that the woman, if you please her right, you might get rewarded with a treat: Red Lobster.
Damn, Yonce strikes again and hits hard with this video.
Just look at the plethora of natural black female hair! Beyonce rips apart the paparazzi and haters who often go after Blue Ivy's natural tresses stating "I like my baby hair with baby hair and afro." So yes, all you haters can take several seats in the corner. Beyonce loves that natural hair, she loves her child being natural and the way she is supposed to be; a care free black child not held down by your ridiculous european standards of beauty.
The singer goes in again, reclaiming and proud of black features. "I like my negro nose with Jackson 5 nostril".
Did I mention, she dresses like the next Supreme, oh so ready to snatch the wigs and edges off of every hater, internalized racist holding, nay sayer, and fool who doesn't believe in black women or black lives matter?
Go in deeper Beyonce, deeper for all the people who continue looking down on black women.
Symbolism is in abundance in this video:
Beyonce drowning on a cop car
A black boy dancing in a hoodie in front of a police squad
The police putting their hands up
Black women in natural hair styles
Black women sitting in positions of power and elegance
Natural hair styles period
Blue Ivy and other black girls standing proud with their natural hair
Little black girls playing and running about
New Orleans and the culture
"Stop Shooting Us" spray painted on a wall
"Illuminati mess"- debunk the myth if you are black and successful, it just gotta be supernatural mess involved
Beyonce has taken her stance, she isn't as Django described that "exceptional nigga" or that "1 in a million negro". No, Beyonce is not shedding her blackness to be accepted by the media or society. Beyonce is black, and she ain't gonna apologize.
Yes, Yonce.
You're helping us reclaim the word negro.
You just made a black anthem, and it is so right. It is everything we black women need right now in music. And I'm so here for it.
However, I can't help but sit and wait. Waiting for the same people who talked negative about our natural hair, our blackness, and black people in general to start hopping around on the bandwagon saying "I like my negro nose, my afro, I carry hot sauce in my bag" and so on. I literally am sitting waiting for Kylie Jenner to make an appointment for "negro nose" cause obviously her big lips are soooo on trend and desirable now, but are gross on black women for the centuries we have had them.
Also, the people who don't like the song or video. That's cause Beyonce has directly pointed out black women, she literally is singing to us. To the visuals, the lyrics, the images, it is all to us.
Don't forget though: Beyonce will be PERFORMING at the Super Bowl Half Time.
I'm eager to see her say "negro nose" and all the other hot button lyrics live among an audience that is so mainstream is hurts.
You can watch the video here: Formation Video (for some reason it is not posted on YouTube yet)
Gotta admit though, kinda cold Miss Yonce dropped this bomb while Rihanna's Anti is still so fresh. Sorry Rih, but Beyonce had to do it!
Yonce straight Queenin.
What do you think about the video?
XoXo, Razz
(photos aren't mine!)
YONCE BISH!
Last night she did another surprise drop, similar to her album that caused a massive heart attack across the globe, with her new video "Formation".
Beyonce's video is the epitome of Pro-Black, Black Feminism, Protection of Black Childhood, Unapologetic Black Woman, Black Girl Magic, and Social Awareness.
Beyonce address Katrina, police brutality, the beauty of black female naturalness, attacking that "illuminati mess", and being black and so so so proud of it that she declares she got "hot sauce in her bag, swag!".
Yonce goes further by stating that the woman, if you please her right, you might get rewarded with a treat: Red Lobster.
Damn, Yonce strikes again and hits hard with this video.
Just look at the plethora of natural black female hair! Beyonce rips apart the paparazzi and haters who often go after Blue Ivy's natural tresses stating "I like my baby hair with baby hair and afro." So yes, all you haters can take several seats in the corner. Beyonce loves that natural hair, she loves her child being natural and the way she is supposed to be; a care free black child not held down by your ridiculous european standards of beauty.
The singer goes in again, reclaiming and proud of black features. "I like my negro nose with Jackson 5 nostril".
Did I mention, she dresses like the next Supreme, oh so ready to snatch the wigs and edges off of every hater, internalized racist holding, nay sayer, and fool who doesn't believe in black women or black lives matter?
Go in deeper Beyonce, deeper for all the people who continue looking down on black women.
"Okay ladies, let's get in formation"!
Symbolism is in abundance in this video:
Beyonce drowning on a cop car
A black boy dancing in a hoodie in front of a police squad
The police putting their hands up
Black women in natural hair styles
Black women sitting in positions of power and elegance
Natural hair styles period
Blue Ivy and other black girls standing proud with their natural hair
Little black girls playing and running about
New Orleans and the culture
"Stop Shooting Us" spray painted on a wall
"Illuminati mess"- debunk the myth if you are black and successful, it just gotta be supernatural mess involved
Beyonce has taken her stance, she isn't as Django described that "exceptional nigga" or that "1 in a million negro". No, Beyonce is not shedding her blackness to be accepted by the media or society. Beyonce is black, and she ain't gonna apologize.
