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Afro-textured hair was once language, lineage and spirituality across African cultures. It carried tribe, status and story.
Then colonisation shifted the standard. Glossy, straight hair became the global definition of beauty. Professional. Acceptable. Desirable.
So what happens to generations of women and children growing up outside that standard?
In this episode, Cynthia Simango mum, nurse and founder of Embrace for Every Curl shares her journey from Zimbabwe to America to Australia and how migration revealed a gap that was bigger than products.
There were no shelves reflecting Afro textured hair.
No widespread education.
No cultural literacy in the chair.
But the issue wasn’t just commercial. It was historical.
Cynthia built Embrace for Every Curl to restore confidence, dignity and belonging not just for women but for the next generation learning to love their natural hair early.
This is not just a hair conversation.
It’s an identity conversation.
And your curls were never the problem.
By Mana Mind StrongHerAfro-textured hair was once language, lineage and spirituality across African cultures. It carried tribe, status and story.
Then colonisation shifted the standard. Glossy, straight hair became the global definition of beauty. Professional. Acceptable. Desirable.
So what happens to generations of women and children growing up outside that standard?
In this episode, Cynthia Simango mum, nurse and founder of Embrace for Every Curl shares her journey from Zimbabwe to America to Australia and how migration revealed a gap that was bigger than products.
There were no shelves reflecting Afro textured hair.
No widespread education.
No cultural literacy in the chair.
But the issue wasn’t just commercial. It was historical.
Cynthia built Embrace for Every Curl to restore confidence, dignity and belonging not just for women but for the next generation learning to love their natural hair early.
This is not just a hair conversation.
It’s an identity conversation.
And your curls were never the problem.