A Little Taste of Normal

Sara Davidson

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June, 9, 2020

“Do you have a tattoo?” the hair stylist, Jennifer, asked me. Was she crazy? She was 26, with blue eyes and dark hair falling in waves down her back. And she had a delicate tattoo starting at the nape of her neck and disappearing down the front of her black t-strap dress.

I’d never been asked that before. My generation didn’t get tattoos, I said, although I’d known one woman and one man who did, and regretted it.

I was not in Kansas anymore. I was in a balayage salon. I’d seen signs around town for “balayage,” but thought it was something like the Brazilian hair straightening treatment that had come and gone.

Looking around the salon, I figured I was at least 30 years older than everyone else. I’d come there because I couldn’t stand my hair any longer. I realize, of course, that in these times, bad hair is a petty problem.

Commentators have compared the present to1968.

Our most inspiring leaders—Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy—were assassinated in quick succession; in Vietnam, U.S. troops massacred children and unarmed villagers in Mylai; and in Chicago, police cracked heads and broke limbs of young demonstrators while Democrats held their convention fortified behind barbed wire. There was also a pandemic; the H3N2 virus killed more than 100,000 Americans and a million worldwide.

I was a fledgling reporter then, in the thick of it. I remember the horror, the accelerating nightmare, but what’s happening today feels even more like Armageddon.

I needed some petty relief. “A little taste of normal,” as my ukulele teacher put it. My hair hadn’t been touched—cut, colored, or styled–since January. It looked like dull straw, and there were two inches of gray at the roots. I had to avert my eyes when I walked past a mirror. I remember a friend, a meditation teacher, telling me that after a three-month retreat, “Everyone’s roots were showing.” And one of the first things they did was head for the hairdresser.

For 15 years I’ve been going to the same hair stylist, but when I called to see when she might be returning to work, she said she was moving her practice to a town that’s 20 miles away. Damn. I take Uber or Lyft these days, so that would mean $60 in transportation costs every time I wanted a trim.

More important, I don’t like to change. Glasses, brand of underpants, dentists. If I like something, I resist trying anything else. Keeps life simpler. But when forced to change, I almost always end up preferring the new item or person. So, I thought, maybe it would be good to have a new hair stylist.

As it happens, there’s a salon across the street from me, Paul Morrison Colours. I thought it was a haughty, high-end color salon. (note the “u” in “colour”) But I saw that the front door was open, and inside, stylists were placed six feet apart and everybody wore masks. I called and made an appointment. It would cost almost twice what I’d been paying, but hell, all I had to do was walk across the street.

The receptionist stuck a thermometer in my ear, it beeped, and she cooed, “Normal.”  When I was seated, Jennifer ran her hands through my hair, asked what products my old stylist had used, and set to work.

For 15 years, I’d watched my former stylist paint brown dye on sections of hair at the root line to cover the gray. Then she’d reach for a square of aluminum foil, place a few strands on the foil and paint it with bleach or a darker dye to create highlights and lowlights. Then I’d sit under a hair dryer until the colors had “taken” and could be rinsed out.

Not here. There were no foil squares at Jennifer’s station. After touching up the roots, she lifted strands of hair and painted them by hand. I was alarmed: it looked like bright white streaks among the brown.

Jennifer assured me it wouldn’t look white when she was finished.

Jennifer explained that with balayage, you could create more dimension and design. “It’s more an art form,” she said. “Rather than coloring every streak the same way with foils, you decide where you’ll put your streaks, how wide, how bright, and what pattern you want. It takes experience and skill.”

Behind us, the owner of the salon was putting big sheets of cellophane over sections of his client’s hair to enclose the painted streaks and prevent them from “bleeding.” He was also building a two-foot long container of foil for two of the front sections, so they’d be “hotter” than the back. The client looked like a space-bot, with droopy silver ears.

Bye bye foils. They’re now old school. Balayage had begun in Paris in the 70’s, but it’s only in recent years that it’s gone mainstream here.

When Jennifer finished painting, she did not use a blow dryer because of the concern that if any germs were on the premises, the dryer would blow them all around. So she used styling cream (which I was cajoled into buying), and a curling iron, making the hair look smooth and wonderful.

On my way out, I noticed a photo backdrop with lights, like the walls that actresses pose in

front of at premiers and fundraisers. But instead of “Disney” or the name of the charity all over the backdrop, it said the name of the salon. With facemask still in place, I had photos taken in front of the wall, then outside.

Now it’s back to finding ways I can contribute to healing the virus that threatens our health and the racial injustices that could tear apart our democracy. On June 2, the entertainment industry stopped conducting business for the day, to reflect and take action in support of the movement called The Show Must be Paused.I’ve been brainstorming with others about how to help people who’re in trouble, like our house cleaners, many of whom are here illegally, who’ve lost their ability to work in clients’ homes and have no income to feed their children.

