The Truth About Hair.

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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby Laodicean » Sat Sep 24, 2011 11:58 am

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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby Searcher08 » Sat Sep 24, 2011 1:31 pm

Cousin Itt (*) had an IQ of 300
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These gentlemen turned down $1million from Gillette to shave off their beards
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Itt (*) was obviously a 1960s meme reversal for Harold Geneen's ITT
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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby norton ash » Sat Sep 24, 2011 1:54 pm

Why do clean-shaven men not shave in times of stress? Good stress (cause/campaign, playoffs, big event/festival, road trip, touring, lucky streak) or bad stress (mourning, break-up, job loss, health crisis).

It's not just that you're in a more time-limited or casual atmosphere, and not necessarily letting yourself go. There are times when you want to be more of an animal, I think, or that the civilized rules are off... or that you know you're on a more vital, adrenalized plane somehow...

There are times that intuition says not to shave.
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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby Project Willow » Sat Sep 24, 2011 2:06 pm

^ I wish that everyone would quit shaving, until I remember the fellows who've painfully exfoliated my chin with their facial hair.

justdrew wrote:try an undercut in the back. best of both worlds. :partyhat

(no idea how I remembered that :shrug: )


Thanks JD!

Bruce Dazzling wrote:Unfortunately for me, people often say I look like this cat:


I was going to offer a counter to Avalon's preference, but in review, I don't think it's about preference, but chance, that many of my recent guys were bald or balding. I don't care much about various physical qualities, I mainly want the brainz. *Searches for zombie smiley.*

AlicetheKurious wrote:I have a question, though, that the article doesn't address: what about women who cover up their hair under a scarf or wig?


I think the requirement within some orthodox practices that women cover their hair may buttress the article's thesis, if one holds the opinion that a central purpose of the major patriarchal religions is to control female sexuality.
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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Sep 24, 2011 5:32 pm

.

Hair-shaving is the very first step in the military process of removing individual and cultural identity and taking possession of the recruits' bodies as obedient parts of a larger body. Perhaps this is a factor in the Indian scouts losing their sensitivity when they go into "service"?

Speaking only for myself, I generally feel better and am more energetic and awake with short hair. If the OP thesis is true, maybe my perceptual apparatus is still assisted by the plentiful body hair? More likely it is due to what I feel about my appearance; I think I look older and doofier with the big silver wirehairs reaching in all directions. (Having mirrors all over the place has definitely revolutionized how people are, the last couple of thousand years.) I do hate shaving, pretty much the reason for keeping a goatee so that I can just shave once a week in quick order. I'm always upset that women depilate, demoustachiate, and shave those yummy armpits. I like big eyebrows.

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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby barracuda » Sat Sep 24, 2011 10:51 pm

Canadian_watcher wrote:(why does it not shock me that the fish has an oddball hair that he nurtures?)


I'm not sure nurturing is quite the right name for the activity. I don't swaddle and pamper it or feed it nourishment and encouragement - that damned hair receives the same treatment I give any other eyebrow hair. Non-discriminatory non-depilatory.

Nordic wrote:I cut my hair.

Everything went to shit.


Nordic, I'm sorry things turned out like they did, but that was hilarious. I feel I know what you mean, though. Chopping it off is a surrender to all the forces that stood against letting that freak flag fly.

Nordic wrote:Long hair on a woman


And I must agree with you there. A long-haired lady I know informed me of her theory that the earliest source of all lust for power and subjugation sprang from the fact that it needs more than one person to care for a woman's flowing locks. I think she was kidding, though.

AlicetheKurious wrote:I have a question, though, that the article doesn't address: what about women who cover up their hair under a scarf or wig?


There are many Sikhs in my neighborhood, and I wonder the same thing about the men practising kesh.

I'd love to grow mine back again and try to escape the treadmill and topple the pillars, but my fallback incoming wave rececptors at the moment are limited to the curling tendrils of the upper lip region.

Growing hair is one of the few accomplishments one can acheive by doing absolutely nothing. This would seem to be a skill-set I am well-suited for attaining, so maybe there's still a chance for me.

