I’ve been going to the same hair cutter for a couple of years now. My last hair cutter, Phil, was great. He made me look younger and did such a great job of hiding my receding hair line. I loved Phil, but he vanished on me. Hair cutters tend to do that. Once you nail down a good one, they realize they're good and move on to bigger and better things.
So, being Phil-less, I began the hunt to find a new hair cutter that could do the same miracles Phil could. I was referred by a friend to this one fellow but the place was so extremely hip, noisy, and it made me nervous.
Finally, one day, I just wandered in and found Tikrit. She was from Turkey and could almost do what Phil did. (Actually, her name wasn’t Tikrit, it was Filiz which I could never remember, so I always thought of her as Tikrit since both names have two i’s in them).
Every time I was there getting my hair cut, I’d notice Rob. Rob was your basic, good-looking, effeminate, homosexual hair stylist. Rob looked like he knew what he was doing and he always had a customer in his chair.
I wanted Rob.
I have absolutely nothing against nice Turkish women doing my hair, but when you want a really good hair cut, you want a "Rob" or a "Phil" doing your hair. At least I do.
One day, I just happened to be in the neighborhood and, needing a hair cut, stopped by to see if Tikrit was available. She wasn’t, but Rob was!
Needless to say, Rob did a great job on my hair. It was better than Tikrit ever did.
Here was my dilemma: How would I switch over to Rob without hurting Tikrit’s feelings? And what if I switched over to Rob and Rob left me like Phil did. I couldn’t go skulking back to Tikrit if that happened and I’d truly be in a pickle.
So, I kept going to Tikrit.
That is, until yesterday. I actually made an appointment with Rob. It was a big moment for me.
I was hoping that it would be Tikrit’s day off, but of course, she greeted me at that door. Don’t you hate it when that happens?
Anyway, I told Rob that I wanted to do something different with my hair. I explained the idea I had, he told me his ideas, we consulted, and it came out fantastic.
Of course, Tikrit was at the counter to take my money, so I just smiled really big and said, “You know, I just wanted to try something completely different.” She smiled really big and said “Fuck you,” with a Turkish accent.
No, she said my hair looked great. Which it did. I realized that making the move to Rob was a good idea. I would have never tried a new hair cut with Tikrit because of the language barrier. I just needed a basic, good-looking, effeminate homosexual hair stylist with whom I could use phrases like “whispies” and “wedgy-things” and "scrudge-scrudge" and “fabulous” and he'd know exactly what I was talking about.
When I came in to work today, I got three compliments right away.
Now, you just watch. Next time I need my hair cut, Rob will have abandoned me.
They always do.
I'll solve your dilemma right now.
ReplyDeleteGo to Supercuts.
Fourteen bucks. Just walk in and say, "Gimme the Iwanski."
Scrudge-scrudge is new to my vernacular. Is it different than hoo-ha?
ReplyDeleteScrudge-scrudge is what you do to your hair with your fingers when you get out of the shower. It's a very easy haircut to style. You get out of the shower and just go "scrudge-scrudge" with your fingers and you're done.
ReplyDeleteYOU know what I mean!
A haircut!
ReplyDeleteGeez Louise, I knew there was something I forgot to do this weekend!
Grrrr ...