24 thoughts on “Shampoo Regimen | Natural Hair Care for Children Series”
Today Michelle and Evie joined me to do a one on one hair care lesson. I
thought if this helped her is might help others. I hope you all enjoy this
tutorial and please share with any parent you feel might like it too! Make
sure you come back Thursday for video 2 where I will be showing an easy
style and trim!
I love this! It’s such a blessing for this family to love and welcome this
child into their home. You can clearly see the love and care this mother
has showered on her daughter! I can only imagine how the mom felt to be
unsure of how to care for such a basic need. Bless you for taking the time
to educate her on haircare for tightly coiled hair!
Evie’s hair looks so cute at the beginning.. she was doing a good job
already and I’m sure with your direction they will both be less overwhelmed
and have more options than just her afro texture. LOVE THIS!
I commend the mom for wanting to learn how to maintain her daughter’s
natural hair on her own. When you have a child of a different culture its
important to maintain that culture for the child.
When in doubt, Fro it out! Her hair looked good in the fro too. I love that
she wanted to learn more about her daughters hair. What an awesome, loving
mother!
MA you are such a sweetheart for helping this mother out, I’m sure this was
probably painful for her as well as her baby in doing her hair texture. I’m
sure when she left your home she left with the knowledge and comfort that
caring for her babies hair can now be much easier for her. Your such a
blessing to so many.
What a beautiful video. It really put a smile on my face to see how this
mom loves and cares for her daughter. Can’t wait to see the next video.
Evie is too cute.
I think people assume it’s only white mothers of black adopted babies or
mixed race babies that need educating in how to care for they’re child’s
hair, but a lot of us mixed race and black mums need re educating. Mostly
because our mums were given bad information on how to care for our hair.
And generations of women have continued doing things to our hair that were
unhealthy. Don’t get me wrong there are some great traditions passed down.
But for example greasing the scalp was considered a good thing but now
we’re told it clogs the pores and slows down hair growth. So I think we
could all re learn good healthy techniques to care for our hair. xx
I love how you cover Mom-stuff on your channel. I wished for a little girl
but I was blessed with 2 boys. I love the support you provided in a
mom-to-mom way. MA you are an awesome lady.
Little Evie is just so adorable. It’s great that she sat still and allowed
you to do her hair. My hair in it’s natural state is very thick and I
remember not liking getting my hair combed when I was younger.
black hair care is a struggle and I’M A BLACK WOMAN with natural hair!!
kudos to this mama for reaching out for help and to you for giving it to
her. awesome.
This was so cute to watch, Im also adopted by white people my mom was
taught how to do my hair but was so busy with work she hardly did it. I
look at pictures of myself when I was a child and laugh so hard because my
hair was so bad lol
This is great video, I can even learn from this video after two years of
being natural and still have challenges. I think this could be a calling
for you to help educate mothers of different races that adopt black
children and also black mothers who want to learn more about how to care
for their children`s natural hair. Please continue this series and I hope
you can develop something successful from this. All the best
I commend this woman because she is very unfamiliar with afro textured
natural hair but she is taking the initiative to learn. KUDOS! I am so sick
and tired of seeing white women that have biracial children that are half
black and they don’t know how to do their children’s hair. Then mom sends
these kids off to school looking crazy and all the kids make fun of them.
Hey white women…. If you are going to sleep with black men and have
biracial children take the initiative and learn how to do their hair so
that they don’t go to school and get teased. So that as they grow up you
can teach them how to take care of their hair and they can carry what they
have learned from you with them into adulthood. I went to school with this
biracial girl, mom was white dad was black, she was a very smart and pretty
girl but her hair always looked like a birds nest just a dry and ravaged
bird’s nest. Kids would make fun of her and send her home crying everyday.
Learn to do their hair!
Today Michelle and Evie joined me to do a one on one hair care lesson. I
thought if this helped her is might help others. I hope you all enjoy this
tutorial and please share with any parent you feel might like it too! Make
sure you come back Thursday for video 2 where I will be showing an easy
style and trim!
~MA
Great video! Awesome concept.
I love this! It’s such a blessing for this family to love and welcome this
child into their home. You can clearly see the love and care this mother
has showered on her daughter! I can only imagine how the mom felt to be
unsure of how to care for such a basic need. Bless you for taking the time
to educate her on haircare for tightly coiled hair!
Thursday! I need part 2 right now though! Lol great video for any mother
taking care of natural hair. ..especially me. :-)
Evie’s hair looks so cute at the beginning.. she was doing a good job
already and I’m sure with your direction they will both be less overwhelmed
and have more options than just her afro texture. LOVE THIS!
I commend the mom for wanting to learn how to maintain her daughter’s
natural hair on her own. When you have a child of a different culture its
important to maintain that culture for the child.
Love this video !!! Evie is a cutie !
When in doubt, Fro it out! Her hair looked good in the fro too. I love that
she wanted to learn more about her daughters hair. What an awesome, loving
mother!
MA you are such a sweetheart for helping this mother out, I’m sure this was
probably painful for her as well as her baby in doing her hair texture. I’m
sure when she left your home she left with the knowledge and comfort that
caring for her babies hair can now be much easier for her. Your such a
blessing to so many.
Awesome Video. Some many can benefit from it, including me! Sharing
now!!!
You are doing awesome! You are only one person. Quality and thoughtfulness
is better than quantity. Go on Girl!
What a beautiful video. It really put a smile on my face to see how this
mom loves and cares for her daughter. Can’t wait to see the next video.
Evie is too cute.
Loved this! Looking forward to part 2 & Evie is sooo cute!
Such a cute little girl and it’s wonderful that her mum is so interested in
learning how to care for her hair.
I think people assume it’s only white mothers of black adopted babies or
mixed race babies that need educating in how to care for they’re child’s
hair, but a lot of us mixed race and black mums need re educating. Mostly
because our mums were given bad information on how to care for our hair.
And generations of women have continued doing things to our hair that were
unhealthy. Don’t get me wrong there are some great traditions passed down.
But for example greasing the scalp was considered a good thing but now
we’re told it clogs the pores and slows down hair growth. So I think we
could all re learn good healthy techniques to care for our hair. xx
Great video !!!! That poor woman was prob overwhelmed like the rest of us
Moms with daughters with natural hair!!! Can’t wait to see vid #2!!
I love how you cover Mom-stuff on your channel. I wished for a little girl
but I was blessed with 2 boys. I love the support you provided in a
mom-to-mom way. MA you are an awesome lady.
Little Evie is just so adorable. It’s great that she sat still and allowed
you to do her hair. My hair in it’s natural state is very thick and I
remember not liking getting my hair combed when I was younger.
black hair care is a struggle and I’M A BLACK WOMAN with natural hair!!
kudos to this mama for reaching out for help and to you for giving it to
her. awesome.
Learn more about hair care for your little ones.
This was so cute to watch, Im also adopted by white people my mom was
taught how to do my hair but was so busy with work she hardly did it. I
look at pictures of myself when I was a child and laugh so hard because my
hair was so bad lol
Awesome video!
This is great video, I can even learn from this video after two years of
being natural and still have challenges. I think this could be a calling
for you to help educate mothers of different races that adopt black
children and also black mothers who want to learn more about how to care
for their children`s natural hair. Please continue this series and I hope
you can develop something successful from this. All the best
I commend this woman because she is very unfamiliar with afro textured
natural hair but she is taking the initiative to learn. KUDOS! I am so sick
and tired of seeing white women that have biracial children that are half
black and they don’t know how to do their children’s hair. Then mom sends
these kids off to school looking crazy and all the kids make fun of them.
Hey white women…. If you are going to sleep with black men and have
biracial children take the initiative and learn how to do their hair so
that they don’t go to school and get teased. So that as they grow up you
can teach them how to take care of their hair and they can carry what they
have learned from you with them into adulthood. I went to school with this
biracial girl, mom was white dad was black, she was a very smart and pretty
girl but her hair always looked like a birds nest just a dry and ravaged
bird’s nest. Kids would make fun of her and send her home crying everyday.
Learn to do their hair!