HAIR-RAISING EXPERIENCE (29-Jan-2021)
“God only made a few perfect heads, and the rest covered with hair” – Anonymous quote
An
ordinary hair-cutting experience morphs into a hair-raising experience and a natural
way to mitigate this risk is to orchestrate a fall with a grand entry into the
bald club. The world has only two types
of people: one who are bald and the other who are not!
Many
from the former strive for an entry into the latter via a wig here and a toupee
there, and modern clinical interventions.
Receding hairline has known benefits - time & money saved; vis-Γ -vis
the clan members who enjoy or suffer a copious full-head of hair - extravagantly
spend on a multitude of products such as hair gel, oil, combs, curlers, colors,
shampoo, not to mention the high-spend on styling options like the now
ubiquitous mohawk cut.
Who
said the hot chair is a politician’s prerogative?! There is indeed a hot chair in a barber’s
shop. One enters the shop with a head
held high but once seated subjugated to his mercy. One prays for his good mood, albeit the sound
of the scissors sends a chill up-the-spine!
A miss here and a cut there is an embarrassment with the head held low
at exit.
Good
old barbers have undergone metamorphosis in their nomenclature - hair
stylists. Then a hair-cutting episode, now
an experience - illustrated in an exhaustive menu card and astronomical price tag
– no choice but to cough! Then, one would
walk into a salon to get the hair chopped - period, and today one is treated to
a variety of experience that spans across magazine-and-newspaper browsing, a
cup of hot tea, a good scalp massage, and a pedicure. Drown in the pseudo
pleasures for an episode waylaid!
In the
70s and 80s, a step-cut a la Rajesh Khanna style to cover one’s disproportionate
ears, long-and-sharp sideburns to resemble the legendary Amitabh Bachchan, long
hair at the back to hide the dirty-and-torn shirt-collar – indeed clever variations
to a hair-cut. This stands out vividly
in my memory: met a friend outside a barber’s shop who shook his head in utter
disbelief; accosted him to gather his hit-by-a-missile suffered look. He was in despair and left the scene in
silence. The barber inside spilled the
beans - apparently his client had aspired for an AB-style haircut, but the
barber in a not-so-good mood gave him a cut that resembled the AB of Anand instead
of AB of Deewar. My friend found solace later
in looking more like a Dev Anand donning the special cap that covered up the
faults. Today this friend dons the same
Dev Anand-style cap, only that it covers now a permanent baldpate!
Then the
decision to go to a barber was swayed not by his cutting skills alone but the
hygiene of the place. Once had to leave
the hot chair abruptly, since the barber who had started my haircut stepped
away only for me to realize that he had stepped out to answer the nature’s call. A bolt from the blue that led me to bolt from
the chair – indeed a ‘hair-rising’ experience!
One can feel the breeze from another dimension. Enjoyed the article.
ReplyDeleteToo much of a breeze is a problem..... thanks... wish you had left your name
DeleteGreat perspective Prasanna, on what hair cut can do to all of us and the whole ritual has indeed undergone an evolution...especially on the people classification. I always thought there were only two types of people - one married and other not :) -jagruthi
ReplyDeleteThe lenses that you wear provides diff perspectives... evolution everywhere... thanks a lot
Deleteπ - jagruthi
DeleteGood read. But no experience to relate to π
ReplyDeleteThank you.... wish you had left your name
DeleteEnjoyed the article. Good read
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot... wish your name was there
DeleteEnjoyed the article, a good one with humor :)
ReplyDeleteThank you Chida....
DeleteEnjoyed reading this π
ReplyDeleteThanks Pranati...
DeleteGood one...Enjoyed reading
ReplyDeleteNice article, Prasanna. Reminds me of my young days when I changed my barber as the new guy pampered me with a cup of coffee and a collection of magazines.
ReplyDeleteThere you go sir......those were the days. Thanks a lot...
DeleteNice read Prasanna....the tinge of humour made it more enjoyable to read π
ReplyDeleteThank you very much...wish you had left your name.
DeleteNicely written. Some time we will be sleeping �� after giving our head to barber and my hair raising experience is when barber sprays water on our head ��
ReplyDeleteKittu... very true. The head massage is a good formula to induce sleep...
DeleteThanks a lot
Interesting pate tales !
ReplyDeleteI recall the men in the family describe the 'hair stylists' (of few decades ago) as narrators of juicy gossip of the neighbourhood too !
Padmashree
Yes you bet. They had stories since they had the heads in their hands of their clients, who would fear and hence answer all questions from the barber.
DeleteThank you as always....
good one Prasanna... keep writing ...Mie
ReplyDeleteMei Thank you very much...
DeleteHa ha ,what a humorous description true to the experience!
ReplyDeleteSuresh Srikant
Thank you sir... yes experience is what guides us forward....
DeleteThere is a saying in Tamil that in the hands of a skilled , even a blade of grass is a tool. In your hands even hair cutting experience becomes an enjoyable read.
ReplyDeletePADMANABHAN SUBRAMANIAM
Brilliant parallel you've drawn sir... very apt. Thanks for your comments.... appreciate it
DeleteEnjoyed reading this as it took down my memory lane... the difference was when I grew up in my small village, barber used to come home and get the formalities done in the designated place... of course special instructions would have been given to him before in hand for a so called "summer cut" (when did we have "winter" in down south?!)... but now it is different story as you described... to me, this one process takes a full circle in its own for many. When the hair grows, they spend money to cut for 40 odd years, and then for some they spend the same amount of money to "grow" for next 20 years!!!
ReplyDeleteYou said it Aru.... but like they day it always comes a full circle. Recently due to Covid restrictions, i had a 'hair stylist' come home in his PPE and me wearing my mask. So it was all dejavu....
DeleteThanks buddy for your comments...
Last almost one year responsibility of giving a hair cut has fallen on me ππ. Imagine π
ReplyDeletePower in your hands and you're the new stylist
DeleteThanks for stopping by....
Funny.Enjoyed itπ
ReplyDeleteGood One! Gotta flaunt it while still having it!. Being Bald during winter keeps the head really chilled! Cheers!!.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking from experience? It doesn't get that cold in Bangalore... I'm glad
DeleteThanks buddy
Glaciate/Benumb/Freezing my Borderline Bald noggin! near Baltimore!
Deletehmm Catchy!!
Good one sir :)
ReplyDeleteThank you Srinath...
DeleteWell said. Reminiscing of some good old days!!
ReplyDeleteThank you sir.... the good old days for sure and the hair cut was a luxury....
DeleteVery interesting sir...
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot
DeleteWe often ignore to focus on the health of the living cells of of body and prioritize nonliving (hair ) one ...Biswarup
ReplyDeleteYou said it Biswa.....it is very true. My take is of a lighter note on something that is so common to all of us. Thanks a lot
DeleteGood article. Enjoyed reading
ReplyDeleteVidya , Tampa, FL
Thank you very much.... appreciate it
DeleteWill written, going back to those days...
ReplyDeleteVERY TRUE SIR......memories stay with us....thanks a lot
Delete