Yes, Yonce.
You're helping us reclaim the word negro.
You just made a black anthem, and it is so right. It is everything we black women need right now in music. And I'm so here for it.
However, I can't help but sit and wait. Waiting for the same people who talked negative about our natural hair, our blackness, and black people in general to start hopping around on the bandwagon saying "I like my negro nose, my afro, I carry hot sauce in my bag" and so on. I literally am sitting waiting for Kylie Jenner to make an appointment for "negro nose" cause obviously her big lips are soooo on trend and desirable now, but are gross on black women for the centuries we have had them.
Also, the people who don't like the song or video. That's cause Beyonce has directly pointed out black women, she literally is singing to us. To the visuals, the lyrics, the images, it is all to us.
Don't forget though: Beyonce will be PERFORMING at the Super Bowl Half Time.
I'm eager to see her say "negro nose" and all the other hot button lyrics live among an audience that is so mainstream is hurts.
You can watch the video here: Formation Video (for some reason it is not posted on YouTube yet)
Gotta admit though, kinda cold Miss Yonce dropped this bomb while Rihanna's Anti is still so fresh. Sorry Rih, but Beyonce had to do it!
Yonce straight Queenin.
What do you think about the video?
XoXo, Razz
(photos aren't mine!)
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
Vagina A La Mode
I know I'm not the only person to notice the epidemic that has been slowly but surely swirling out of control.
You know the one I'm talking about.
The one where every single facet and nook and cranny of the world around us hypersexualizes the human body to push their products, most notably the female body.
Try counting how many times you see a woman with her tits on display, her mouth agape in a sexy way, half naked in a bra and panty in a sultry pose, or giving some form of "come and get me" look at her man in the ad, or any other one of the millions pushed in our faces at every waking second.
Sure, I admit, companies are real good at selling their products with the sexual desire of the female body. Hell, they even sell burgers that way now.
However, you'd think, with the way our society pushes sex and the hypersexualized image of women in our faces, that the natural common functions of the body would be accepted along with the "promise" of sexual pleasure it offers.
Answer: fuck no.
A very large majority of men still twist their face in disgust when the topic or image of menstruation is presented to them. And don't even get me started on the whole "girls don't fart," myth that is still somehow floating about.
How in the hell did we get to the point that we can be force fed sex every 5 to 10 seconds, but still haven't accepted the most natural functions of the human body?
To breast feeding babies, bodily functions, hairy legs, armpits, or vag, to bleeding every month, it just seems kinda irrational that the very large percentage of men, hell and some women too, just can't cope with what is normally happening in the female body. Hello, we grow hair everywhere just as much as our male counterparts do, and I shouldn't have to even state why it is more than okay to breast feed a hungry child cause hmmm I don't know, that's kinda what tits are actually there for.
Thankfully, some women are out there trying to destigmatize the beauty of that which is the female body and her functions.
And did I mention they're doing it with kick ass fashion accessories?
Lili Murphy Johnson, a British jewelry designer babe, has crafted a full blown line of marvelous jewelry pieces circling around periods. And guess what? It was inspired by, yes, her period cycle and the stress and anxiety she got from it:
Rings, necklaces, cuffs, you name it, she got it in her collection. I dig the bead embroidery "period stain", and that used sanitary pad is to bleed for. You can check out all of her work here: Lili, Destigmatize the Menstro, Johnson
Rupi Kaur, the "poetess" and author of the greatest comfort a woman can receive in the form of a book, Milk and Honey. Kaur has a way with words, believe me I read her Milk and Honey too many times to count. But, instead of using her poetic charm, she took to photo as she posted images for a visual rhetoric project she created. The photos showcase typical period scenarios such as that very frustrating leak and drips down the leg.
Of course, cause women parading around almost naked is totally okay, but the normally occuring cycles your body goes through is not, Instagram took down her photos. Kaur went off in her response, literally airing out the bullshit standards and notions that our society is founded on. The poet ripped apart the misogynist attitudes, the glorification of porn and the stigmatizing of women's bodies, and the shame that women have to live with. It was fucking rad. You can check out her and her work at her website: Rupi Kaur the Bad Ass Poet
Macey Dickerson, owner of a fabulous instagram account I follow, crafts these utterly pretty Yoni necklaces. For those who don't know, Yoni in Sanskirt means "vagina" or "womb" and is the symbol of the Goddess. Yes, I just said that. Goddess. So, Dickerson literally makes vagina necklaces that help you emulate your inner Goddess. All coming in different shades for every Goddess, the vagina necklaces even come with crystals such as jade, amethyst, or rose quartz. Every crystal in the world has different meanings, properties, and vibrations, so you can literally choose which you want depending on what you need for yourself. Want to love yourself more? Choose Rose Quartz. Want to enhance your innate intuitive gifts? Choose amethyst.
You know the one I'm talking about.
The one where every single facet and nook and cranny of the world around us hypersexualizes the human body to push their products, most notably the female body.
