[¡Ask a Mexican!] The Long and the Short (Hair) of It

Dear Mexican: Why, oh, why do most Mexican women cut their long, black hair after reaching the pivotal age of 40? Not only do they cut it short, but they also dye it all shades of the most unnatural hair color for Mexicans: red. My own madre is guilty of this offense, and I see it on all the older women of SanTana! Why is this the case? Why do women in Mexico tend keep their flowing hair and trencitas while women here in the States go for the Bozo look? Please help me with this!

A Que Tener Pelo Largo

Dear Wab: Mujeres shearing their locks in el Norte has gone on longer than you think—and it’s not just the geezers. “During the 1920s, a woman’s decision ‘to bob or not bob’ her hair assumed classic proportions within Mexican families,” wrote UC Irvine professor Vicki L. Ruiz in her 1999 book, From Out of the Shadows: Mexican Women In Twentieth-Century America. She was specifically talking about young mexicanas following gabacho youth trends to the consternation of their elders, but you can use that same rubric with nuestras mothers and aunts. I don’t have any empirical data on the number of old ladies with short hair in the U.S. since AARP isn’t exactly the Pew Hispanic Center of viejitos, but nearly every elderly gabacha the Mexican has ever met, seen or heard about goes with pelo corto. I’m not a post-menopausal gal, but methinks it has to do with hair loss, a better framing of the wrinkled face and the creation of an easier platform to dye those pesky grays. Since Mexicans take to American habits like we do to Reconquista, it follows que Mexican ladies copy their gabacha peers. But why the outrageous hair colores? For once, the Mexican will not dare answer a pregunta because one just doesn’t question the logic of your mami, whether it’s hair color, superstition or her insistence that Vicks VapoRub and 7-Up cure everything.

Dear Mexican: Why is it that Mexicans only want to go back to Mexico after they kill a gringo?

Gabe Ocho

Dear Gabacho: Such ignorance, such stupidity, such lies! Lou Dobbs, was that you angling for a new job?

Dear Mexican: Why do Mexicans put lard in their beans? I don’t know any fit-’n’-trim Mexicans. Even the skinny ones have a li’l belly. I just made some excellent refried beans with Goya extra-virgin olive oil and butter. Just wondering.

Skinny White Boy Vegetarian From Dallas Who Loves Healthy Tex-Mex

Dear Gabacho: Refried beans made with olive oil? Why don’t you just add tomato and capers to ruin it even more? Whatever floats your barco, but no need to call us a bunch of fatties along the way. Besides, you’re muy wrong. Not only does the Mexican know too many wabby gym rats, all getting their buff bodies ready to further overrun the United States, but also lard ain’t what gives the gordos their panzas. “My friend Rick Bayless is skinny, and he loves lard!” says Robb Walsh, author of The Tex-Mex Cookbook and perhaps the most Mexican gabacho after the famous Chicago chef. “As Señor Bayless likes to point out, lard is not unhealthy—it is lower in saturated fat and cholesterol than butter. When rendered at a high temperature, as it is in Mexico, lard has a roast-pork flavor that is part of the traditional taste of tamales, refried beans and moles. Don’t use the hydrogenated stuff in the tub—buy your lard at the butcher shop. And it sounds better if you call it manteca.” One further food insult from me: Using Goya products to cook Mexican cuisine is like making your Cuba Libre with Hornitos.

Ask the Mexican at themexican@askamexican.net or myspace.com/ocwab. Or write to him at: Gustavo Arellano, P.O. Box 1433, Anaheim, CA 92815-1433. Find him on Facebook and Twitter!

 
  • hjsan 03/02/2010 10:36:00 AM

    Dear Mexican, What is the reason for throwing coins onto a sheet that the bride and groom stand on during the reception? I had never seen this one before. Wanting traditions in our wedding couple.

  • evelyn 12/04/2009 8:09:00 PM

    the hair thing cracks me up. my abuela had long hair & it was grey. she mostly wore it in a braid as i recall. all my tias cut their hair short & dye it, yes the hideous red. my mom started doing it too. when my abuela was getting close to the end she said please grow su pelo para m� she wanted me to & i have. i'm in my 40s my hair is to my waist & there is grey in it. i don't do the braid (yet) but i might. i guess what i am saying is i took it as my abuela wanted me to keep it long like she did. so i do as my connection to her. my mom & my tias cut it short because its easy as you said, but i'm keeping mine long por mi abuela.

