Thursday, November 6, 2014

Curls Gone Wild!

Ayanna Nzinga Williams (center) with natural hair YouTube video stars Alyssa Forever (l) and Taren Guy (r).

Congratulations to Ayanna Nzinga Williams (center), founder/CEO of the Curls Gone Wild® conference at the University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign). The conference was jam packed to overflowing, and free goodie bags with hair products were had by all! Ayanna has introduced a new level of discussion into the natural hair movement. It's about freedom, self-esteem, self-empowerment and, most important, fun. To paraphrase BeyoncĂ©, sistas run the world! Our future is in good hands!

Love,
Donna Marie

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Runway show for real-sized women

Following is the Evans fashion show held during London Fashion Week. What do you think?


Did you notice how sistas were barely represented in the show? What, they couldn't find any? Please.

As for the clothes, apparently the line "includes reworked styles from top designers' main collections." I would wear a couple of the outfits, but overall I was underwhelmed. Why is it so difficult for designers to create cute clothes for curvy bodies? 

Love!
Donna Marie

Monday, September 15, 2014

Gymnast Lloimincia Hall's got the funk, is PERFECTION

Where have I been? Lloimincia Hall competed in February 2013 and earned a perfect score of 10, but hey, better late than never. Watching this, I just can't stop smiling. She is clearly doing her own thang, and doing it to perfection.


From the YouTube description: "LSU sophomore gymnast Lloimincia Hall earned a perfect 10.0 score on floor exercise at Missouri on 2/8/13. It was the first 10 of Hall's career and the first 10 for an LSU gymnast since Ashleigh Clare-Kearney did it on vault during the 2009 season."

And isn't it just wonderful how her teammates and the crowd supported her? There's hope, I tell ya, there's hope!

Love!
Donna Marie

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Curls Gone Wild | Illini Edition

Ayanna Nzinga, my daughter and U. of Illinois econ/sustainability senior, interviewed her fellow Illini students about their natural hair raising experiences. Enjoy!







Love!

Donna

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Love your body as is

Love your body exactly as it is right now: pillowy, pudgy, saggy, floppy, billowy, fleshy. Loving your body puts you in the right frame of mind to achieve the body you want. Throughout the day, say these simple, powerful words: “I love my body as is.” Now that you love your body, you have developed a strong foundation for creating the new and improved body you want. But never forget, "I love my body as is."

Love!
Donna Marie

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Free your mind, feel good

Live and let live, that's my motto – at least I try not to judge. I'm not always successful, but I try. Who am I to think I'm always right, anyway? Besides, being constipated with grudges and judgmentalism clogs the spirit and backs you up with negative emotions, stress, and illness. I want none of that.

Are you with me? Need an antidote to runaway judgmentalism? I give you En Vogue...


Prejudice, wrote a song about it.
Like to hear it? Here it go.

I wear tight clothing, high heeled shoes
It doesn't mean that I'm a prostitute, no no
I like rap music, wear hip hop clothes
That doesn't mean that I'm out sellin' dope no no
Oh my forgive me for having straight hair, no
It doesn't mean there's another blood in my heir yeah yeah
I might date another race or color
It doesn't mean I don't like my strong black brothers.

Why oh why must it be this way
Before you can read me you gotta learn how to see me, I said
Free your mind and the rest will follow
Be color blind, don't be so shallow.
Free your mind and the rest will follow
Be color blind, don't be so shallow

So I'm a sistah
Buy things with cash
That really doesn't mean that all my credit's bad, oooh
So why dispute me and waste my time
Because you really think the price is high for me
I can't look without being watched, and oh
You rang my buy before I made up my mind, OW!
Oh now attitude, why even bother
I can't change your mind, you can't change my color

Why oh why must it be this way?
Before you can read me you gotta learn how to see me, I said
Free your mind and the rest will follow
Be color blind, don't be so shallow…

Why oh why must it be this way?
Before you can read me you gotta learn how to see me, I said
Free your mind and the rest will follow
Be color blind, don’t be so shallow… FREE YOUR MIND!