Try counting how many times you see a woman with her tits on display, her mouth agape in a sexy way, half naked in a bra and panty in a sultry pose, or giving some form of "come and get me" look at her man in the ad, or any other one of the millions pushed in our faces at every waking second.
Sure, I admit, companies are real good at selling their products with the sexual desire of the female body. Hell, they even sell burgers that way now.
However, you'd think, with the way our society pushes sex and the hypersexualized image of women in our faces, that the natural common functions of the body would be accepted along with the "promise" of sexual pleasure it offers.
Answer: fuck no.
A very large majority of men still twist their face in disgust when the topic or image of menstruation is presented to them. And don't even get me started on the whole "girls don't fart," myth that is still somehow floating about.
How in the hell did we get to the point that we can be force fed sex every 5 to 10 seconds, but still haven't accepted the most natural functions of the human body?
To breast feeding babies, bodily functions, hairy legs, armpits, or vag, to bleeding every month, it just seems kinda irrational that the very large percentage of men, hell and some women too, just can't cope with what is normally happening in the female body. Hello, we grow hair everywhere just as much as our male counterparts do, and I shouldn't have to even state why it is more than okay to breast feed a hungry child cause hmmm I don't know, that's kinda what tits are actually there for.
Thankfully, some women are out there trying to destigmatize the beauty of that which is the female body and her functions.
And did I mention they're doing it with kick ass fashion accessories?
Lili Murphy Johnson, a British jewelry designer babe, has crafted a full blown line of marvelous jewelry pieces circling around periods. And guess what? It was inspired by, yes, her period cycle and the stress and anxiety she got from it:
Rings, necklaces, cuffs, you name it, she got it in her collection. I dig the bead embroidery "period stain", and that used sanitary pad is to bleed for. You can check out all of her work here: Lili, Destigmatize the Menstro, Johnson
Rupi Kaur, the "poetess" and author of the greatest comfort a woman can receive in the form of a book, Milk and Honey. Kaur has a way with words, believe me I read her Milk and Honey too many times to count. But, instead of using her poetic charm, she took to photo as she posted images for a visual rhetoric project she created. The photos showcase typical period scenarios such as that very frustrating leak and drips down the leg.
Of course, cause women parading around almost naked is totally okay, but the normally occuring cycles your body goes through is not, Instagram took down her photos. Kaur went off in her response, literally airing out the bullshit standards and notions that our society is founded on. The poet ripped apart the misogynist attitudes, the glorification of porn and the stigmatizing of women's bodies, and the shame that women have to live with. It was fucking rad. You can check out her and her work at her website: Rupi Kaur the Bad Ass Poet
Macey Dickerson, owner of a fabulous instagram account I follow, crafts these utterly pretty Yoni necklaces. For those who don't know, Yoni in Sanskirt means "vagina" or "womb" and is the symbol of the Goddess. Yes, I just said that. Goddess. So, Dickerson literally makes vagina necklaces that help you emulate your inner Goddess. All coming in different shades for every Goddess, the vagina necklaces even come with crystals such as jade, amethyst, or rose quartz. Every crystal in the world has different meanings, properties, and vibrations, so you can literally choose which you want depending on what you need for yourself. Want to love yourself more? Choose Rose Quartz. Want to enhance your innate intuitive gifts? Choose amethyst.
You can see more of her work, and buy her necklaces, here: Macey, the Yoni Goddess, Dickerson.
The best part? There are more women trying to show the truth, that a woman's body should never be ashamed, looked down upon, or disregarded for the beautiful machine it is. Not just these wonderful artists.
What do you guys think about the hypersexualization of women, but the dismissal of what their bodies actually do?
Which pieces do you like the most?
Would you wear these accessories?
What do you think about Kaur's photos getting taken down, while women can be posted almost naked?
Just questions for thought, and always remember, question the world around you. And don't be afraid to call bullshit on the standards on yourself, women, men, and the whole world.
XoXo, Razz
(obviously the photos aren't mind)
Monday, February 1, 2016
We. Are. Diamonds.
It's been a long time since I've been on here, and I admit I've been negligent. I haven't updated in well over an year or more, and it kind of feels like time has gotten away from me.
I spent a very large portion of my time looking inward; really trying to analyze who I was at that time, who I wanted to be, and everything else in between that really didn't have anything to do with me but did all at once.
I'm trying to vaguely put into words what person I was when I was posting back then. My words would be clumped together to paint the person as: a naive, energetic, small town, little girl, that feverishly had very high aspirations, but her head not in the right place or where it belongs.
I feel as though I had my, socially speaking, head where it needed to be: Working a part time job, going to college full time, a very decent idea of what I wanted to do, goals, and all together had my shit where it needed to be.
However, I find that, mentally, I didn't even align where I needed to be. I didn't think further than anything outside of the classroom, getting my paycheck from work, having a boyfriend, and somehow randomly ending up in the fashion industry. Outside of those topics, I honestly couldn't be bothered....and television, yea, I couldn't be bothered outside of that too.