But when I walk past the mirror (at least for now)… I smile.

YOUR COMMENTS?

If you’re in Boulder and would like help cleaning your home, I can recommend someone who’s been helping me for 18 years. She cleans with a mask and gloves, and disinfects all surfaces she’s touched before leaving. Email  leap@saradavidson.com.

For an amusing break, here’s a short film (7 min) that’s provocative and apt, “Face to Face Time” —selected for the Cannes Film Festival. Let me know if you get the climax. I missed it.

 

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  • Nancy says:

    You look gorgeous. Love your new hair!

  • Gail Storey says:

    Beautiful, Sara, your hair and post!

  • Chris says:

    Hi – um….just for future notice – colour is not high-end and snooty – it’s actually the way Canadians (and Brits the world over) spell the word! Yup, we like favourite too.

  • Anne says:

    Love this thank you for sharing

  • Joyce says:

    Excuse me if I misspelled, but it’s just a less labor intensive way of making streaks or highlights in the hair. They always try to make things sound fancier (and to find a way to raise the price of their services), so they give it a fancy French name and call the salon workers/beauticians that do it ‘artists’ instead. If you are being serviced by an ‘artist’, you would expect to pay more, right, so they should be able to charge you more.

    Your hair looks nice and I’m glad you were able to get it done, but it used to be called streaking or highlights/lowlights…..now, it’s called baliage…..well, at least it takes less time and is less messy! 😁🌼

  • Linda Farrell says:

    First. beautiful hair!
    Now, I know that’s not the most important comment for today’s ever chaotic world, but it really makes me feel more empowered to face that world when my hair is normal. Yours is lovely.

    I really enjoy your blog, your tv production and writing, your books, and your never ending curiosity about life and change.
    Thank you for them all. I especially loved “Leap”.

    I’m Linda, live in Golden. and in my 60’s. A former TV news broadcaster and now communication consultant. I’m beginning my next phase as a writer. You are encouraging me by staying true to yourself.
    Keep writing!
    Linda Farrell

    • Oh Linda, and everyone who’s responded, thanks so much, you’ve made my day. I wrote this several weeks ago but was reluctant to post it, because the country and world was in such a threatening state. It seemed narcissistic and petty, but as you say, Linda, when my hair looks decent, I feel better, more enthusiastic, and joyful. I’m glad you’re going to pursue your writing. When I’m working and it’s flowing, that’s the best feeling for me. Tennessee Williams was once asked what he wanted for his birthday. He said, “I want what every writer wants–a day when the muse is with you and you’re hot.” May it be so for you.

  • Barbara says:

    The only thing that matches how good a haircut feels is when The Library opened

  • sandy koepke says:

    hi sara. i always follow you and appreciate your thoughtful and thought-provoking pieces. so the first time i am moved to post a comment is about your hair? you mean more to me than that, but you do look fabulous.!!

  • R Commerce says:

    Félicitations sur les cheveux nouveaux!

    As for the video. : ) The first comment that bubbled up for me, as I watched her preparations, was how this was such a wry update on a quip from “The Boys In The Band” (Mart Crowley, 1968) … “One thing you can say for masturbation: you don’t have to look your best.”

    Her undressing and jumping into bed while the other person is distracted reminds me of the near-to-last scene in “Desert Hearts” ( https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089015/ ), where the character Cay does that while Professor Vivian Bell, obliviously gazing outward at the landscape, begins her bitter soliloquy, “I’ll write a book …”

    At the end, the video’s sound seems to have a stumble, or he is portraying speech that is supposedly slightly choked-up, so I cannot be sure if he is saying “… sometimes [people?] need [dick?].” Okayyyy, so, women’s bodies are not his only comfort. Pah-dmp-CHISHHH

  • quint says:

    Christopher Hitchens once remarked that there are times when we take out the “national hankie”; this is one of those times with other reasons. If you remember from the 60s, there is this time where everyone wants to be cleansed so they can go in front of their friends of a different persuasion say “I’m okay you’re okay”.

    The reason that it feels like Armageddon is because of Internet news. You see young folk in Germany protesting about something in a medium-sized US city as Germany still struggles with its desire to “cleanse itself of genocide and reapply for admission to the human race”, (as Sir Humphrey said).

    What is actually different are the number of different demographics out there protesting. We tend to forget that antiracism has been a multiracial effort for more than 100 years but our 10 minute YouTube snippets them show us that.

    I haven’t had a haircut in three months and I know what you’re going through looking for a new haircare person. I don’t know if my barbershop has survived because even though Northern Virginia has opened up, she has not reopened her shop. We have to remember that while everyone is complaining about the Chinese supply chain, that Western corporations stormed the beaches in Shanghai and Hong Kong and a lot of the factory cities in China in order to get cheaper costs. The premier of China did not go to Apple Computer put a gun at Steve Jobs head. This is something everyone tends to forget.