Love!
Donna

Monday, August 25, 2014

Sports Illustrated cover girl, Mo'Ne Davis

Reporter: “What’s your signature pitch?" 
Mo’ne Davis: “Strike.”

Mo'ne Davis at #ESPNThePicnic (Kaitee Daley)
Forget about your models in skimpy bikinis. Little League World Series pitching star, Mo'Ne Davis, has taken over the cover of Sports Illustrated! See photo highlights of her outstanding performance here.

A role model to girls who love sports, Mo'Ne has a 70-mph fastball, and she's the only girl on her team, the Taney Dragons.

Not that I keep up with Sports Illustrated covers, but I can't remember when a 13-year-old black girl from Philly dominated the cover of any magazine, not to mention SI, but there she is, in all her skilled, disciplined, gorgeous glory.

That's not all. Jackie Robinson West, the Little League team from the south side of Chicago, won the U.S. title! I will never, ever, forget that last play FOR AS LONG AS I LIVE!!

To watch these young people play ball was a thing of beauty. Congratulations to their parents, and double props to their coaches. Even the commentators had to give it up: these kids have skills. And I loved their sportsmanship. Beautiful.

Mo'Ne and the boys have restored my faith in youth, and I know I'm not alone in feeling this way. When coming home the evening after JRW's big win against Nevada, a young football team was waiting for us at the stoplight off I-57. They were trying to raise money for their upcoming season. Helmets in hand, they walked in a dignified manner in between the lanes as their coaches kept a watchful eye.

I gave money, as did nearly everyone who stopped at the light. When children work hard, we must support them. Whether they win the game or not is not always the point. Mastering a skill develops self-esteem, discipline, time management, and a strong sense of team in kids.

In my family, we put our children in music (see SugarStrings), but sports is equally powerful in developing physical, social, and cognitive skills. Like I said, a beautiful thing.

I bet Jackie Robinson is up in heaven giving the angels high fives!

Love!
Donna

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Fitness sista, Tiffany Rothe

Tiffany Rothe is a force of fitness nature! Check out her exercise videos on YouTube. I subscribed to her channel today, and I promise you, I will not let them sit in the corner like an unused piece of exercise equipment (y'all know what I'm talking about).

For all you mamas out there who can't stand to see your kids waste good food, check out this Tiffany tip:


Love!
Donna

Friday, August 15, 2014

Hands up, don't shoot: a new thought for our sons

My son, the verbose Michael, long ago
I have a son. He's grown now, but I can remember how goofy he was as a kid. And talkative. I mean that boy could talk. That boy would talk (about nothing, I used to think) even when tears of extreme fatigue were slipping down my face. It really didn't matter if I was asleep or awake. He'd talk.

My son loves to write rap lyrics. Yes, some of them are a bit foul for my taste, but they're always thought provoking. He looks at the world through the lens of his hybrid experience, a suburban kid, an urban kid, and his finally making peace with both.

I can't help but think about my black son in light of the young black men who seem to be constantly under attack – from elements within society and, to be honest, urban culture and themselves.

Why would I even raise this issue on a blog that purports to raise the spirits of black women and our friends of goodwill? Because when I think of Ferguson and New York and Florida and L.A. and every weekend in Chicago, my hometown, I find I must make an extra effort to feel good, and often, to be honest, I'm not all that successful.

Yet despite what's going on around us, it's still our job to manage our emotional states, to make ourselves healthy, to educate ourselves, to steadily create a better world for ourselves and our children.

A long time ago, I worked for some consultants who would go into schools, mostly urban, and work with kids. One of the consultants, a gang violence specialist, used to say that what looks like black-on-black homicide is really black male suicide. If that's true, that our young black males are subconsciously taking themselves out, then that speaks volumes about their internal states. They're depressed, angry, and terrified. But they can't talk about it, and they can't show it. That would be a violation of the street.

