Sunday, January 08, 2006 2:36 AM
by
will
Haircut
I decided to try out a new hair place in my building this weekend. Back
when I was in my glorious, long-haired hippy phase ('89 - '99
roughly), I only had to worry about getting a haircut once every year
and a half or so. Now that I'm 38 and keep my hair business-consultant
short, I
need to hit the
barber every four or five weeks. My hair doesn't grow out elegantly,
and the transition to doofus-looking is shockingly fast. (The doofus
phase lasted nearly two years when I grew my hair out. Some say it
lasted the entire decade.) At this age, I've also reached the point in
my life where advertisers and
marketers have started to write me off. As I move into middle-age, I've
developed what they call
"brand loyalty". When I find something I like, I tend to stick with it
relentlessly. Unto death. The products I use today will, it seems, be
the ones I
take with me to the grave, decades hence. (When I am laid to rest, put a
stick of "Gilette Cool Wave" deodorant on each eye so I won't stink up
the afterlife.) Thus, having found a decent
hair place near my apartment in Beijing, I had some resistance to
trying a switch. But in this situation, laziness trumped loyalty. The
prospect of finding a good cut literally right below my apartment was
too compelling to ignore.
When I first arrived in Beijing, and
was living up in the Northwest, I used to get a 10 kuai cut from the
barber at the BLCU gymnasium. It wasn't elegant, but with hair as short
as mine that's not really a concern. Your worst cut grows out in about
three weeks. Since moving downtown, I've gone to a flashier, unisex
stylist at Soho/New Town, where I now pay 80 kuai a shot, recently
raised from the 60 they used to charge for their entry-level, Chinese
styliststs. Such is the price for moving into the fashionable area of
town. Of course, all neighborhoods in Beijing have their supply of
cheap'n'cheerful, local haircut parlors. But I am always a touch wary of
the low-end because brothels notoriously masquerade as hair joints in
many parts of Beijing. Frankly, I think blow-jobs and scissors mix badly. But maybe that's just me; people looking for
no-anaesthetic vasectomies may have a different take. Of course you can
usually spot the hair brothels because they are visibly overstaffed
with Rubenesque, provincial young women in far too much makeup who sit
conspicuously close to the window or door and gaze at male passers-by
with expressions that do not, in all honesty, suggest haircuts.
Nevertheless, discretion is the better part of keeping your balls attached, so I
normally select the more upmarket joints.
My long-haired phase aside, I'm a fan of simplicity when it
comes to haircuts. Until moving to Beijing, it had almost always been a race to rock-bottom for me. Back
when I was in college, but before I started growing my hair out, I used
to get my trims for $6 from a guy called Capers who had a place down in
the Seabright neighborhood of Santa Cruz. Capers had been cutting hair
since being in the Navy in WWII or Korea, or one of those
grand-adventure wars they used to have before the Aquarians ruined that
idea for everybody with Vietnam. Apparently he'd had
both ears blown off --must have been a combat barber-- as he wore a pair
of conspicuously prosthetic ears on a metal headband. Or perhaps he cut
them off shaving, but that was too terrifying a prospect to
contemplate. Capers gave one of the world's great, power-assisted scalp
massages with a device I've never seen anywhere else, but wouldn't be
surprised to stumble upon in a Beijing hair brothel. Twenty years later
I still get tingly thinking about it. He lasted until my long-hair
decade, during which I
only had five or six trims, and so didn't have any particular loyalty
to hair joints, although I developed rigid tastes in conditioners and
hair mousses. Those were dark times.
I was living in Singapore when heat, boredom, advancing age and the
visible signs of a receding hairline made me realize the long hair had
to go. I went to a place in Great World City called "Jantzen Hair
Design" and told them to get rid of it all. All those years of long
hair had made me surprisingly tolerant of places billing themselves as
"hair design" or "stylists". Like I said, those were dark times. Jantzen whacked the
lot off and I spent the next day wandering around, feeling my scrubby
scalp in delight like a dorm-rat on X. Out of inertia I took my shorn
head back to Jantzen for several months until I realized the Malay
barber in Holland Village, walking distance from my house, would give me the exact same haircut for one
quarter the price. I stuck with those guys until I left Singapore.