  • Chanterasz Verdeja 11/30/2009 11:51:00 AM

    It's no surprise that white-washed Mexicans are fat. It's the American way to be obese.

  • dallas resident 11/25/2009 10:20:00 PM

    I have a question for you, why are you so racist yet thats your number one complaint? Hypocrite..haha, Lou Dobbs has the capcity to run for president, what do you have? ahole of the year maybe, nothing more and a whole lot less..The behavior of illegals is the number one reason people dont want them here..

  • Gustavo Arellano 11/24/2009 11:04:00 PM

    David: You're about 90 years too late for your comment to have any relevance! Idiot. Beaner: DUDE, I forgot to comment on meeting your uncle at Northwestern!!! CRAZY. He's a good guy, so send him my respect! FiddleJ: Yes, let us now praise famous pigs...

  • FiddleJ 11/24/2009 8:20:00 PM

    Lard is truly a miracle ingredient. Not only does it add a magically porcine flavor to everything it touches, it makes pie crusts flaky and tender, and smells wonderful when cooking, too. A friend of mine, a 53-year-old woman, puts lard in all of her bean or tortilla dishes and she is as hot and trim as can be. Let us all give thanks to the pigs for their generous gift of lard!

  • beaner4life 11/23/2009 10:10:00 AM

    I guess my grandmother is an exception to the question about hair and Mexican women. She actually DID have red hair :D

  • aztlan 11/22/2009 11:26:00 PM

    my god. i've been thinking of this for years. the older women in my mexican side of the family sport this peggy hill look, but so do the older women on my nicaraguen side of the family. only our women would rather go blind than wear those humongous bumble bee glasses old gabachas sport all day (that's something our old men do for some reason, even when they get all vaquero-d out).so considering old gabachas, mexicans and nicaraguens, (not to mention wab negras from africa) horrible old lady hair is a transnational and multiracial nightmare. ang: w/ old ladies it does seem dichotomous, que no? it's either the short 1920's look or the american indian rat tail look. both looks are prominant among the older women in my family. in fact my abuela and my dad, w/ their short wavy, peggy hill hair and bronze skin look like twins. but b/c i'm big on american indian traditions amongst mexicans, i prefer the rat tail. but either way, they both look nice w/ those mexican aprons our moms, tias and abuelitas wear all day (u know: the ones that r usually light red and white or light blue and white). david perez: do we receive special treatment or those things we demand! and to the pinche gabacho asking why we only go to mexico after we kill a gabacho... the romantic dream of getting away from the law and heading to mexico is just as prominent, if not more so, amongst gabachos. u know: the ones w/ the UC and CAL STATE sweaters who border hop for underage drinking and prostitution, and, at least according to hollywood, EVERY effen gabacho who either robs a bank or kills people.

  • DAVID PEREZ 11/21/2009 7:28:00 AM

    themexican@askamexican.net Why is it that the Town of La Habra has so many of you people and your children getting special treatment? Free food, free dental, Free college grants. You get all of La Habra and Fullerton jobs before any race...WHY? And don't forget the under the table construction business in the home. And that gardner who pays NO taxes and lives in La Habra Heights with a tennis court.....know him? bet you do.

  • Ang 11/20/2009 10:19:00 PM

    Regarding hair and Mexican senoras. How about those ladies that never, ever touch their hair. Virgin hair, I call them. Never a perm, a dye, a salon hair cut. All they do is pull it back into a colita with a scrounchy. Color of the scrounchy or liga not necessarily need to match their outfits. When hair turns gray, gray it stays, still in a ponytail.

  • Chris 11/20/2009 4:40:00 AM

    Gustavo, Good answer to the women with short hair question. You mentioned that women during the 1920's wore bob haircuts. I have pictures of my grandmother (her parents were from the state of Guanajuato) during this era wearing her hair in a short bob... and also wearing a suit and hat. Also, my wife is a hair stylist, and she says that it is a lot of work to color long hair as you mention.

  • m.e. 11/20/2009 4:28:00 AM

    beans refried with olive oil? gross..

 

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