learning to braid
Location
“Momma can you please braid my hair?”
a ritual request with each daily fading of light from the window
I would make my way over in matching flower PJs on the cold tile floor of my parent’s bathroom
(the one which would later be demolished by a an energetic earthquake fault line directly below)
I would then kneel patiently as my mother’s hands parted the waves of tangles
and calmly bushed out each section
she would begin to deftly wrangle the flyaway strands together
while enquiring about my day at preschool
the stories would weave themselves into the growing plait to be finished off
with a yellow hair tie
my two swinging kite tails were inseparable from my appearance
untouched by scissors for years
they were long enough that some thought my family was Pentecostal
hardly a day in my childhood where my hair wasn’t scarcely contained into two long braids
I couldn’t imagine my reflection without them
I was so afraid of growing up that I vowed I would never turn seven or move out of the house
(a statement I am frequently reminded of as I search for colleges)
so I obstinately refused to learn to braid my own hair for years
on stressful nights my requests were answered with passive-aggressive suggestions that I
go and ask my dad, an inconceivable solution
yet finally as I lost more teeth, my hands gravitated from my doll’s hair to my own
a shift from purposeful dependence
it was a change that brought bittersweet relief to my mother
in the turbulence of middle school self-consciousness overwhelmed
insecurity led me to adopt the mainstream and classic ponytail
through even now, in moments of unguarded seclusion I still braid my own hair
down to the very ends
when surrounded by glaciers, tress and a few family friends
it is my escape
back to the times when I moved freely
followed by the two streaming tails of a exultant kite