Hair ©
By
Michael Casey
I had my hair cut yesterday, I was turning into an
Old English Sheepdog, so I had it cut. My wife cuts my hair, she used to use
just scissors, but then we invested £10 for electric clippers. A haircut is
10quid in most barbers, which is expensive. So the wife does the honours, she
is very good. She also cuts the girls’ hair too.
When she used scissors I want told to sit on a
chair in the yard, then she’s poke and prod me, just like a sheep having its
annual shearing. She’d laugh as she sheared me, pulling my left ear then my
right ear, so I’d be in the right position. I’d grumble and watch as the snow
fell. The snow being the colour of my hair, but at least my hair is thick and
soft. I tell her we should use my hair as stuffing for pillows.
My daughters would come out and tell me I have a
bald patch appearing, so I’m some sort of street theatre, or like a sinner in
the stocks. Why don’t they invite the neighbours to come and throw cabbage at
me. And still the snow falls, no black or brown left, I am Snow White. Maybe
that’s why I’m called Granddad when I do the school run.
Finally with a slap here and a slap there, all in
aid of getting rid of stray hairs sticking to my body, I am told to stand up
and shake myself in the garden, just like a wet dog. My barber is satisfied with her work, then
she demands £10.
Once we had the clippers I was allowed to have my
haircut inside, in the warmth of our bathroom. Though sitting on the toilet for
30 mins is not comfortable, again I am prodded and poked and slapped, like a bullying flower arranger, the flowers
would have to be made of steel to survive, but dad was a blacksmith, so I am
forged of steel.
Laughing as she works my wife chuckles as she cuts
my hair, like a demon catching souls and sending them to hell. The snow
continues to fall, I am slapped again, the snow must not block her view of her
work. Turn this way, turn that way I am ordered. It feels like regimented
foreplay, maybe this is how it’s done in North Korea. I should add my wife wears
a bright red Korea Food apron every day, it’s her housefrau look. So I laugh a
lot. When she leaves home, she then looks like a model, but not while cutting
my hair.
She finishes and tells me I look like Bruce
Willis, only I don’t have a vest, just a woolly jumper, with snow stuck to it.
So she beats me again, to get the snow, my hair off the jumper. I tell her I’ll
keep her another week for her barber skills. And so the romance goes on, she
shouts after me to buy some broccoli as a reward for all her hard work. So I
buy cabbage instead, men don’t know what vegetables look like, I am Bruce
Willis after all.
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