Your source for irreverance and irrelevance. Favored by train-jumpin' hobos everywhere, The Harmonica bleats the word on the street.

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

The Tousle and the Hair

My hair is stick straight, fine, and abundant. It lays flat against my head. To have any body, I have to use products with names like "Big Sexy Hair" and fashion creative hairstyles involving razor-cuts and 80's-style back-combing. However, I never can manage that Diana Ross sort of body that I crave. If I had it my way, I would have an Afro, one that could be tamed only with a variety of flat irons and lye. I also have a forehead cowlick. This means that when I have bangs, I must be very vigilant about keeping the cowlick in check, lest I look like a tousle-haired little boy in a Norman Rockwell painting. When my cowlick is out of control, I might as well be toting a beagle and doffing my clothes near a sign that says "Swimmin' Hole."

Not only do I have a cowlick, my forehead is so large that I don't have a forehead, I have a five-head. People must face the sun when they are talking to me lest they risk being blinded by the light glinting off of my massive Caveman-like head ridge. If there is proof for evolution, it is in my forehead. Scientists have even suggested that I am the Missing Link. So these are my choices: 1) taming the nefarious behavior of my widow's peak, or 2) constantly being approached by billboard representatives to see if I will rent my forehead out for ad space.

I have been insecure about the attractiveness-shortcomings of my head ever since I became aware of them. This occurred at the age of seven, when I heard my mother's friend whisper to her that a "permanent" might stop me from looking like a wet long-haired chihuahua (I do have a bit of a Latina look) and could also disguise my cowlick. My mother, who was tired of explaining to people that I was not a tousle-haired boy but a girl with unfortunate hair, conceded that this might be a great solution. So I spent a miserable afternoon in the kitchen, covered in body-wave solution and a garbage bag smock, my hair rolled so tightly against my scalp that my eyes bulged from my head. The result of this endeavor? I looked like a wet Lhasa Apso. I had a barely discernible amount of waviness (imagine the low-frequency wave that would be displayed if Barry White spoke into an oscilloscope). Then, with my hair being as heavy and plentiful as it is, the curl fell out completely about a week later.

After that, my mother pretty much abandoned any idea of me having feminine tresses. She stopped dressing me in pink and silently hoped that my emerging curves would help others to realize that I did not have a Y chromosome, despite my large collection of Matchbox cars. I rarely got a haircut, and I constantly looked unkempt, with my cowlick sticking so far out from my huge forehead that I started to resemble a Neanderthal-like unicorn, and my bangs so long that strangers longed to tie them up in a bow like a poodle's. So the summer I turned 11, I decided that I had had enough hair humiliation for one lifetime.

The State Fair for the Upper Peninsula of Michigan is considered a compensatory event for U.P. residents, who aren't really considered part of the state. Despite our second-class standing, the class trip to the State Fair was a prime social event. I wanted to make my debut at this important affair as a refined and beautiful pre-adolescent. I decided that if my mother wasn't going to take me for a haircut, I had to take matters into my own hands. However, as I leaned over the bathroom counter and peered into the mirror, I realized that the basic bang requirement is that they are fashioned in a straight line. Having a history of not even being able color within the lines, I realized that I needed some sort of straight tool to cut a line against. I dug around and found some bias tape, used for cutting clothes patterns. Placing the bottom of the half-inch tape against the tops of my eyebrows (a logical length, it seemed), I placed the kitchen scissors to my hair and began to cut. The click and gnaw of the implement against my unwanted hair made me feel very smug in my scissorly stab at independence. This was until about halfway across my forehead, when I realized, with a gasp of horror and acid in my throat, that I had cut above the bias tape. Eyes filled with tears, I resignedly continued cutting along the horrible path I had blazed for myself. I took a step back after the deed was done to examine my non-handiwork. Trying to be calm, I went and found my older sister, who was talking on the phone, to seek her advice. I even brought a level with me to affirm that this was not a tragedy (as the line was as straight as Bill O'Reilly in a gay bar), but a situation for which I was seeking creative camouflage.

The second she saw me, she started to laugh. I lost all sense of zen and began to wail, "What should I dooooooo?" She responded, with great authority, "Drink milk. Milk will make your hair grow back by tonight." I was slightly suspicious, because my sister was not exactly the most loving sibling, having engaged in activities such as pantsing me in gymnastics class and allowing the boys at the bus stop to give me noogies. However, I was willing to try anything. The State Fair was in two days. I went to the kitchen and guzzled glass after glass of milk until I felt sick. Trudging back to my sister to report on my progress, I heard her remark to her friend, "My sister messed up her bangs so I told her to drink milk to make them grow back (cackle cackle cackle)!" Suddenly, I didn't feel so guilty about that time I threw the cat at her.

My bangs didn't grow back until well after the State Fair. Fortunately, my breasts had started to bud over the summer, and the other kids at school were distracted from my bad hair by my new curviness. With my quickly-blooming chest, swiftly-defining hips, and my half-forehead blunt-cut bangs, I looked like an 11-year-old Bettie Page. This has recently become the new "look" among some trendy indie people. Bad hair or not, I was a girl ahead of my time. I can't engage in that look, however. My unicorn-cowlick prompts Renaissance-fair types to want to display me in their mythology booths. I would much rather be erected as a billboard for BudLight. There's an interesting ad for BigSexyHair on the other side of the freeway. A girl can dream, can't she?