The most dangerous traps are the ones you set for yourself. - Phillip Marlowe
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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby freemason9 » Sat Sep 24, 2011 11:20 pm

i want it long, straight, curly, fuzzy, snaggy, shaggy, raggy, matty, oily, greasy, fleecy, shining, streaming, gleaming, flaxen, waxen, knotted, polka dotted, twisted, beaded, braided, powdered, flowered and confettied, bangled, tangled, spangled and spaghettied
The real issue is that there is extremely low likelihood that the speculations of the untrained, on a topic almost pathologically riddled by dynamic considerations and feedback effects, will offer anything new.
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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby Luther Blissett » Sat Sep 24, 2011 11:43 pm

I find this story more than a little silly. My other board has two native Canadian brothers (both with long hair) posting on it who ripped this piece apart when it was posted earlier this week.

I think there's a lot of symbolism and prescribed psychological connections to our appearance, but this article is anti-science.
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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby freemason9 » Sat Sep 24, 2011 11:51 pm

Luther Blissett wrote:I find this story more than a little silly. My other board has two native Canadian brothers (both with long hair) posting on it who ripped this piece apart when it was posted earlier this week.

I think there's a lot of symbolism and prescribed psychological connections to our appearance, but this article is anti-science.


still, i want it long, straight, curly, fuzzy, snaggy, shaggy, raggy, matty, oily, greasy, fleecy, shining, streaming, gleaming, flaxen, waxen, knotted, polka dotted, twisted, beaded, braided, powdered, flowered and confettied, bangled, tangled, spangled and spaghettied
The real issue is that there is extremely low likelihood that the speculations of the untrained, on a topic almost pathologically riddled by dynamic considerations and feedback effects, will offer anything new.
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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby Saurian Tail » Sun Sep 25, 2011 1:07 am

Luther Blissett wrote:I find this story more than a little silly. My other board has two native Canadian brothers (both with long hair) posting on it who ripped this piece apart when it was posted earlier this week.

These sorts of unsubstantiated and unverifiable stories are a dime-a-dozen. The story clicks through to a blog that specializes in this sort of thing. But it sure is fun talking about hair ... I feel like I know Barracuda so much better now that I know about his "antenna"!
"Taking it in its deepest sense, the shadow is the invisible saurian tail that man still drags behind him." -Carl Jung
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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby Nordic » Sun Sep 25, 2011 1:36 am

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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby justdrew » Sun Sep 25, 2011 3:05 am



the undercut is back in style BTW! the internet says so :partyhat

and just to be complete, the original version, by Zen...
By 1964 there were 1.5 million mobile phone users in the US
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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby AlicetheKurious » Sun Sep 25, 2011 3:19 am

Saurian Tail wrote:
Luther Blissett wrote:I find this story more than a little silly. My other board has two native Canadian brothers (both with long hair) posting on it who ripped this piece apart when it was posted earlier this week.

These sorts of unsubstantiated and unverifiable stories are a dime-a-dozen. The story clicks through to a blog that specializes in this sort of thing. But it sure is fun talking about hair ... I feel like I know Barracuda so much better now that I know about his "antenna"!


Having unwillingly thought about it for longer than I would have thought possible or wise, I find myself reaching the same conclusion as Saurian and Luther (including the part about fun).
"If you're not careful the newspapers will have you hating the oppressed and loving the people doing the oppressing." - Malcolm X
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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby Laodicean » Sun Sep 25, 2011 2:03 pm

Well - how about another perspective? Here's a Jewish one. A google search of hair and spirituality had this as the top result:

‘Flow It, Show It’: The Spirituality of Hair
By Gila Lyons

Published December 09, 2009, issue of December 18, 2009.

When I was younger, I felt physical pain at getting my hair cut. I hated leaning my head back under hot water and feeling rough hands scratch at my scalp, taking something from me that was mine. Many spiritual and religious traditions view hair as a retainer of one’s vital essence. Rastafarians consider hair their connection to God, calling their long dreadlocks “God antennae.” Sikhs allow their hair to grow naturally as a symbol of respect for the perfection of God’s creation. Ancient Middle Eastern tradition includes offering hair for religious rites in place of human sacrifice and the fulfillment of vows. Samson lost his battle when his hair — the secret source of his power — was cut.

So I was intrigued to hear about Amber King, an intuitive “spiritual hairdresser” in the East Village who reads her clients’ tarot cards, discusses with them their spiritual paths, and cuts their hair so that their outside appearance will reflect and serve the processes taking place within.