Sister Feelgood. Sigh. In times like these, I wonder if I'm off the mark. Is Sister Feelgood too much in la la land?

No. Sister Feelgood is all about self-esteem, self-love, and taking our power back. Motivating ourselves to do better every single day. It's beyond survival. It's about thriving.

I believe a thought, a single thought, has been deposited into the collective unconscious of black males: powerlessness. Powerlessness in men leads to anger and a strong sense of victimization, which leads to all kinds of negative, problematic behaviors.

I'm not blaming the victim. No, today I'm praying for the sons, all sons, but especially African American sons, that they just entertain this one thought: they are not victims. They are powerful. A lot must occur before such a thought can become an eternal, internal state, but for now, here's just a seed of a prayer: my sons, you are not victims. You are powerful, and you have what it takes to transform your lives into whatever you want and pursue your highest calling.

To truly begin to think and feel this way is a gift from God. It may not happen overnight, but if you just have the thought, "I am not a victim, and I am powerful," you will begin to see opportunities everywhere. You will begin to think, feel, and behave differently. The Bible says, "Out of the heart, the mouth speaks." You'll even start talking differently.

Martin Luther King and Malcolm X held to their extremely high-level visions for a better world, even when the dogs and hoses were loosed on them. In fact, Malcolm X raised his consciousness in prison. These men didn't waver. Our sons must be taught to envision a better life. And I don't think the lyrics of their favorite music will take them to that higher place that they, deep down, crave in their souls.

The other day a guy said to my verbose son, "My man Mike! All about that positivity, heh heh." As if being positive was about unicorns and daffodils, not for everyday living. I'm proud my son has the courage to go against the current. He believes he's responsible for his thought life, emotional life, and behaviors toward self and others. No one else.

Yes, the police need to be retrained. Yes, racism needs to be eliminated. But on our side, moms and dads, we must begin to teach our sons that their lives change the minute they change.

Maybe we've gotten it all wrong. We've been saying, "No justice, no peace." Maybe the truth of the matter is, "Without inner peace, there will be no justice."

Love!
Donna Marie

Friday, August 8, 2014

'Happy' cracks the egg

I've heard a few covers of Pharrell's "Happy" and I've loved most. But this one by Alex Boye' cracks our world's hard shell of negativity and lets the light of joy break through.



I'm guilty of reading too much bad news, but sometimes you've got to take a break from it all and just decide to be happeeeee. Like this...

Clap along if you feel like a room without a roof
Clap along if you feel like happiness is the truth
Clap along if you know what happiness is to you
Clap along if you feel like that's what you wanna do!

I nominate Pharrell Williams for a Nobel Peace Prize, and I hope he'll wear his Dudley Do-Right hat by Vivienne Westwood when accepting the award. Why the heck not? It's hard to feel hatred when you hear this song, and it's high time an artist won the prize. Are you with me?

Have a happy weekend!

Love!
Donna Marie

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Style yourself to get the feeling you want

The Bassett
Forgive my gushing, but at 55 years old, Angela Bassett is awesomely amazing. Gorgeous. In great shape. Talented. Smart. She's my shero today, and I wanted to share with you some pure undiluted Angela wisdom.

In an interview with Violet Grey, Angela explains how she uses fashion to manifest a feeling. First she asks herself how she wants to feel. "Do I want to be flirty? Sensual? Powerful? Then I try to dress for that feeling," she says. 

Her words struck me as pure gold. In our quest to manifest our dreams, our job is to practice our faith, especially when what we want is nowhere in sight. That means getting our thoughts and feelings to sing in positive harmony. God and the angels take care of the rest.

But that's the trick, isn't it? Staying positive and emotionally tuned up in love and happiness while you're sick, broke, or lonely. It's a psyche job, and you have to work at it everyday. Sometimes it seems like every five minutes you're trying to coax yourself into a better mood. Keep at it, though. The effort is well worth it.