15 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Back in November, Elizabeth (Dirtmagnet)and I were discussing how nobody is ever happy with their hair. I have thick, wavy hair. With lots of volume. Too much volume. I have to have it cut so that they take some of the thickness away.
Oh, and of course, it's just wavy enough to get super frizzy anytime I'm outside of the desert. I live in S. CA. There is usually some humidity in the air. Just enough to make my hair a constant disaster.
Oh, yeah and my forehead is really small. I can never have bangs. I thought I could in jr. high, but looking back at pictures have now realized that wavy bangs will never be cool. I burnt myself trying to straighten out my bangs once. Oh, and I also cut them perfectly straight by copying my stylist. My 9 year old mind forgot that when wet hair dries it shrinks. My bangs were like a 1/2 inch long.

Your sister sounds hilarious. :)

10:58 PM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

That was my way of saying, "I would LOVE your hair!"

11:01 PM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Harmy,

I have to say that I, too, would love your hair. I've always wanted straight hair, and try very hard to have it every day of my life. Mine is quite unkempt without the weilding of a hair dryer every morning. And bangs of any sort use about a half of a bottle of Rave hairspray (I love the 90's!!). Love your cowlick, girlie! It could be worse!!

11:10 AM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Oh Harmy, I feel your pain! I also have too much thin, stick straight hair - darn it all. Unfortunately, mine holds a perm, well, about half of it holds a perm, the other half goes back to straight after a week. I had a mother that refused to give in to the awful hair I had inherited from my no good father, (her opinion after the divorce, I do not share that opinion) so month after month I went back for another "half-perm" always the same half stuck. Finally, summer before 9th grade (yeah, I was slow to gain my independence) I told my mother I would never have another perm. She promptly let me know my hair would be even worse all straight and that I was crazy for thinking I could ever keep it longer than ear level.
Well, that was a long story just to tell you that I have learned to live with my hair, I still don't love it, but it is barable.
No perm, high and low lights, (more low to be sensible for winter) slightly below shoulder length and okay looking, I figure.
My routine, which I try to limit the time of because I hate taking forever to get ready, involves a little bigger than a quarter size amount of medium hold gel throughout, blow dry medium heat, and curl under ends with 1.5inch curling iron on high heat, end with a light spritz of hair spray.
No, the curl does not stay in, but it gives the hair enough body to avoid the wet chahuahua look.
The cowlic I have no advice for.

What is this about a U.P. State Fair? Yoopers have their own? Or do you dare to cross the bridge to attend the real State Fair? :P
I don't think the Trolls think of you all as "second class citizens" so much as just wondering what could have been if the cold hadn't settled into the ancestors years ago.
We love the Yoopers, eh?!! :P

12:45 PM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I also have a cowlick in the front! I have a hard time parting my hair on that side.
I am enjoying my stick-straight, fine hair that took forever to be in vogue, and I will never get a perm again.

12:50 PM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I would love your hair many people are saying, theres plenty of ways to get hair like that, we must love our hair whilst we have it. lol.

1:56 PM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have no forehead and Elvis sideburns. Also, my BLACK eyebrows not only meet in the middle unless vigorously plucked, but they trail up to my hairline. I do have a Widow's peak, though, and some sort of hair-ish thingie next to it that a gay hairdresser once marveled in hushed tones as "a Full Swirl!" On my chin, the dreaded "random whiskers" have begun to sprout. And then there's the mustache.
I am a very beautiful Chimpanzee!

2:02 PM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

never even read a blog before - I was a blog-virgin! But I laughed so hard reading this, my whole family wondered what I was doing. And Patti, you described my hair perfectly. Unite Beautiful Chimpanzees!

8:36 PM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I used to have long thick straight tresses; it turns out they were just straight because there was so much durn hair. When I developed FPB, or female pattern balding, my hair thinned out and went totally curly. But I digress.
When I was a budding kid (I too got tits early) I had this ridiculous cowlick. But it wasn't an ordinary cowlick. It was a cowlick with lots of stray frizzies reminiscent of pubes in the middle of the forehead. My BFF at the time named it "fuzzy" and said, "We should cut fuzzy out." That seemed like a logical solution to a plaguing dilemma. So BFF got the old blunt scissors and just cut the hell out of old fuzzy. Which meant I now had a blank spot in the middle of my forehead. Well, it's hard to ignore something like that. It was so not hot.
I would like to say I learned my lesson and always left impulsive bang-cutting to the pros, but I am not that bright. On the bright side, fuzzy is gone--or maybe he just took over my entire head out of spite. If I knew how to attach a photo of my head here, I would, as proof. But again, I am not that bright.

1:04 AM

 
Blogger Dale's Gmail said...

This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

6:53 PM

 
Blogger writerwill said...

Bad Hair is even worse for the guys. When I was growing up my hair was very important to me. As a white guy you are limited to a few different styles. I feel sorry for Asian men because they are further limited to two styles, mo from the 3 stooges and Pete Rose. In today’s eyes there are no bad hair cuts (mullets do not count). I was standing in line at Quiznos today when I saw a very bad Rod Stewart hairdo and the guy beamed proudly as he ran his fingers through his hair. I could get that same look by running Vaseline through my hair and drinking extra Nyquil. When I awake from my self induced coma I would have his hairdo.. I am fortunate enough now to now care so much whether it is lack of pride or the fact that my hair is as long as the film release of Gigli regardless my hair issues are a thing of the past. To make a long reply even longer let me say I feel your pain.

2:53 PM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

4:57 AM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

hi! i got your site address from your ww profile! you can read my journal at www.xanga.com/dreaming_once_again
i emailed you!

6:32 PM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Need more chronic(alisms)...I am hooked. Please call on the muse ASAP.

3:26 PM

 
Blogger Smerdyakov said...

If your forehead mated with my forehead, the subsequent unspeakable spawn could, dare I say, rule the world.
For the sake of all humanity we must swear, right here right now, to keep our associated foreheads as far away from each other as possible. It is the only hope for the future.

6:03 PM

 

Post a Comment

<< Home