It was K who noticed the barber shop.
“Did you want a haircut?”
My head felt like a chia pet left
untended somewhere with plenty of water and sunlight, and it was
speeding through my supply of tiny bottles of hotel shampoo. I would
have gotten it cut in Belgium, but I suspected a Turkish haircut
might be interesting.
Good call.
A not-tall man with short gray hair was
reading the paper when I opened the door, and gestured me to a seat.
He spoke no English, and I can only say “thank you” in Turkish,
but my gestures and shoulder shrug of “something like that” were
met with a nod of understanding.
He started with the buzzer, which
seemed to have a hard time with my long hair. One spot in particular
was giving him trouble, and he went over it again and again, slowly,
until I looked in the mirror and saw he was watching the TV in the
corner, where overly emotive sighs and gasps sounded like an adult
movie.
We see you watching TV, Mr. Barber Man |
It wasn't the first time a barber has
gotten sucked into a soap opera while cutting my hair, but as long as
he wasn't holding anything sharp, I didn't mind.
After the buzzer came the scissors, and
soon I felt ready to go. But we weren't done.
He asked something in Turkish, and I
agreed. Why not? He pulled me forward and pushed my head into the
sink, and I retroactively heard the word “shampoo” in his
question. Shampoo what is 97% buzzcut? Oh well.
It was the first time someone else has
washed my hair since Jennifer, the Elizabeth Shue lookalike who was
the object of one of my 6,000 Middle School crushes. It was kind of
nice, actually.
Another old Turkish man had come in by
the time the barber was toweling my head dry, and for some reason,
there under the towel, I got the giggles. I tried to stifle it before
either man noticed, or the concealing towel was removed.
“Why is he giggling?”
“I don't know. I do nothing. I just
wash his hair.”
“Foreigners are very strange people.”
Thanks to K for the photos in the mirror |
Luckily I was composed in time, because
we still weren't done. Next was a warm-foam shave with one of those
little brushes and a straight razor. A friend once recommended I have
this done in New York, saying it would make me feel like a million
bucks. I should have taken his advice. There is something relaxing in
a uniquely manly way about having another man scrape your face and
throat with a razor blade.
We still weren't done. Next:
aftershave. The kid in Home Alone was overreacting, but I see his
point.
Still not done. A cotton swab swished
around in my ear, then out came the cigarette lighter. I have the
fuzzy ears of an 80 year old man, but Turkish Barber was going to
help me. With artistic brushes of flame, he singed those bad boys
right off.
Almost done. Just a few puffs of
cologne across my chest, and I was ready, emerging onto the Istanbul
street a new man.
Or at least smelling like one.
Teşekür
ederim, Mr Barber Man.
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