In India, hair is not just an accessory.
It is life force. It is discipline. It is feminine lineage… rooted feminine power.
And at the same time, it’s something deeply everyday. Intimate. Domestic. Human.
In many regions — from Rajasthan to southern India — long, healthy hair has long symbolized strength, fertility, patience, and inner alignment. It’s no coincidence that ancient temple sculptures portray goddesses with abundant hair or long, ornamented braids.
Hair represents prana — the energy that circulates through the body.
Yet what I find most beautiful is this:
It’s not cared for from aesthetic obsession.
It’s cared for through ritual… and through tenderness. Through “come here, let me oil your hair.” Through oil gently warming while stories are shared.
Today I want to share the three steps I personally practice — blending Indian tradition with conscious modern beauty. Not rigidly. Not perfectly. Just intentionally.
1. Oil before you reveal
Oiling the hair is still a living tradition in India. Mothers, grandmothers, and sisters sit together massaging warm oil into the scalp.
It’s not just external nourishment.
It’s touch. It’s pause. It’s transmission.
Coconut oil strengthens the hair fiber, protects against dryness, and improves elasticity. But more than anything, it slows you down. It asks you to be present.
I apply it before washing, allowing my hair to absorb what it needs. It’s my way of honoring that tradition — even if I’m doing it alone in my bathroom between classes and choreography.
A small practical note:
Coconut oil is wonderful as an occasional treatment. However, it changes state with temperature and solidifies easily, which isn’t always ideal for household plumbing if used very frequently.
For more regular use, olive oil or argan oil are beautiful alternatives — deeply nourishing and more stable in texture.
2. The braid: contained energy
In many Indian traditions, loose hair symbolizes expansion or emotional intensity. A braid, on the other hand, gathers energy.
A braid speaks of:
– A centered woman
– Channelled energy
– Strength with direction
It also physically protects the hair from friction and breakage (and yes, it’s practical when your day is long).
But what I love most is its symbolism: each intertwined strand is memory, story, continuity.
As a dancer, I feel that my braid doesn’t just hold my hair.
It holds my energy. It grounds me before stepping on stage.
3. Beauty from within: modern coherence
This is where tradition and present day meet.
Hair doesn’t grow strong from external care alone. It needs internal support: minerals, antioxidants, fatty acids, hormonal balance… alignment between what we apply and what we nourish within.
That’s why I complement my ritual with:
✨ FRESH Beauty Caps by Ringana
A complex designed to support skin and hair from within, with antioxidants and nutrients that contribute to connective tissue quality.
✨ FRESH Shampoo by Ringana
Free from silicones that suffocate the roots. No residue build-up. Just real cleansing that respects the scalp.
I’ve been working with this brand for months now. If you’d like personal guidance and support in your own care ritual, feel free to reach out to me at:
elizabethmedinadanza@gmail.com
If I speak about feminine ritual, I cannot ignore what I choose to put into my body. For me, it’s about coherence.
Long hair as a silent declaration
In India, growing long hair is an act of patience. It is not forced. It is accompanied.
And that reminds me:
True beauty is not imposed. It is cultivated.
And it can be lived lightly.
If you choose to try this ritual, do it from love.
Not from pressure.
Not from comparison.
Because a woman’s strength is not in the length of her hair.
It’s in how she inhabits it.
With love,
Elizabeth