But, as I started to look around, as I started to listen, as I found myself questioning certain things. My mental started to twitch and expand, and honestly, it all came to a head when I started attending school in NYC, and eventually moved here to dorm and go to school.
But if I really want to be honest I started to feel my mind questioning years beyond this point. I guess it began when I was little, and my mother religiously put Relaxers in my hair. My mother had the habit of putting relaxers in my hair, and most notably she did this at home without any professional understanding of what she was doing. Relaxers, for those who don't know, are toxic highly chemical substances that very often African American women put in their hair to give it the eurocentric appearance of Caucasian women's hair or pin straight hair follicles.
This was the point right there, every single time I sat between her legs and she smeared that cold thick substance in between each part of my hair she made, that I thought: Why do I get this done? Why does she do this to my hair? What's so bad about the stuff that grows out?
I'm not really sure what black women enjoys feeling that frigid feeling of relaxer smeared on their head, but I know that my entire life I didn't like it. But, as I got older I just continued to do it out of habit. I continued to do it even though I had my sides burnt out of my head leaving me with bald spots on the side of my head. I continued to do this even though I spent so much money going to the salons once I had more control over my head. I continued to do this even though when I combed my hair, it shed and fell out like your pet's hair does when you are combing them and you haven't in weeks. I kept on relaxing my hair, kept on questioning why, but never did anything about it.
I had what society would deem "good hair". It was long, straight without any kinks, moved, was long past my shoulders and down my back, and moved when the wind blew. Yea, my hair was "perfect" to the other black women in the salons also allowing the hair dressers to pour chemicals on their head, perfect to the majority white people in my Long Island town, and perfect to my mother who spent hours relaxing my hair when was little.
Perfect.
Utterly Perfect.
So perfect.
So fucking perfect that I didn't really sit to think outside of myself for five seconds to realize WHY I was doing it, WHO I was doing it for, and WHAT it represented.
Fast forward to me sitting on Tumblr, fast forwad to me seeing people talking about internalized racism, fast forward to me googling internalized racism, fast forward to me then for hours, days, weeks, months, devouring these words and their meaning and their actions and their vibrations on repeat: internalized racism, eurocentrism, beauty standards, media and norms of beauty, patriarchy, feminism, melanin, natural hair, systematic oppression, cultural appropriation, police brutality, approval, bleaching, self hatred, approval, and plenty more that go beyond words or phrases and jump deeply into structures.
Plain and to the point; the reason I sat through 23 years of relaxing was because I hated myself. Yes, I Razz hated myself, who I was, the person I was, and everything I was all the way up to this point. I literally didn't let myself organically be who I was, think deeper about who I was, or even let my hair be who it was. Let me pause to say, I acknowledge that some women who relax their hair do it cause they enjoy it, but this is my story and my narrative so yea. But, yes, I had all the signs of confidence, with expressing myself through fashion, taking pride in who I was and what I was doing, but deep down, I didn't love myself.
But who could I blame?
Society.
The media.
The list can go on for months if I let it. But what can I say? We are surrounded, force fed, visually bombarded, and chatted up and down about what is "pleasing, desired, envied, better, the best, and accepted" all without taking a moment to look deep and say why? Why is it better for black women to chemically drench their hair in hazardous products that have adverse effects on their internal body for straight hair? Why is it better for the girl in front of the tv to stop eating cause the girl selling the latest watch is skinny and "hot"? Why is it better that women should not enjoy sex while men are expected to be over aggressive or overtly hungry sexually? Why is it the best for the little boy to stop crying when his feelings get hurt and stop acting like a "girl"?
Why? Why? Who says? Who says?
We as humans are much too quick to accept what the media or ingrained ideas say is best or trending, and put how we organically feel or know to be best for our souls second. We put the ideas of other people before our own. We let our friends, family, and peers guilt us out of what we love and into bullshit we can't stomach. For what? A little taste of being accepted that dwindles off once you're alone again and looking up at your ceiling at night?
It's like, we are trained to work against ourselves and being organic to who we are and what are potential is.
We take "you can't do that, you can't wear this, you can't act like this, and you won't ever be able" a lot easier than "you can, you will, you are".
Three weeks with all of this in my head, and alone in my dorm room made me feel conflicted. I felt very chained in a sense, not really free of the soul, mind, and heart.
And I know damn well I am not the only one who feels this.
So...I just did the next rational thing.
I bought a buzzer, sat in my chair for a few hours, and cut and buzzed every inch of hair off of my head.
It was like an itch I needed to scratch, I needed to do this. I felt that if I didn't cut my hair off I would regret something inside of myself for the rest of my life. I felt that if I didn't do this one thing genuinely for myself, and by myself I would hate the living shit out of myself and never be able to stomach myself ever again.
