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Why My Dad Said No to Wigs is a powerful, deeply personal speech about identity, race, and reclaiming autonomy over one’s own body and expression. Jola begins by recounting her formative years in a Nigerian boarding school, where girls were forced to shave their heads, a practice that planted early feelings of shame around natural hair. Her father’s refusal to let her wear a wig became a lesson in resisting Eurocentric beauty standards and valuing authenticity. She explores how these standards shape perceptions of Black femininity and masculinity, from the media scrutiny of figures like Megan Thee Stallion, Serena Williams, and Michelle Obama, to fictional characters like Rue from The Hunger Games. Jola highlights the pervasive double standards: dark-skinned women are coded as aggressive or masculine, while lighter features are normalized as feminine, reinforcing narrow, exclusionary ideals of beauty and behaviour. Her speech reflects on the constant pressure to perform femininity—through wigs, makeup, or behaviour—to fit these rigid standards, particularly as a Black woman in the UK. Ultimately, Jola rejects these constraints, declaring that her femininity, and that of all women of colour, is self-defined. Her message is one of empowerment: identity, aesthetic, and expression are personal and should never be dictated by external, fictionalised standards. This speech is a call to challenge harmful norms, embrace authenticity, and reclaim control over how we define ourselves and our communities. Jola’s artistic inclinations span writing, visual arts, and design reflects her philosophy as a graphic design student at Loughborough University. Her interest in media, politics and sociology allows her to reclaim narratives and challenge the ways they are represented and misrepresented in modern culture. In her upcoming speech, she explores themes of gender, race, heritage, and identity in perceived hypermasculinity of afro-textured hair as well as dark skin and phenomena such as “the UK Black girl aesthetic” through an Afrocentric and intersectional lens. In her arguments, she rejects narrow views of femininity and embracing oneself beyond flawed societal expectations as a catalyst for cultural change. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx