Let’s
put things in perspective.
My disability income
has
not been
cut. I found a temporary
home
to
live
in
for the
next
six months. I have
neither
a cough nor a fever.
I can still smell
and taste
my
food. I’m not on a ventilator.
I’m not even
“suffering”
from boredom.
Advantage
introvert.
So
I’ve
got
it good.
If
you’d like,
this
might be
the
time
to
stop reading
and resume
your
online
surfing.
I’m sure
Drs.
Oz and Phil have
more
sage
things
to say about the
pandemic.
It’s time
for
me
to
whine.
I’m
bracing for your eye
rolls.
I’m trying to pretend
I’m not on the
precipice
of
an all-out hair crisis.
I’d
thought I’d timed
things perfectly,
texting
my hairstylist during the
first
week
of March and ensuring
she
could
fit me
in
for a cut, sideburn
coloring and full highlights five
days
before
my
flight to Stockholm. It was the
last
possible
day
that would work, given
that I had so many tasks and appointments
related
to my scheduled move-out
from my condo. It had taken
her
three
days
to reply
to my text,
but we
locked
in the
day
and time
and
I felt
confident
I’d be
well
groomed,
perhaps
even
blending
in as a wannabe
Swede.
You
know what came
next.
I stayed
in full denial
about both the
trip
and the
cut.
They
would happen.
Wish for something
bad enough
and it comes
true.
Disney told me so.
Hmm,
the
prime
minister’s
hair is
holding up particularly well...
|
But
then
Sweden
closed
its borders
to foreigners
and the
next
day my stylist texted
to say she
could
no longer
take
appointments.
It was for her
safety,
for our safety
and, as if to make
sure
I’d
suck it up and show both
dignity
and awareness for others,
she
added
that she
was
in daily contact with elderly
family members
and relatives
with compromised
immunity. Secretly,
I thought the
canceled
haircut was a brilliant,
if mean-spirited,
maneuver
by our prime
minister
to ensure
that
I would stay at home.
Well
played,
Mr. Trudeau.
Well
played.
When
pushed
and prodded
enough,
we
all
can come
up
with something
as our best
physical asset.
Maybe
it’s
piercing
blue
eyes
or toothpaste
commercial-worthy
teeth
or bulging biceps
or a bubble
butt.
For me,
perhaps
by default,
it’s hair.
It
wasn’t always so. As
a kid growing
up in
the
’70s,
I
was
regularly
ridiculed for
being
the
only
kid in class with a head
of unruly red
curls. Living
far from the
Emerald
Isle,
red
was considered
freakish
and
plain ugly. Fonzie
wooed
the
girls,
not Richie
Cunningham.
I got called
Carrot Top, Raggedy
Andy and, yes,
Raggedy
Ann. Mild putdowns but devastating
for a shy, overly
sensitive
kid
with a propensity
for staring at his shoelaces
and saving his best
conversations
for imaginary friends.
I
grew
into my hair. In my twenties,
people—always
women—started
to almost sound envious
about the
shade,
a
sun-kissed
strawberry blond in summer,
a deeper
auburn in winter.
They
even
liked
the
thickness
and the
twisty,
willful
curls. It was the
’80s,
after
all, the
era
of big, big hair.
Alas,
the
’80s
are
long
behind
us but my big, big hair is back. I’m doing what I can to cope,
adding
extra
gel
as a feeble
effort
to tame
the
beast
and playing with the
part
every
day as if something
slightly off-center
will make
the
waves
less
than tsunami-sized.
I take
comfort
knowing I’m not going through hair anxiety
alone.
I
see
the
distressed
tweets
on a daily basis. I’ve
seen
the
selfies
documenting
drastic action, men
shaving themselves
down to a stubbled
noggin. Two
weeks
ago, my boyfriend (yes,
it’s reached
the
point
where
I’m
calling Daniel
that) texted
me
to
tell
me
he’d
taken
a shaver
to his already
short gray hairdo. “Photo, please,”
I
replied.
I needed
to prepare
in
order
to conceal
a possible
look
of shock. Fortunately, he
looked
as handsome
as
ever.
To
be
sure,
I
won’t be
shaving
my head.
When
I was about twelve
or
thirteen—such
a vulnerable
age—,
my paternal
grandmother
looked
at me
and
said, “I see
you
got my moles.”
I
know there’s
a whole
field
of them
under
all my hair. A
few
years
ago, one
of
them
blew
up to the
size
of
a cyst and I
had
it cut out after
a six year
old quite
delicately
informed
me
that
I had a wad of bubble
gum
stuck in my hair. If
only. Over
the
years,
hairstylists have
nicked
many a mole.
What
lies
beneath
ain’t pretty.
About
four times
a week
Daniel
offers
to cut my hair. It’s
clear
evidence
I whine
too
much. I really
must stop claiming that hair cutting should be
an
essential
service.
I
politely
decline
the
offer
or
artfully dodge
the
subject,
craning my neck
and pointing out a social distance
violator
on one
of
our many walks. (That always gets
him.) For a moment
this week,
I almost
empathized
with the
red-capped
protesters
in Michigan, wanting to reopen
businesses
so they
could feast
on endless
breadsticks
at Olive
Garden
once
again.
I’ve
also
dreamed
too often
about a black market
for barbers
cropping up.
The
reveal:
morning bedhead
|
I’m
sane
enough
to know ordering
barbers
back to work won’t bring the
immediate
relief
I need.
Toilet
paper
plundering
will pale
in
comparison to the
riots
that will break
out during the
quest
for hair redemption.
People
will
rush to make
appointments
with far quicker
texting
thumbs. I’ll
be
left
staring longingly into salons, watching other
luckier
souls sitting and sipping their
newly
appreciated
Starbucks frappuccinos as their
tresses
are
tamed.
Relief
for
me
is
many weeks
away, perhaps
even
longer.
I’ve
started
studying the
looks
of Marge
Simpson
and ’80s New
Wave
bands.
I fear
that in a moment
of styling defeat,
I may surrender
to split ends
and asymmetry,
letting
Daniel
hack away with a dull
pair
of kitchen
scissors. It seems
too early
to put our relationship
to such a test.
But
these
are
indeed
dire
times.
I
close
with
another
reality
check.
Yes,
yes,
I’m in good health.
That’s the
main
thing. Now that grocery
stores
aren’t
letting
me
bring
in my canvas bags, I can always pass the
idle
time
turning
my growing supply of paper
bags into an art project.
2020 will go down as an anomaly in the
fashion
annals anyway.
Keep
coping, people.
We
shall
survive
this,
even
if things have
to
get
a little
uglier.
2 comments:
Boyfriend. Relationship. Hmmm.
Sounds like this pandemic (I can't believe I'm using that word in 2020) might be forcing you to accept any number of things you wouldn't otherwise, including an unkempt head of hair (what a symbol). Embrace it, RG. Call it freedom.
Own it! By the way, you look like a former colleague of mine called Leif. :)
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