I thought taking this socially beautiful hair and taking the first cut would scare me and make me stop...but when I cut it first my blood was rushing. My heart was going crazy. I was so happy, I started smiling. Then I took my hair, which I tried transitioning to natural, put it all in a pony tail, and snipped it off.
This euphoria was climbing all over me, pride, this inching closer to this part of me I denied for so long. Like I was about to meet someone so foreign to me I only heard stories about. And then I started buzzing and trimming. I literally couldn't stop or take a break till every chemically damaged strand was cut from my head.
My room was throbbing with songs of empowerment, of womanhood, or pushing past society and into something sweeter and true to the self. Beyonce, Lorde, Willow Smith, Ida Marina, and so many more were painting my theme song, and cheering me on as I chopped, and buzzed, and snipped.
Then, after it was done, I couldn't stop staring at myself in the mirror. Who the hell is this crazy, bold, bald chick staring at me? This woman who bought an expensive buzz cutter and took her long locks and chopped them off in a second's notice?
Me.
I was finally looking at myself.
The girl, no the woman, I was looking at was me. And I felt so alien in that moment. I was really, truly, honestly looking at who I was. No chemical hair, no pin straight strands, naked, me.
I admit, I had this small fragment of worry in my stomach...was what I did so fucking wrong? Would this screw me over in the long run going for jobs once I graduate? Would anyone in the fashion world even accept me? Would they just gloss me over once they saw my bold bald naked head, not even looking deeper at what I could do or what my skills were.
I FaceTimed my mother.
Wrong move.
Now, I don't blame my mother, I still love her, but she was taught the same thing. Eurocentric features get you more in life and are better. She first thought I was joking, but as soon as I moved a bit away from the phone to show my bald head, she was furious and my step father wasn't amused either.
"Why would you do that? No one will date you. No one will hire you. Good luck fighting that fight."
Who would have thought that hair influenced jobs, boyfriends, and stood as something so black powered and political?
After that, I just stood and cried. My high of discovery got the blow I was afraid of.
Who could love me without my long relaxed hair? What fashion industry job or magazine would hire me? Would people just think negative?
I felt low, really low. I just fucked up my life at the age of 23 with the buzz of a life time. So, I just did what I thought would help. Sulk in bed for hours.
Then I just went on Pinterest, I searched for bald headed women...and Lupita Nyong'o came up.
Lupita is so beautiful. She's so feminine. Lupita is the essence of beauty. And there she was, on my phone screen with her close cut hair and glowing with a killer smile that could bring any naysayer to the ground in seconds.
Then Solange came up. Looking fierce and unapologetic, makeup bold and eyelashes longer than the heels on my booties. Solange is an untamed spirit, dancing to her own drum, and grooving all the way into the sunset.
Then a whole array of beautiful black women flooded in, each more beautiful than the next with close cut hair, bald, or flat tops. All of them normal women, not celebrities, all unnamed, but so fucking gorgeous.
Looking at Lupita and Solange and those unnamed close cut babes lit something in me. Look at them with their lack of hair, look at their beauty, and where is mine?
Right there where it was the first time I looked into the mirror once I buzzed off all my hair.
My beauty was always there, even when I had that awful damaged hair weighing me down. But cutting it all off, it shined brighter than any diamond, it radiated warmer than the sun, and it glimmered better than the sun catching in a glass and flickering the rainbow.
I was beautiful.
I am beautiful.
Without hair.
Without relaxed hair.
Black, Beautiful, and Shining.
I admit, the next day after ditching my hair, I was scared of what my boss at work would do. I've heard, and seen through the internet, countless black women being fired and let go from jobs because of the hair that naturally grew from their heads. And here I was, going in with no hair at all.
But, no matter what, I decided. I beat my face with makeup, wore bold gold and hot pink skull earrings that dangled, sharp cat eyed liner, dressed sharp in a black blazer and striking accessories. Head held high, walking down the streets of NYC like I'm on the runway, and like I have 100 men following behind me begging for my time.
My boss wasn't fazed, thankfully, and she complimented me and told me she loved the look before tossing me onto the floor with work to do.
So? What did I learn?
Being true to yourself is not a crime and your life isn't over. Releasing the social struggle inside of you out, and following your heart instead of what society says or what the tv says isn't wrong or out of the question, and making the change that sets you free is not a death sentence or will destroy your life. If anything, chopping off my hair was the most orgasmic, freeing, natural high I have ever experienced so far in life. The thrill, the release, the freedom, the dropping off of baggage, and discovering the goddess that was buried under all the chemical mess. Hell, even my mother came around, and still tells me to buzz off my hair even though I'm trying to grow my natural curly tresses out.
Yet, I still find myself questioning whether I can enter the fashion world. Whether my natural hair, yes I now have some curly hair on my head, will allow me into the industry I have dreamed, lived, ate, drank, and craved for for years since the beginning of high school. The industry where society's notion's of beauty are doubled and felt greater.
But, my fear doesn't stop me.
