I had an eleven o'clock beauty appointment. It was an odd time, breaking the day in two. At nine, I was getting antsy, so I decided to take a long walk and shower at my mother's house before getting beautified. On the walk, I passed a backyard with a pool, so I used my phone to take a snap. I want to do a swimming pool series badly. Picture mom and dad lying in pool lounges and a couple of kids jumping into the pool. I don't know. I would figure it out. I'd post-process the shit out of the pictures so that they looked more mythical than this, dehazing the sky, subtle vignettes, bringing some colors up and some down. The backyard pool just seems a phenomena to me, part of the mirage of The American Dream. Do you have a pool?
See what I mean?
I got to my appointment right on time, and my little gypsy Russian Jew was ready. My knees got a little weak, but I said, "Let's do it. I'm not afraid of change."
It takes a looooong time for her to do my hair, and we had three hours to talk. A little more, really. There was a whole lotta chopping to do, and she was toning my hair down from a bleach blond to a sophisticated golden. So she said.
"How's your mom?"
Yea, yea, that's how almost all conversations start now. My life, her life. I asked about her new hip. It was good, she said, but the other one now. . . . That's the way that goes, I think.
My beautician was a wild girl when I met her. Then she got married and had a son. The fellow turned out to be a psycho, and he left. Out of the picture. Then he wasn't, and there were a couple of years of legal hassles. Then she started dating a cop from the D.R. Moved in with him. Then, at the last moment, they had a daughter, now two. My beautician is forty-eight, older than the cop. A bit later, they got married.
What could go wrong?
I got to hear about what could go wrong. Like I said, we had three hours.
I kept my eyes closed most of the time. On the best of days, I don't like looking at myself in a mirror, and this was not the best of days.
"You know this, I know, but when women put on weight, they think it is their hair that needs changing."
"You're right."
"And so. . . here I am."
It is not just the weight. I've aged. I was looking pretty homeless, I thought. A haircut would be just the thing.
I think I made a mistake. I don't look any less homeless and not a bit younger. And the color just looks beige. I am shocked when I pass a mirror. What did I do?!?
No matter, I tell myself. It is all inevitable.
Of course, my mother loves it. She won't shut the fuck up about it. She keeps sneaking phone pics of me.
"Stop it! Nobody ever took my photo when I was better looking. Now, when I look the worst, everybody wants to make a fucking phone pic. Just stop it."
I had taken the usual selfie when I got into the car after getting my hair done. Oy!
Instead of making the evening cocktail when I got back to my mother's, I had a light beer. You see, I need to lose weight, and cocktails don't help me do that. And now that Q is down to his pre-high school weight and righteously a practicing teetotaler, I have to do something. Light beer is really just hydration.
"I will only drink light beer," I tell myself. I've been telling myself that for a month.
I had wine with dinner.
And then a scotch.
But. . . then I switched to tea.
"Atta boy. Just throttle it back."
My little gypsy Jew made me laugh when talking about the difference between herself and her husband.
"He wants to talk about things too much."
"Processing?"
"Exactly. He's going to therapy. I grew up a poor Jew in Russia. People don't have any idea what that was like. We didn't have shit. I lived in the North Pole for awhile. People whine about stupid shit without any idea how hard life can be. We didn't have time for 'processing.' You just had to deal with things, so when he's 'processing,' I'm like, 'Let's just go fuck some shit up!'"
Now, I'm not gangsta-like at all, but this is going to be my new favorite thing to say--"Let's just go fuck some shit up!"
Kind of like my hair. It's fucked up. I'm either going to have to let it grow or get more cut off. There is another option. I could find someone to fix it. Maybe my gal has gotten too old, married, and out of touch to be good at this anymore. I've been going to her for twenty years or so. Maybe I need some new hipster gal to work me over.
I don't know.
It's not my hair, though. It's the whole package. I'll wear a hat and stay away from people until I figure things out.
I DO need to figure out how to do the pool series, though. I think it would be sterling.
"What's the beautician's name?"
"Her name is probably Darlene Fontaine — though everyone in the salon just calls her “Dar.
She’s been doing hair since 1958, swears by Aqua Net and Lucky Strikes, keeps a transistor radio humming behind the counter, and knows every customer’s divorce history before the perm rods are even set. She dyes her beehive “Cinnamon Flame No. 7” every other Thursday and insists your fellow “has marvelous hair density for a man his age.”


























