As an experienced dreadlock stylist, I've met people who express their dreadlocks in many different ways.
When it comes to beginners or "loc-starts" (as we call them) some people request micro-dreadz, small-medium, medium to big and so on..... often-times people would say "I don't want it BIG and chunky like Bongos" (people call Bongos the Big, Bold Rastafarian type dreadlocks) and they usually say it with a smile on their faces as if everyone with BIG dreadlocks don't clean them or couldn't be bothered about them. This piece is my way of finding out for myself.....If it's an artistic expression or a neglectful way of living, what do you think?
I was born in Barbados and funny enough from a very early age I was exposed to the Rastafarian lifestyle, not from my family but from some people who decided to "settle" (some would say squat or even steal or teef) on a piece of land to the bottom of my street.
I was around 7 or 8, and I found it very difficult to speak to these guys without looking at their hair. I wasn't really sure what was going on and my mum was as lost as me, never-the-less, they would talk to me about Rastafari Livity, Haile Selassie I, Bob Marley, Marcus Garvey and all associated Rasta tradition. My family was Christian, but I wasn't really attached to a religion of such, I was more interested in running wild through the jungle, which was the place that they had inhabited.
After a few months, they had built two grand-2-storey homes, I would mostly go to the one closer to me, his name was "Zoes" and I would have to shout for him over the Reggae music that would be constantly playing. Next to his house, he built a herb garden, there was Aloe Vera for bathing, and a fireplace for cooking. At night he lit his candles or sometimes it seems like he had electricity, which I found quite odd, because everyone knew that the land that they had settled on, had no facilities for utilities.
What?
I just couldnt understand how these guys could be in such harmony with their environment that they had all the things that we had, but wasnt working long hours like my mum was.
Just like our family, he had his guard dogs, his family, a daily routine, values and judgements, underneath it all, they were quite normal.
Imagine......
If Zoes was a well shaven socialite, nice clean haircut with razor marks, tattoos with a 2012 mercedes convertible, as we call them " a child of materialism" would he be in-tuned with his environment in this way?
Hmm, probably .....NO!!
Could it be that the closer someone is to their creator the more "free" or natural they become?
Well, I'm not too sure if it is neglectful anymore, seeing that the only things they neglect are they things that keep humanity in suspended animation. They neglect the rat-race and all that it has to offer. I always thought to myself that they were a symbol of creativity, man in his purest form, his most animalistic expression, an image that I admire, but would reluctantly step into.
Whatever the conclusion, its obvious that they "do" have a roll in society, even if they are merely living reminders that not everyone is enslaved to material creations.
I am happy for my childhood experience and my personal opinion is: they are towers of strength, because, everytime I see them, I see a person that don't give a damn what I think of them, fully liberated, when was the last time you felt like that?