It doesn't stop my goals for becoming a fashion journalist, being a fashion editor, for working at a fashion magazine, and climbing the fashion world's latter. Besides, the fashion world, in my opinion, is getting the call. Fashion is thirsty for different faces, different women with different body shapes and features, and for women who are so bold and fierce in their love for themselves and who they are. Fashion is opening it's arms to models with full, thick, beautiful curvy bodies that look like modern day Venus personified. Even the ads are showing the real of humanity and how gender itself isn't defined by the clothing anymore, as seen in the recent Louis Vuitton campaign with Jaden Smith. The workers in the fashion industry are coming in different shades, sizes, background, and with different curl patterns all over.
Representation matters, and it is here.
Move over society's bullshit standards, cause the world is changing. Women are loving themselves all over. We aren't holding back anymore, and we aren't staying quiet. We are changing everything, and the fashion industry is changing with us.
I used to think back that I was the only black girl aiming for dreams in fashion writing, but I was wrong. Fashion has opened itself, and black women are in there making a difference, and representing proudly. With their curls, their shades, and their beauty shining like diamonds:
I spent a very large portion of my time looking inward; really trying to analyze who I was at that time, who I wanted to be, and everything else in between that really didn't have anything to do with me but did all at once.
I'm trying to vaguely put into words what person I was when I was posting back then. My words would be clumped together to paint the person as: a naive, energetic, small town, little girl, that feverishly had very high aspirations, but her head not in the right place or where it belongs.
I feel as though I had my, socially speaking, head where it needed to be: Working a part time job, going to college full time, a very decent idea of what I wanted to do, goals, and all together had my shit where it needed to be.
However, I find that, mentally, I didn't even align where I needed to be. I didn't think further than anything outside of the classroom, getting my paycheck from work, having a boyfriend, and somehow randomly ending up in the fashion industry. Outside of those topics, I honestly couldn't be bothered....and television, yea, I couldn't be bothered outside of that too.
But, as I started to look around, as I started to listen, as I found myself questioning certain things. My mental started to twitch and expand, and honestly, it all came to a head when I started attending school in NYC, and eventually moved here to dorm and go to school.
But if I really want to be honest I started to feel my mind questioning years beyond this point. I guess it began when I was little, and my mother religiously put Relaxers in my hair. My mother had the habit of putting relaxers in my hair, and most notably she did this at home without any professional understanding of what she was doing. Relaxers, for those who don't know, are toxic highly chemical substances that very often African American women put in their hair to give it the eurocentric appearance of Caucasian women's hair or pin straight hair follicles.
This was the point right there, every single time I sat between her legs and she smeared that cold thick substance in between each part of my hair she made, that I thought: Why do I get this done? Why does she do this to my hair? What's so bad about the stuff that grows out?
I'm not really sure what black women enjoys feeling that frigid feeling of relaxer smeared on their head, but I know that my entire life I didn't like it. But, as I got older I just continued to do it out of habit. I continued to do it even though I had my sides burnt out of my head leaving me with bald spots on the side of my head. I continued to do this even though I spent so much money going to the salons once I had more control over my head. I continued to do this even though when I combed my hair, it shed and fell out like your pet's hair does when you are combing them and you haven't in weeks. I kept on relaxing my hair, kept on questioning why, but never did anything about it.
I had what society would deem "good hair". It was long, straight without any kinks, moved, was long past my shoulders and down my back, and moved when the wind blew. Yea, my hair was "perfect" to the other black women in the salons also allowing the hair dressers to pour chemicals on their head, perfect to the majority white people in my Long Island town, and perfect to my mother who spent hours relaxing my hair when was little.
Perfect.
Utterly Perfect.
So perfect.
So fucking perfect that I didn't really sit to think outside of myself for five seconds to realize WHY I was doing it, WHO I was doing it for, and WHAT it represented.
Fast forward to me sitting on Tumblr, fast forwad to me seeing people talking about internalized racism, fast forward to me googling internalized racism, fast forward to me then for hours, days, weeks, months, devouring these words and their meaning and their actions and their vibrations on repeat: internalized racism, eurocentrism, beauty standards, media and norms of beauty, patriarchy, feminism, melanin, natural hair, systematic oppression, cultural appropriation, police brutality, approval, bleaching, self hatred, approval, and plenty more that go beyond words or phrases and jump deeply into structures.
Plain and to the point; the reason I sat through 23 years of relaxing was because I hated myself. Yes, I Razz hated myself, who I was, the person I was, and everything I was all the way up to this point. I literally didn't let myself organically be who I was, think deeper about who I was, or even let my hair be who it was. Let me pause to say, I acknowledge that some women who relax their hair do it cause they enjoy it, but this is my story and my narrative so yea. But, yes, I had all the signs of confidence, with expressing myself through fashion, taking pride in who I was and what I was doing, but deep down, I didn't love myself.
But who could I blame?
Society.
The media.
