August 10, 2012

  • Scab Hair II

    If you really know me you know that I’m always reading and researching.  My desire to learn never ends.  Thus how I happened upon the Curly Girl Method.  But something else has also sparked my curiosity.  It’s called “Curly Like Me” by Teri LaFlesh.  Teri is biracial and grew up in Kentucky.  Her tightly curled hair was never properly cared for and was severely damaged with the use of relaxers as a child.  Thus led her on a quest to find a program that would help her natural hair to grow healthy and strong.  Teri has her own website which is found here:  www.tightlycurly.com.  Yes my curiosity is getting the best of me and I want to try her method because her hair is gorgeous.  However, I’m going to stick with The Curly Girl Method for now because I’m finally starting to get all day moisture after a little over two weeks.  laughing

    Here is what Teri had to say about scab hair (which adds to my belief that the hair currently growing on the sides of my head – where I had the most damage is truly scab hair):

    Question:
    What is “scab” hair?
    Answer:
    If you are experiencing a tight mat of hair at your scalp when you are trying to grow out very damaged hair, such as hair from a relaxer or any other chemical damage, you might have “scab” hair. (Flat irons can damage hair to the point it acts like it has a chemical on it. Flat irons don’t mess around. In fact, one girl that I demonstrated how I would do my hair on theGrowing It Out page had lost her curl due to flat irons alone). 

    This is because the relaxer works by totally changing the entire chemical structure that makes up your hair. It actually takes a double bond that puts your hair together, and breaks it apart so it’s only a single bond that holds your hair together, making it much less flexible and weak. When this single bond chemically damaged hair meets up with the springy new growth with it’s two bonds holding it together. This is often where the “scab” hair is formed, where these two radically different types of hair are joined it creates a mat. 

    Since these two textures are very different in how they behave, it’s very easy to comb them differently. Generally, the chemical hair, since it’s spirit has been broken (I know, my bias for natural hair is really showing), the comb goes through it easier than it does for the thicker, spirited new growth. And if you have scab hair, which is the mat that often forms where the two textures meet, you often have to tug pretty hard to get through that. The increased force needed can me enough to snap the fragile chemical hair, especially at the place where it’s meeting the healthier new growth. This will often cause breakage. 

    I went through a phase of nearly a year where I got a huge mat in my hair where the damaged hair met the natural hair (not my natural hair’s fault). Once more of my natural hair grew in, the mat moved down until my hair was long enough that I could cut it off. I’ve heard people refer to it as “scab” hair, and I think that’s a great way of looking at it: like your hair was hurt with the chemicals, and now it’s healing, and soon it is all better and happy, and then you’ll start to see your curls coming in. So the “scab” is the area where the new growth and the damaged hair are attached to each other, and is not what your real hair will be like. Your real hair will follow the scab hair, just like brand new skin is beneath a scab where you were hurt. 

    What this means is that if your hair is doing what mine did while growing it out, you will have a band of hair that is kind of messed up. Then your real, true, natural curls will start growing in after this hair. It’s very important to be very gentle with this new hair, because it’s this hair that will grow long for you.

     

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