I visited her apartment-cum-salon, where she sat waiting for me at the kitchen table — two cups of licorice tea steaming and a stack of cards between them. King is a striking 41-year-old woman with shiny blond hair swept in a side part and curled into a bun behind one ear. Some of the cards I chose depicted a pale, naked woman on a boat; a knight on a white horse; and a fool. King spoke with me about a lover who had mostly left my life but was still hovering around the edges, about a mother figure offering me great support lately, and about setting the stage for the realization of my goals. She was dead-on in all accounts.

I was afraid she’d tell me that she was going to shave my head, or that I would benefit from a drastic change or a fresh start. I was prepared to listen. But after leading me to a claw-foot tub and rubbing my scalp with warm water and oils, she simply trimmed the ends of my hair, explaining that my hair was an important source of power and protection for me, and that it was good and grounding to have “all that protein around my crown chakra.”

When she was done, she gathered some of my hair off the floor, placed it in a small envelope of handmade green marbled paper, and gave it to me. She also handed me a matchbook with 40 matches, instructing me to light one match every morning while focusing on a wish I had for myself. “The Hebrews wandered for 40 years in the desert to change their slavery consciousness,” she said. “In the New Testament, Jesus meditated for 40 days and 40 nights on the Mountain of Temptation. Working with a prayer for 40 days is transformational.” It was one of the first times that I didn’t feel some sort of loss at having my hair cut, that I felt that my hair was treated as an extension of a whole person — me.

Judaism has no shortage of practices and traditions regarding the cutting, covering, maintaining and styling of one’s hair. Observant men let their beards grow untrimmed and their peyes, or sidelocks, curl around the sides of their faces, and they refrain from shaving or cutting their hair when in mourning. Priests were instructed to keep hair short and maintained, while Nazirites — Jews of biblical times who vowed to avoid drinking wine, among other things — and were forbidden to cut it. Beards are considered holy and best kept long, while women’s hair is considered a nakedness that is best kept covered.

What is it about hair that merits such ritual attention and tradition? Rabbi DovBer Pinson, head of the Iyyun Yeshiva Center in New York, explains, “[The] idea of hair is that it transmits and funnels energy.…Metaphysically speaking, all head hair originates from within the skull. The deeper source of head hair is residue of brain, better yet, mind energy.”

In observant families, no scissors can touch the head of a baby boy until he turns 3 years old. He lives in somewhat of a Nazirite state — one of appropriate self-absorption and boundary-less-ness with those around him. When he turns 3, his parents give him a ritual haircut called an upshern (Yiddish for “to shear” or “to cut off”), primarily to form the peyes — the curling sidelocks that are the trademark appearance of Orthodox men.

In Jewish thought, long, unkempt hair — like that of the Nazirites who is forbidden to touch a razor to his head — represents a holiness detached from the everyday. The Nazirites lived absolved from worldly directives, obligated only to spiritual laws. When I was 18, I traveled from my parent’s house in Boston to the desert Southwest, hiking canyons, building straw-bale huts, herding turkeys, pulling weeds. My matted mane held desert dust and campfire smoke and ocean water and the oily exhaust from car fumes. I never brushed and rarely washed it. My wild hair was a symbol of my freedom. As I laid my sleeping bag down under a California redwood or dusty plot of Arizona desert, it was my pillow.

Although my life in New York City as a 30-year-old is dramatically different from the vagabond days of my late teens, I still don’t do much to my hair other than run my fingers through it and give it the occasional wash. Hair is primal, wild power; I take great pleasure in letting it grow unchecked, feeling it whip around me in a wind.

King, the “spiritual hairdresser,” sees people’s hair as their own Tree of Life, a record keeper like the rings of a tree. “My haircuts last longer than anyone’s I know because they’re an action of love. When you do anything with love, it grows beautifully,” she explained.

I seek treatment for my body and mind from holistic practitioners who consider the whole person rather than isolated body parts. My hair has been growing healthy and curly and long since my haircut with King last spring. It’s been growing so well that I haven’t needed another cut. But when I’m ready for the next one, it will be back at King’s apartment, to be realigned with where I’m going, who I am, and how I look. My hair is the outermost reminder of these things, growing from a source deep, deep within.

Gila Lyons is a writer living in New York City.


http://www.forward.com/articles/120555/
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Re: The Truth About Hair.

Postby Laodicean » Sun Sep 25, 2011 2:21 pm

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