The list can go on for months if I let it. But what can I say? We are surrounded, force fed, visually bombarded, and chatted up and down about what is "pleasing, desired, envied, better, the best, and accepted" all without taking a moment to look deep and say why? Why is it better for black women to chemically drench their hair in hazardous products that have adverse effects on their internal body for straight hair? Why is it better for the girl in front of the tv to stop eating cause the girl selling the latest watch is skinny and "hot"? Why is it better that women should not enjoy sex while men are expected to be over aggressive or overtly hungry sexually? Why is it the best for the little boy to stop crying when his feelings get hurt and stop acting like a "girl"?
Why? Why? Who says? Who says?
We as humans are much too quick to accept what the media or ingrained ideas say is best or trending, and put how we organically feel or know to be best for our souls second. We put the ideas of other people before our own. We let our friends, family, and peers guilt us out of what we love and into bullshit we can't stomach. For what? A little taste of being accepted that dwindles off once you're alone again and looking up at your ceiling at night?
It's like, we are trained to work against ourselves and being organic to who we are and what are potential is.
We take "you can't do that, you can't wear this, you can't act like this, and you won't ever be able" a lot easier than "you can, you will, you are".
Three weeks with all of this in my head, and alone in my dorm room made me feel conflicted. I felt very chained in a sense, not really free of the soul, mind, and heart.
And I know damn well I am not the only one who feels this.
So...I just did the next rational thing.
I bought a buzzer, sat in my chair for a few hours, and cut and buzzed every inch of hair off of my head.
It was like an itch I needed to scratch, I needed to do this. I felt that if I didn't cut my hair off I would regret something inside of myself for the rest of my life. I felt that if I didn't do this one thing genuinely for myself, and by myself I would hate the living shit out of myself and never be able to stomach myself ever again.
I thought taking this socially beautiful hair and taking the first cut would scare me and make me stop...but when I cut it first my blood was rushing. My heart was going crazy. I was so happy, I started smiling. Then I took my hair, which I tried transitioning to natural, put it all in a pony tail, and snipped it off.
This euphoria was climbing all over me, pride, this inching closer to this part of me I denied for so long. Like I was about to meet someone so foreign to me I only heard stories about. And then I started buzzing and trimming. I literally couldn't stop or take a break till every chemically damaged strand was cut from my head.
My room was throbbing with songs of empowerment, of womanhood, or pushing past society and into something sweeter and true to the self. Beyonce, Lorde, Willow Smith, Ida Marina, and so many more were painting my theme song, and cheering me on as I chopped, and buzzed, and snipped.
Then, after it was done, I couldn't stop staring at myself in the mirror. Who the hell is this crazy, bold, bald chick staring at me? This woman who bought an expensive buzz cutter and took her long locks and chopped them off in a second's notice?
Me.
I was finally looking at myself.
The girl, no the woman, I was looking at was me. And I felt so alien in that moment. I was really, truly, honestly looking at who I was. No chemical hair, no pin straight strands, naked, me.
I admit, I had this small fragment of worry in my stomach...was what I did so fucking wrong? Would this screw me over in the long run going for jobs once I graduate? Would anyone in the fashion world even accept me? Would they just gloss me over once they saw my bold bald naked head, not even looking deeper at what I could do or what my skills were.
I FaceTimed my mother.
Wrong move.
Now, I don't blame my mother, I still love her, but she was taught the same thing. Eurocentric features get you more in life and are better. She first thought I was joking, but as soon as I moved a bit away from the phone to show my bald head, she was furious and my step father wasn't amused either.
"Why would you do that? No one will date you. No one will hire you. Good luck fighting that fight."
Who would have thought that hair influenced jobs, boyfriends, and stood as something so black powered and political?
After that, I just stood and cried. My high of discovery got the blow I was afraid of.
Who could love me without my long relaxed hair? What fashion industry job or magazine would hire me? Would people just think negative?
I felt low, really low. I just fucked up my life at the age of 23 with the buzz of a life time. So, I just did what I thought would help. Sulk in bed for hours.
Then I just went on Pinterest, I searched for bald headed women...and Lupita Nyong'o came up.
Lupita is so beautiful. She's so feminine. Lupita is the essence of beauty. And there she was, on my phone screen with her close cut hair and glowing with a killer smile that could bring any naysayer to the ground in seconds.
Then Solange came up. Looking fierce and unapologetic, makeup bold and eyelashes longer than the heels on my booties. Solange is an untamed spirit, dancing to her own drum, and grooving all the way into the sunset.
Then a whole array of beautiful black women flooded in, each more beautiful than the next with close cut hair, bald, or flat tops. All of them normal women, not celebrities, all unnamed, but so fucking gorgeous.
Looking at Lupita and Solange and those unnamed close cut babes lit something in me. Look at them with their lack of hair, look at their beauty, and where is mine?
Right there where it was the first time I looked into the mirror once I buzzed off all my hair.
My beauty was always there, even when I had that awful damaged hair weighing me down. But cutting it all off, it shined brighter than any diamond, it radiated warmer than the sun, and it glimmered better than the sun catching in a glass and flickering the rainbow.
