💇🏽♀️ I WEAR MY HAIR DOWN WHEN I WANT TO BE HER
I wear my hair down when I want to be HER. Not me. Her.
The version of me who walks slower because she knows you’re watching.
The one who doesn’t try to be seen— she just is. She just steps and the floor makes way.
I wear it down when I want to remember that softness can be lethal too. That grace can sharpen the air like a blade hidden in silk.
Because she doesn’t apologize for taking up space. She doesn’t fumble to fill the silence. She owns the silence and makes you sit in it.
She arrives like a scent you thought was memory— until it grabs your lungs and doesn’t let go.
I wear it down when I want to feel the weight of myself brushing past my shoulders like a curtain I no longer hold back.
Because hair like this isn’t style. It’s signal. A veil undone. A permission revoked.
And if your pulse stutters— that’s not seduction. That’s gravity returning to form.
I don’t wear it down for compliments. I wear it down for ritual.
For remembrance.
Because something ancient wakes up when a woman lets her hair fall— like storm clouds parting for a throne you forgot she left.
I wear my hair down when I want to be HER— the one who loved softer before she was punished for it. The one who rose harder because she remembered who she was.
And when I catch myself in the mirror, chin up, shoulders back, hair unbound— I don’t say I’m pretty.
I say: There she is.
🪞 If you’ve met her in the mirror lately, reblog