We have our spiritual tools, like gratitude, forgiveness, and prayer, and thanks to Ms. Bassett, now we have fashion. Yup, fashion can be used as a spiritual tool.

Just for today, let's table our desire. Instead let's just aim for manifesting a good feeling. How do you want to feel today? Flirty? Wealthy? Powerful? Loved? Faithful?

Now go into your closet and assemble an outfit that will give you that feeling. Note how certain colors make you feel.

Put it on, and don't forget to accessorize.

Looking good, feeling good!

Love!
Donna Marie

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Happy independence, Jamaica!


When I was a little girl, my Jamaican mother took me and my sister to the island to celebrate Independence Day with family. I'll never forget, there was dancing in the streets, mon!

Let's pray today for the beautiful Jamaican people and land. Irie! It's all good!


Now That We've Found Love ~ Third World


Try Jah Love ~ Third World


Funkin' for Jamaica ~ Tom Browne

Love,
Donna Marie

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Social networking goes natural

Kimberly Lewis, CEO, The Natural Hair Academy
Natural hair is back, baby! After decades of ends-splitting, scalp-drying, shaft-burning, edge-ripping jheri curls, chemical relaxers, flat irons, lace fronts, and weaves, today's "naturals" are returning full circle to the styles of the '60s and '70s, but with a twist.

Back in the day, afros were blown out to smooth perfection. Think young Michael Jackson and BernNadette Stanis (Thelma in Good Times). A radical departure from straightened hair, fros were a power statement, a fist-pumping rejection of the dominant culture. Today's natural hair styles – locks, braids, fros, and those that defy categorization – seem wilder and freer, a symbol of our deepening self-acceptance within the context of white beauty standards, and that's a healthy shift in the right direction.

We haven't seen the last of butt-long weaves and chemicals, but we now have natural hairstyles in our collective beauty arsenal to add variety and to give our scalps and hair much needed respite. Heralding the natural trend with education and community, Kimberly Lewis unveiled The Natural Hair Care Academy, a social networking site for naturals, at a recent launch event in Chicago.

The Natural Hair Care Academy team. Photo: Ayanna Nzinga Williams
The Academy's online platform "unites natural and transitioning women of every hair texture through one virtual community," says Kim. "We offer educational tools and tips, customized courses, and a community where natural women can find support throughout their hair journey."

This intellectual and communal approach to hair was intriguing, so I asked Kim to share her thoughts on natural beauty and the movement in general.

DONNA MARIE: This is very basic, but define natural hair. Are you completely against flat ironing, weaves, relaxers, etc.?

KIMBERLY LEWIS: We define "natural" as hair that is not texturally altered by means of a chemical treatment, such as a relaxer, but not including hair dying products. We recognize that women who choose weaves, wigs, hair extensions, and extended braid styling can also be considered natural if the hair being concealed or enhanced is not texturally altered by means of a chemical treatment. The Natural Hair Academy does not discriminate against, nor does it advocate for the exclusion of women with chemically enhanced styling from the natural community.

DMW: Why did you feel there was a need for a social networking site for naturals?

KL: Just like me, many other women experience the negative reactions to wearing their natural, and I wanted to build a place where we could build each other up. YouTube was great but there was a lot of one-way communication, one vlogger talking to several hundred thousand people. We needed a platform where people could be both leaders and members.

At The Natural Hair Academy, you can sign up, build your profile, join the group/class with your texture to share styles and tips, write a post on our community news feed, check out the latest in natural hair through our natural news section, enter to win weekly hair challenge giveaways, and access weekly Groupon-type deals. Some features that we are currently building are a salon directory, product library and grading system, and classroom leaders to help educate about the different hair textures.

DMW: Why is education needed? Can't we just wash and condition our hair?

