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He won't bathe/she won't comb her hair!!!
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<blockquote data-quote="AllStressedOut" data-source="post: 67908" data-attributes="member: 3837"><p>I love the salon idea, but I do have a suggestion for at home.</p><p></p><p>My difficult children bio cousin is half AA half white. Her hair was never fixed when we would have her visit. Yes, this is my husbands ex wifes sisters daugher, but we love her and would take her on weekends, before she was taken away from the state and her moms rights were terminated. Oh the gene pool my difficult children came from is lovely, I know!</p><p></p><p>Anyways, back to her hair. She was just a beautiful little girl, but would come over with an afro and just hated her hair. I had an AA friend who would braid it for her, but she too felt it hurt. So my AA friend recommended baby oil to control the frizz. Its the cheapest way to get the frizz under control. Just put a quarter size in your hands, rub them together then run your fingers and hands through her hair. It gets the frizz under control and she can manage her hair much easier.</p><p></p><p>I found that I could actually fix her hair almost as easy as my straight hair after the baby oil. Use more oil if you need too, but a quarter size usually did it for her shoulder length hair. I would part it in the middle and twist in from the front down to the back and put bows in it. She was younger, so this probably wouldn't be a preferred hair do for yours, but the baby oil should help manage it.</p><p></p><p>Every weekend she came to visit I would fix her hair like this and she loved it because it didn't hurt and made her hair soft.</p><p></p><p>We also used the oil and warm dryed her hair, not hot dry, and it smoothed it out some. We used a round corse brush and a hair dryer and kept the heat on warm. The hot heat was too hot for her scalp. It took more than an hour, but it did straighten and smooth it out without the pain of the heat from a straightening iron.</p><p></p><p>Hope this helps!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="AllStressedOut, post: 67908, member: 3837"] I love the salon idea, but I do have a suggestion for at home. My difficult children bio cousin is half AA half white. Her hair was never fixed when we would have her visit. Yes, this is my husbands ex wifes sisters daugher, but we love her and would take her on weekends, before she was taken away from the state and her moms rights were terminated. Oh the gene pool my difficult children came from is lovely, I know! Anyways, back to her hair. She was just a beautiful little girl, but would come over with an afro and just hated her hair. I had an AA friend who would braid it for her, but she too felt it hurt. So my AA friend recommended baby oil to control the frizz. Its the cheapest way to get the frizz under control. Just put a quarter size in your hands, rub them together then run your fingers and hands through her hair. It gets the frizz under control and she can manage her hair much easier. I found that I could actually fix her hair almost as easy as my straight hair after the baby oil. Use more oil if you need too, but a quarter size usually did it for her shoulder length hair. I would part it in the middle and twist in from the front down to the back and put bows in it. She was younger, so this probably wouldn't be a preferred hair do for yours, but the baby oil should help manage it. Every weekend she came to visit I would fix her hair like this and she loved it because it didn't hurt and made her hair soft. We also used the oil and warm dryed her hair, not hot dry, and it smoothed it out some. We used a round corse brush and a hair dryer and kept the heat on warm. The hot heat was too hot for her scalp. It took more than an hour, but it did straighten and smooth it out without the pain of the heat from a straightening iron. Hope this helps! [/QUOTE]
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He won't bathe/she won't comb her hair!!!
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