When I Realized I Needed to Become My Own Stylist
The latter part of my teenage years was especially formative in my relationship with hair. Between the ages of seventeen and nineteen, I began working small jobs and, for the first time, could afford to splurge on professional hairstyles.
I had reached my dream. I wanted to look as though I lived inside a music video daily.
There was just one issue.
The Dream Bubble
I did not know how to do my own hair.
Haircare, to me, existed through the lens of someone else performing it. When I was finally able to afford consistent salon visits, I believed that would be enough. It looked gorgeous the first day. By the second, the finish would begin to soften.
I did not yet understand how to maintain salon hair at home.
The dream required proximity to the stylist. And that was not sustainable.
What I Observed
Someone close to me seemed to maintain that polished look daily. I was always astonished by how long she could stretch the space between appointments while still looking composed.
Looking back now, I understand why. Her hair had a rhythm.
There was a morning routine.
There was an evening routine.
She treated what was on her head with attentiveness, day and night. What I once interpreted as glamour was actually discipline.
What Changed
Years later, I understand it fully.
The life I once imagined as cinematic is now structured. My supernatural crown receives daily care. Not excessive care. Not frantic care. Consistent care.
I now instruct Princess in the same way—what to do before bed and what to do upon waking. Maintenance is not occasional. It is built into the day.
This is the principle refined within Refined Haircare 101: learning how to maintain what has already been done, so that salon-quality hair does not depend on the salon.
The transformation was not about appearance.
It was about stewardship.
The key is to become our live-in hairstylist from the inside out.