KL: For so long African Americans have experienced oppression and discrimination because of our hair. We rejected the exploration of caring for our hair in its natural state and instead developed ways to chemically alter our hair to make it acceptable. We didn't have the opportunity to explore our hair and find out what works best. As a result, naturals need to be educated on how to moisturize, style, shampoo, condition, etc. because many of us have used straightening agents our whole lives and don't know how to manage our own texture.

DMW: What was your own journey to natural like?

KL: I've been natural since summer of 2010. Since I was a little girl, I had a relaxer, and after 11 years of heat and chemicals, I had no idea what my real hair texture actually looked like. As the years of damage piled up, my hair began breaking off, getting shorter and shorter each year. After years of abuse, I was fed up with the breakage and hair loss (alopecia) and physical damage to my scalp, and I decided I was going natural. I received a lot of negativity that summer like, "Are you crazy? Why do you want nappy hair?" Someone even told me, "Girl, you need a perm." I felt so ashamed of how I looked I spent the summer wearing hats and scarves to hide my hair. I got so fed up and told my boyfriend to just chop it all OFF! The only thing I had at the time was a pair of crafts scissors and he told me to make the first chop. I did and he did the rest. I had officially begun my natural journey, but I had no clue what to do with my hair. Then one of my friends introduced me to YouTube. I started subscribing to vloggers like Naptural85, NikkiMae2003, MyNaturalSistas, and BeautifulBrwnBabyDol, just to name a few. I spent several hours a day watching their videos and posts for product reviews, styles, tips, and techniques which really helped me a lot. I was able to do so much with my hair.

DMW: Lately I've been hearing about racist incidents in schools and in the workplace connected to natural hair styles.

KL: Right! Recently a friend was insulted in front of the entire administration at her job for wearing her hair in twist out. Her boss told her that her hair was unkempt, unprofessional, and should not be worn like that to work again. I told her that in her follow-up meeting with him to educate him about black hair. "Let him know how your hair grows and that it isn't naturally straight and that you aren't wearing it curly as a way to stand out but rather to embrace who you are. Everyone else at your workplace is allowed to do so. Why aren't you?"

DMW: Can you suggest some basic steps to keeping natural hair beautiful and healthy?

KL: The four essentials are:

  1. Cleansing - In order for your hair to react to products the way they are intended, you need to cleanse the cuticle layer of your hair thoroughly and regularly so that it can absorb the products. 
  2. Moisturizing - Water is excellent for adding moisture to your hair. After cleansing, add a leave-in conditioner or simply add steam or water to the hair to moisturize.
  3. Sealing - Seal in moisture with a light oil like an argan or jojoba oil. I use light oils because they absorb into hair more easily than a coconut or shea butter oil. Heavy creams and oils tend to sit on top of the cuticle layer.
  4. Styling - Many naturals think that creams moisturize the hair, but they really don't. They are meant to give you that "slippage" needed for styling. Generally oil and water do not mix, so once the oil is in your hair, it will keep the moisture from leaving the cuticle layer of the strand while providing a protective barrier around the strand.

Kim Lewis is the Academy's founder and CEO. To join the community, sign up at The Natural Hair Academy.

Love!
Donna Marie

PS: Photographer and econ/sustainability senior at University of Illinois, Ayanna Nzinga has been doing natural hair length checks every couple of months. Check her out!


Saturday, August 2, 2014

Get up offa that couch!





Get up offa that thang,
and dance 'til you feel better,
Get up offa that thang,
and dance 'til you, sing it now!
Get up offa that thang,
and dance 'til you feel better,
Get up offa that thang,
and try to release that pressure

Ha!
Good Gawd!
So good!

Dig yo mashed potatoes! Yeow!



R.I.P., James Brown!

Love,
Donna Marie

Day 48 – Eat your roughage!

