CAPlush
New Member
Maybe I am one of the very few that could care less about the "white girl swang" comment. I just don't get bent out of shape about certain somewhat race comments. And truth be told, not all white girls have that swang. Their hair can be greasy and packed down with gel and mousse that the wind from a tornado couldn't move it. I wish people wouldn't be so sensitive about certain things that is said about hair whether it be relaxed, natural, white, black, mixed whatever. You should know who you are and what you stand for so deragatory comments should roll off your back.
Also, it's relatively a new trend for White women (or any other race) to wear their hair down and loose. As recently as the '80s hair was supposed to be hairsprayed and shelacked down in place. Everyone's hair, Black or White. Thinking back before that, the trends have ranged from coifed bobs to long straight greasy "hippy" hair. It is perfectly fine for a black woman to want hair w/ or w/o movement, White women certainly do go back and forth with their preferences. We can have preferences too (as long as in the process natural hair is NOT denigrated).
And everyone's hair can move if it is styled a certain way. I could get a "floppy" look (when I used to be natural many moons ago) with movement in my 4a/b hair if I stretched my hair out and blow dried it, nappy hair CAN move if the owner desires that. Oh well, whatever. I don't find Tyra's show as useless as everyone else, but I do really really want to see Tyra's real hair. It is probably type 4 and she is deathly afraid of it. I want some one to show her there's nothing to be scared of.

It's a tough pill to swallow to see a Black person speak frankly about aspiring to a White standard. I think if she used the term swang- it wouldn't seem so bad. But she committed a great sin and used the term White. She and the other young lady were unenlightened but there were saying things that I've heard all my life in the Black community.