The place downstairs in my apartment building is clearly "hair
design". At the low end they charge 98 kuai for a cut from a Korean
stylist, 68 for a Chinese
stylist. This graded pricing is a peculiarity of Beijing hair salons,
where the operating assumption is that maximum style can never be
achieved through the services of a Beijing native. Having walked many
of Beijing's malls, it is possible that there is a grain of truth in
this assumption. But I think it's mostly about playing to people's
infatuation with exotic imports. My previous hair place charged more
for stylists from Hong Kong, while the Toni & Guy up the road at
Sunshine 100 charges big bucks for the sophisticated caresses of a
Canadian stylist (no doubt of Hongkie extraction).
The place had only been opened for a few days and customers were still
in short supply, so I was descended upon by a well-coiffed mob the
moment I entered and gently ushered upstairs into serene, white-paneled bliss.
There the attendants locked my coat in a cabinet (for my protection),
seated me on a luxuriously soft couch, and placed The Book on the
coffee table before me. The Book was opened to reveal photograph after
photograph of gorgeous, high-cheekboned, effeminate looking Asian men
with spiky, frosted hair. Which gay, Korean popstar would I most like
to resemble?
I have nothing against gay, Korean popstars (or straight but
devastatingly androgynous ones, for that matter). But as a thirty-eight
year old white man with broad shoulders, a generous nose and prominent
brow line, no amount of hair engineering on earth is going to make me
look like one. But they were game for a try. Everybody seemed a bit
crestfallen when I said that I simply wanted my hair cut short, and a
little longer on top was OK. I was seated in a spanking, new salon
chair with not a strand of previously cut hair upon it, and a gorgeous,
high-cheekboned, effeminate looking Chinese man (remember, I didn't
stump for a Korean) with spiky, frosted hair went to work on me.
Meanwhile, two attendants hovered over the chair ready to do...anything
that might be necessary. Or, almost anything. This was not, after all,
a hair brothel. The only contribution that they made during
the actual haircut was when one held a transparent shield over my face
for thirty seconds while my bangs were being cut. If I hadn't lowballed
on the stylist, I'd have assumed they were sitting at the feet of the
master. As it was, they were sitting at the feet of the discount.
At the end of the process was where we ran into communication
difficulties. I have hair best described as "unruly". As usual, there
were two or three little sprigs on the top of my head that refused to
lie flat. I said to the stylist, "I always have some that stand up. Use
a little gel." (Actually I used the English word for gel, I have to
confess to not knowing the Chinese.) Naturally, this was perceived as
"use some gel to make my hair stand up". I had just issued an
invitation to spike up my hair to a man who saw all unspiked
hair as falling far short of its full, glorious potential. I realized
what was happening when, after rubbing in some gel, Mr. Frosty started
using his thumb and forefingers to roll tufts of my hair into spikes. I
did a quick inventory of my Chinese vocabulary and realized rapidly
that I did not have the words to politely say, "I'm sorry. You
have misapprehended me. I do not wish to have my hair spiked. Just use
gel to make it lie flat." So, in the best Beijing fashion, I decided to
roll with it. After all, it wasn't like he was trying to give me a dye
job. I'd have drawn the line at that.
Five minutes later I was looking smooth. Youthful and trendy. I
went down to the counter to pay. There was an opening week 30%
discount, so I only owed 47 kuai. Six bucks. Same as I paid Capers 20
years ago. And Capers worked without help (or ears). I love Beijing.
I took my stylish self back up to my apartment where my wife said, "You paid 50 kuai for bed hair?"
I went into the bathroom and brushed it flat.