The industry calls it fiber today, but let’s call it what our mamas called it—roughage, broom food that sweeps through and cleans out the intestines and colons. The health of your body’s elimination system is totally dependent on a diet with lots of roughage. And a colon impacted with years’ worth of toxins may account for a whole host of cancers and other diseases. Vegetables, of course, are great. Just don’t overcook them. Steaming and stir-frying is best. Oatmeal with a dash of salt, fresh raspberries or strawberries, and brown sugar first thing in the morning will have you feeling good and cleaned out by the end of the day. Beans are also good; just soak and cook them well to eliminate gas. Beans, veggies, and oats are also naturally low in fat and high in nutrients. A diet rich in roughage eliminates the need for laxatives.


It’s a dirty business, but somebody’s got to do it! 

Saturday, July 26, 2014

The black Mona Lisa of Pinterest


Who is she, this mystery woman with the secret smile and beautiful natural hair? Ever since I pinned her picture to my Sister Feelgood Pinterest board several months ago, she has been repinned 901 times and liked 281 times! That's a record for me!

With so many sisters going natural nowadays, we all need to know the secret of her hair care regimen. Please contact me!

Love,
Donna Marie

Day 47 – Break down big goals.

If you’re overwhelmed by the bigness of your health goal, break it down into small, manageable pieces.

Women who choose weight loss over weight maintenance can feel overwhelmed by the numbers—the number of pounds you want to lose, the amount of time it’s going to take to get there, the number of calories and fat grams you’re allowed per day—it’s enough to make you scream for mercy. What’s needed is some good ole Black woman ingenuity. Reframe in your mind the parameters of your goal. Think of smaller, more manageable short-term goals. Achievement of these smaller pieces will give you that feeling of accomplishment you so desperately need along the way. So instead of saying, “I want to lose one hundred pounds,” give yourself a weight loss goal of ten pounds. Reward yourself when you succeed. Most of weight loss is a psyche job. It’s a process of mental toughening and imagination work. Olympic athletes often attribute their success not to physical ability, but the strenuous mental work they did prior to competition.

I will rethink my narrow definitions of success. 

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

R.I.P., Maya Angelou


Maya Angelou kindly gave me permission to reprint her story "New Directions" (Wouldn't Take Nothin' for My Journey Now) in my book Black-Eyed Peas for the Soul. Here's one pearl from the excerpt:
"Each of us has the right and the responsibility to assess the roads which lie ahead, and those over which we have traveled, and if the future road looms ominous or unpromising, and the roads back uninviting, then we need to gather our resolve and, carrying only the necessary baggage, step off that road into another direction. If the new choice is also unpalatable, without embarrassment, we must be ready to change that as well." ~ Maya Angelou

Still We Rise
by Maya Angelou

You may write me down in history
With your bitter, twisted lies,
You may tread me in the very dirt
But still, like dust, I'll rise.

Does my sassiness upset you?
Why are you beset with gloom?
'Cause I walk like I've got oil wells
Pumping in my living room.

Just like moons and like suns,
With the certainty of tides,
Just like hopes springing high,
Still I'll rise.

Do you want to see me broken?
Bowed head and lowered eyes?
Shoulders falling down like teardrops.
Weakened by my soulful cries.

Does my haughtiness offend you?
Don't you take it awful hard
'Cause I laugh like I've got gold mines
Diggin' in my own back yard.

You may shoot me with your words,
You may cut me with your eyes,
You may kill me with your hatefulness,
But still, like air, I'll rise.

Does my sexiness upset you?
Does it comes as a surprise?
That I dance like I've got diamonds
At the meeting of my thighs?

Out of the huts of history's shame
I rise
Up from a past that's rooted in pain
I rise
I'm a black ocean, leaping and wide,
Welling and swelling I bear in the tide.
Leaving behind nights of terror and fear
I rise
Into a daybreak that's wondrously clear
I rise
Bringing the gifts that my ancestors gave,
I am the dream and the hope of the slave.
I rise
I rise
I rise.

And she rose! Thank you, Ms. Maya.

Love!
Donna Marie