    The reason for Armageddon is that we don’t have “our” visionary in the White House. Mom-and-pop in Butte Montana think that he is doing a great job, so does aunt Buddy in Tupelo Mississippi; you need to read the newspapers from those cities rather than our East Coast elitist news rags. I read a column in a city called cottage Grove Oregon and their top story was that somebody went out to shoot gophers and the Fire Chief was talking about shooting rioters.

    By the way, I did buy a book and I liked it a lot. I may be older than you, but we do see very similar things in the world. Yes, I remember black and white TV and the payphone.

  • Donna Greenberg says:

    Hi Sara. I enjoyed reading about your new experience, and I can relate.
    I had my hair balayaged (verb?) 18 months ago, in time for my 50th
    high school reunion. However, I had a change of heart and decided 9 months ago to let my natural gray and silvers come in. What perfect timing! By the beginning of lockdown, I was already six months in.

    As for the 6-minute short, I found it very demeaning to the woman, and reminded me of various
    encounters I had with men when I was younger. It’s incredible how a woman’s first reaction,
    even nowadays, is to ask what she did wrong. I’ll be curious to see what others think.

  • Kimberly Warner says:

    What a great post Sara… the banal is never that distant from the breakdown. Both, equally relevant and transformative. Thanks for sharing some levity and perspective!

  • Joey Bortnick says:

    Sara, your hair looks beautiful! Now I want to try this new “ art” form for my hair!
    I have been wondering about how your son who lives in China is doing. I hope you and your kids and grandkids are all well. I have Loose Change beside my bed and have been rereading it for the zillionth time. I also have enjoyed watching Good Girls Revolt and I read the book. You were a journalist in NY at that time and I’m wondering if you had women friends at Newsweek who weren’t allowed to be writers. You must remember when they sued the magazine. Reading the book and watching the show made me think of you and how you just blew in and manifested your dreams in those early years.
    Anyway, your hair is seriously gorgeous!
    Respect and Blessings, Joey Bortnick from Marin

    • Hi Joey, Yes, I loved “Good Girls Revolt.” I was bummed that it didn’t continue for another season. I was in NY at that time and everything they portrayed was true. I was lucky, because after Columbia Journalism School I went straight to the Boston Globe, and after moving back to NY, I was able to freelance for many magazines. Except Time and Newsweek! They had their systems where girls were researchers and men were writers. My husband knew the editor of Harper’s, and he let me do an article on spec. (no pay, unless they accepted it.And they did!”)
      Thanks for your kind words. Stay well and healthy!

      • Joey Bortnick says:

        I read and loved your article on the Wheeler Ranch. I think that was for Harpers. How cool that you paved your own way and created a new style of journalism! I’m grateful you’re still writing while playing piano, ukulele, singing and skiing! Life continues to be an adventure and it’s so much fun to read about yours. You are an inspiration.
        Love and Peace to you Sara
        Joey

  • Hi Sara: Your hair looks gorgeous, but I still think of you as a brunette.

  • I’m smiling too. You’re looking GREAT in your new hair, Sara. Cedar and I went to a friend’s salon, Roots, ten days ago. We entered with flat hair and came out, the both of us, with fluffy. Dora, our friend the stylist, costs three times what our changing crew of SuperCutters do, but hey, we hadn’t been to the barber’s in three months. My hair is on its way back to the Jewfro I had back in the 70s, as a cool college dean in Chicago. Cedar, who’d been resisting it, is transitioning back toward the longer hair she sported some decades ago, long before me. I’ll say one thing about self-isolating: it does make one more adventurous in some things.

  • Jennifer Sanders says:

    Sara,
    Ever since I read “Loose Change” I have been your biggest fan. The only reason I am on this site is because I was trying to get you to write another book to see what happened to Susie and Tasha. In these crazy days, I have re-read your novel and am STILL curious. How are Susie and Tasha? I did love your hair, but being a natural kind of person, didn’t see the point.

  • Arielle Ford says:

    Fabulous hair! I think of my hair as my personal WiFi reaching out into the ethers to fire up my creativity.
    Now, if ONLY my nail place would open….I am desperate for a mani pedi but alas, I go to tomorrow’s Peace March with unkempt paws….

  • Alexander Auerbach says:

    Hi Sara — I now understand why women tend to live five years longer than men; they need the extra time for the beauty parlor! Los Angeles is beginning to emerge from lockdown, and my wife’s first appointment was with her hairdresser.
    To me, you don’t look much different from our days at The Globe.
    All best, Alex

  • Cheryl lee Terry-Potier says:

    Thank you for the December Project.
    Cheryl lee Terry-Potier, NYC

    • Thank you, Cheryl, for taking the time to send me a note. It’s been years since Reb Zalman passed, and I miss him every day. His wisdom and joy live on. Sara

  • Hi, the article was excellent, Hair is very-much important for developing purposes on development for making much smooth and shinier. Great information.