Showing posts with label Prateeh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prateeh. Show all posts

Sunday, August 24, 2025

All about hair

“What happened to your hair?!” my friend Minerva at the City Engineers’ exclaimed as soon as she saw me after long years of absence. 

“Why? What happened to my hair?” 

I hardly ever see my hair even if I looked at it eveyday in the mirror. So I was curious what she was seeing.

But as soon as I said that, she was very careful and just gave me a measured reply. “You used to have such thick, black hair when we were together,” she breathed to my ears and did not say much more. Just a few days after I met Minerva, I saw our picture together in the mountains of Marilog, wearing our windbreakers with the mountain fog as a backdrop. My hair was scandalously thick and black. Just as it was in the photo of me as a six-month old infant in my grandmother’s arms. Whose hair is that? The babysitters used to say and giggle.  


I simply thought that my hair was so thick that my head looked even bigger than my body.

  

Hair suddenly became our topic when Prateeh and I met in Manila this month, our first meeting in 12 years. We were about to part when I broached the subject of hair. Finally, it was from Prateeh that I learned what Minmin refused to say--that I already lost what used to be such a thick black hair.

 


I used to have a problem with my  hair when I was growing up.

Or so, I thought. 

For it was only much, much later when I began to understand that it was not really my hair that was the problem, it was the people around me. In the place where I grew up, women--Mother, aunts, women neighbors--used to have only one concept of an ideal hair. It has to be straight and black and easy to control.

My hair was thick, wavy--even curly at times, if you allowed it to grow at a certain length. I used to have a picture as an infant with long curly tresses but the aunts did not like it. Kulot. And in our place, people never allowed hair to grow long. “You will look older,” Ma used to say. Older, when I was five or six years old, simply meant ugly. At least, that was how I took what the grownups meant.

So, Ma would push me to go to the hairdresser to have my hair cut. Most often, the hairdresser would have a problem. My hair had a wave just somewhere near the ears; and wavy hair, at least in our village, meant difficult to control. Unlike the straight hair of my sisters, my hair would not follow whichever way you combed it. My hair was unruly, had a mind of its own, would not follow directions. In other words, a rebel.

So, the hairdresser would cut the hair just before the length when it begins to wave; and that meant, cut it even shorter than it normally should. The hairdresser had nothing but high praises for my sisters and mere silences to me. Needless to say, the ensuing haircut would be very unflattering, even ugly. Most of my childhood, I roamed around planet earth feeling ugly and out-of-place. A cast out; a perennial outsider.

 

There was a time when I began telling Sean at breakfast, “I used to grow up thinking I was an ugly duckling until I discovered I was a swan.” He and Ja looked at me. I showed Sean the picture of me as an ugly duckling and he did not recognize me. “See?!” I said. “I’ve already turned into a swan!”

It was much, much later, liberated from the constraints of home, that I finally began to grow my hair long. Later, I could no longer stop to have it cut because I hardly had the time. To control its thickness, I had it straightened, rebonded.

But nothing lasts forever.

Age sets me thinking about my hair now and the people’s attitude towards hair. At the recent gathering, I watched how Iris let her hair be in all its glory.  Prateeh, too, said her hair, once wavy, had developed real curls.  She merely untied it without a fuss as soon as she reached the session hall where we all gathered.  She seemed puzzled why I could not let my hair down.  Why I could not untie it in front of everyone.  I still hear voices in my ears telling me that hair is bad, hair is dirty.  

Suddenly, I longed for that thick, black hair vilified by the world that only wanted straight hair.  I failed to defend that hair. 

Friday, February 08, 2019

There are some things that I missed

I am surprised to discover that I only posted five blogs for the entire year last year.  I failed to mark the coming of the new year and the going away of the old because I'd been working nonstop since July 2018, and the workload never allowed me to breathe all through the year. At Christmas and the New Year, I was simply too tired to celebrate. I even remember battling with sickness while I was doing the usual work overload.  My memory comes in fragments now because of fatigue. 
Since I arrived here in July last year, my days have been bleeding into each other,  the nights becoming days and nights into days, I could no longer tell one from the other.  At times--and it's because I edit the stories fast before they go out to the world as news, I oftentimes get the feeling that the headlines are stale when I see them in the morning. I get the feeling that they happen the other day or the day before that, instead of just yesterday. 
Sometimes an excruciating pain shoots up from my back somewhere and I begin to be afraid of things that I don't understand about spines and lumbar column or whatever they are called. I want to read and learn more about them but the breaking stories keep me occupied. The breaking news, they get in the way of everything I do. They even awaken me from sleep in the middle of the night. I long for simple things--like reading a good book at a leisurely pace in the middle of the garden or eating pizza with my boys at a table near a big window. 
The other day, I got a message from Prateeh but I was too busy when it arrived, I can't even put a finger on the goddamn phone. When I replied, Prateeh must have already gone too far away to even see it. I want to sit down and read a book without anyone disrupting me. The thing that I loved most working in Makati was reading The NewYorker everyday and listening to the Fiction podcast until I drowse off to sleep.  Now all I hear in the morning is the sound of gunfire.