Each season of haircutting marked a major life shift, and I recoiled because I was tired of transitioning. I just wanted to be.
They fell out.
cut
Yes, this country is thirsty for your blood and I’m sorry I can’t protect you.
let her know if there was aaaanything she could do.I’m sorry
be
The cut was speedy, and, after the last snip, I looked down at heaps of black curls surrounding me. The sea of hair steadied my nerves. Post-cut, I felt bolder. But when friends complimented my short tufts, I bit my tongue. I wanted to go even shorter, but I was afraid. Being bald meant an unrecognizable me, and I was terrified of not knowing myself.
*
One year post–big chop, I sat attentively as my boo worked the clippers through my hair. His hand slipped, and “a little off the top” turned baldie fast. Tears and lumps of hair mingled in my lap. For the past month, I’d been clashing with staff at my new job; I convinced myself that longer hair would cure my conflict. The logic’s absurdity matched that month, but I was desperate. I just wanted to be treated with softness and thought femmeness would protect me. I sat, weeping for my armor on the bathroom floor. I’d lost all control, but I trusted him when he wiped my tears in apology, offering to make things better.
As my hair grew out, African Violet was my color choice for the dye. I camped out in my impromptu bathroom lab, sprawling my brushes and supplies on every available surface. My hands worked the carefully portioned powder and liquid mixtures into a creamy paste. I bowed at the mirror and dripped my head in purple, unsure which shade I would uncover. Every few minutes, I dashed out of the bathroom in a frenzy, pressing my boo to point out the spots that needed more dye. In just a few hours, I miraculously achieved my desired science. I locked eyes in the mirror with a new, unafraid person and embraced the imminent storm.
*
At the community organization, my new boss was my close friend until conflict crept in. Before that, she was my daily phone call. We vented and dreamed up futures with our own underground support networks. We delivered food to each other’s homes on emotionally draining days and drank moonshine under the night sky. Suddenly, we broke.
My boss made a decision on behalf of young people, and I trusted her, but I spoke up when I learned that our actions harmed young people. Our nightly phone calls were static, and, in our last conversation, I discovered I had been demoted from friend to coworker. I finally confessed: There’s no vulnerability in this. I know you want to trust me but you don’t. My words blew the final crack in our friendship, and my work life crumbled. Staying was combative, and, during a therapist-advised medical leave, I reckoned with the grief of losing my home again.
One year after quitting my last job, I sent a weaker, less confident letter of resignation to the community organization. I boiled my reasoning down to value differences. Leaving was ugly. While most young people offered well wishes, one called me a quitter. It wasn’t a lie.
The weeks following were steeped in self-admonishment: I hadn’t tried hard enough. Each sleepless night and skipped meal hadn’t been enough; I should have sacrificed more of myself to stay. It was capitalism’s ugliest lie that I’d refuted at my last job, but this one was different. Here, I was a community failure.
Speaking about my experience with the publicly heralded organization felt like putting family business in the streets. When folks asked, I led conversations with hushed tones. My pain and loyalty to my once home muddled into guilt.
As bills piled up, life’s grasp slipped through my fingers again and left me bitter. Unemployment claims were denied, and, soon, I spent hours pleading for a break with debt collectors. In the deepest throes of depression, I craved the promised peace of death and clung to my discounted therapy sessions as a last hope.
A trip to the beauty supply saved me from myself. That summer, wisdom spoke through Adore’s semipermanent emerald dye. After another bathroom-lab dyeing session, a close friend dubbed it “the color of the summer.” It was everywhere: splashed onto graffiti murals, along Charleston’s flower-lined streets and coastal shore when I performed a healing ritual. It was lifegiving during my depressing post-quitting months and was reassurance that speaking up for myself was my protection.
*
On the eve of my twenty-eighth birthday and fresh off the heels of my new full-moon ritual, I was almost bald again. It was a mirror moment. Me between the arms of my boo, him struggling with clippers through my now-faded green hair. I stood up and asked for the tool, curious about the machine mechanics and, admittedly, impatient. With just the right amount of pressure, the hair disappeared. The clipper’s gentle buzz was the soundtrack to my ritual. I ran my fingers across my scalp, taking in this lighter part of myself.
My haircut ritual reminded me that intention carries my self-making practice. I have been unlearning self-judgment for choosing silence for my survival and, instead, celebrating the ways I’ve fought back. This ritual of cutting, dyeing, and adorning my hair taught me that amid the suffering, I could always tend to my shattered parts and start again.
Capitalism has thrived in my conformity and self-hatred. I quit to refuse this system’s complete control of the conditions of my survival. I quit because writers create new realities. I quit because I treasured my integrity.
I’ve untethered myself to full-time employment as a current teaching artist working toward rebuilding myself, emotionally and financially. And yes, when my hand has itched for hair dye, I’ve indulged, but I have learned to embrace this spontaneity like the color emerald. Like all this color has trailed me to where I need to be.
Fullamusu Bangura is a writer originally from Washington, D.C. and currently residing in Chicago, Illinois. They are the author of the essay-book “...Considers Lil’ Kim’s Hard Core.” Their work has been published in Bitch Magazine, New Delta Review, and they were a 2020 Best of the Net Poetry finalist.