I was beautiful.
I am beautiful.
Without hair.
Without relaxed hair.
Black, Beautiful, and Shining.
I admit, the next day after ditching my hair, I was scared of what my boss at work would do. I've heard, and seen through the internet, countless black women being fired and let go from jobs because of the hair that naturally grew from their heads. And here I was, going in with no hair at all.
But, no matter what, I decided. I beat my face with makeup, wore bold gold and hot pink skull earrings that dangled, sharp cat eyed liner, dressed sharp in a black blazer and striking accessories. Head held high, walking down the streets of NYC like I'm on the runway, and like I have 100 men following behind me begging for my time.
My boss wasn't fazed, thankfully, and she complimented me and told me she loved the look before tossing me onto the floor with work to do.
So? What did I learn?
Being true to yourself is not a crime and your life isn't over. Releasing the social struggle inside of you out, and following your heart instead of what society says or what the tv says isn't wrong or out of the question, and making the change that sets you free is not a death sentence or will destroy your life. If anything, chopping off my hair was the most orgasmic, freeing, natural high I have ever experienced so far in life. The thrill, the release, the freedom, the dropping off of baggage, and discovering the goddess that was buried under all the chemical mess. Hell, even my mother came around, and still tells me to buzz off my hair even though I'm trying to grow my natural curly tresses out.
Yet, I still find myself questioning whether I can enter the fashion world. Whether my natural hair, yes I now have some curly hair on my head, will allow me into the industry I have dreamed, lived, ate, drank, and craved for for years since the beginning of high school. The industry where society's notion's of beauty are doubled and felt greater.
But, my fear doesn't stop me.
It doesn't stop my goals for becoming a fashion journalist, being a fashion editor, for working at a fashion magazine, and climbing the fashion world's latter. Besides, the fashion world, in my opinion, is getting the call. Fashion is thirsty for different faces, different women with different body shapes and features, and for women who are so bold and fierce in their love for themselves and who they are. Fashion is opening it's arms to models with full, thick, beautiful curvy bodies that look like modern day Venus personified. Even the ads are showing the real of humanity and how gender itself isn't defined by the clothing anymore, as seen in the recent Louis Vuitton campaign with Jaden Smith. The workers in the fashion industry are coming in different shades, sizes, background, and with different curl patterns all over.
Representation matters, and it is here.
Move over society's bullshit standards, cause the world is changing. Women are loving themselves all over. We aren't holding back anymore, and we aren't staying quiet. We are changing everything, and the fashion industry is changing with us.
I used to think back that I was the only black girl aiming for dreams in fashion writing, but I was wrong. Fashion has opened itself, and black women are in there making a difference, and representing proudly. With their curls, their shades, and their beauty shining like diamonds:
Nikki Ogunnaike, Elle.com Senior Fashion Editor
Rajni Lucienne Jacques, Creative Director & Fashion Content Editor
Sarr Jamois, Senior Fashion Editor of i-D Magazine
Tamu McPherson, Founder of All The Pretty Birds
Ericka Goodman-Hughey, Ebony Magazine Fashion Editor
Julee Wilson, Senior Fashion Editor at The Huffington Post
and so many more!
And for celebrities? You don't need me to tell you how diverse Hollywood is getting, with so many beautiful new faces, of different backgrounds, and breaking through. But my favorites are these women crafted out of superb Black Girl Magic:
Amandla Stenberg
Erykah Badu
Lupita Nyong'o
Solange Knowles
Willow Smith
Zoe Kravitz
Look at these babes. Look at how both the fashion world and Hollywood loves them, and their natural hair, melanin, and more.
To my black sisters, because it is blantantly clear you don't hear or see it enough, know your melanin is special, and beautiful in every way. Know you shouldn't have to hide, or hold back. Know your skin is as rich as the soil, your hair rising to absorb and kiss the sun, each strand perfect. Don't try to reach for approval, you're already crafted special the way you were intended. You are goddesses, bursting forward. Love yourself, know yourself, reach for the stars and heavens. Hell, reach for the galaxies if you desire.
My sisters, my fellow women, of every background everywhere, know you are just as perfect in every way. You are also goddesses. Don't bend to what society tells you to be. You are gorgeous, with your curves, your crazy hair, freckles, different shades, bodies shaped like Venus or not, and all your wonderful quirks. You are women, you are made naturally strong. The world can't handle you, cause you are the ones who made the world. Be true to yourself, aim your arrow, follow it, don't yield for no one. Never. Love each other, regardless of anything.
Men, know you don't have to follow society either. Know you are free to cry, to express yourself, to be as masculine or less masculine as you please, to explore your emotions and your sexuality. You don't have to be aggressive to be seen as male, you don't have to be emotionless to be strong. Be free to be, exist on your own terms, not on what the world says you should be or do.
Shit, that's all I gotta say.
XoXo, Razz
(Obviously the pictures belong to their respective sources)
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