Of all the things a hairdresser should say to a client, "You have a pointy head" is near the bottom of the list.
Alas, I heard that recently. Yes. A pointy head.
I was getting bimonthly haircut (I returned to having my hair cut professionally – by which I mean I go to a discount haircut place and tell them "No. 2 on the sides, No. 3 on top" – after an unfortunate event that historians now call "Baldergate," when Mrs. Brad forgot to put a guard on the clipper and accidentally gave me an inch-wide bad stripe across my skull.
Things were going well this time. I went during my lunch break and I was going to finish a normal 10-minute haircut (how hard is it? You use the No. 3 guard on the top, No. 2 on the side. Unless you're Mrs. Brad on that unfortunate occasion, when you simply leave off the guard and shave a stripe in your husband's hair).
The hairstylist (in my case, more of a barber, but she didn't offer to shave me and Supercuts doesn't have a cool barber pole outside) was chatty. Things were moving along.
Then she dropped the information.
"Your head is kind of like . . . " she started, unable to fully articulate what she meant. Instead, she put her hands together like an A-frame, suggesting my head is shaped like the roof of Swiss Alps villa.
"It's shaped like that?" I asked, trying to figure out what the heck she meant.
"Yes. It's like . . . "
"Pointy?"
"Yes! It's pointy!"
Her enthusiasm was as striking as my horror. My head is pointy? My head is shaped like a roof?
Immediately, I thought of "The Point," a TV movie of my childhood about a boy who lives in a world where everyone's head – except his – comes to a point. He is cast out and wanders with his pointy-headed dog, Arrow. I suspect it's a classic 1970s fable about discrimination fueled by psychedelic drugs. It turns out that very few people saw it, but the movie did feature the song, "Me and My Arrow," by Harry Nilsson, which was a minor pop hit.
Anyway, as I sat in the chair listening to the hairdresser describe my skull, I felt like I was one of the pointy-headed people in that movie. Did baseball caps teeter on the top of my head? Did I unexpectedly bump my head on doorways because it goes much higher than I thought? Should I cover my pointy dome by wearing a stovepipe hat, like Abe Lincoln?
Worst of all, why would a hairdresser say that just as she was finishing cutting my hair very short on the top? "Hey, I'm about done. Now that we're finishing, your head looks like you've put a nacho chip on top. Have a great day!"
It was dumbfounding, but somehow made me feel special.
I finally understood why I feel like an outsider: It's because my head is like a rooftop and I live in a world where people's heads are volleyball-shaped. Now I know why I've never fit in! Now I understand . . . wait!
I don't feel like an outsider and I do generally fit in!
Does this mean people don't discriminate against me because of my head shape? Is it possible that the hairdresser didn't realize what she was saying, that she meant my skull has a spot that is slightly higher than the rest of it, like (I presume) most people?
Who knows? I talked about it with my pal, Nate, and we decided that the good news was that if I ever get caught in a snowstorm, the snow won't pile on my skull, but will slide off on each side, which is an advantage.
Really, who knows?
One takeaway is that everyone is different and having a pointy head isn't necessarily a bad thing. Another takeaway? The hairdresser needs to work on her descriptive skills as she finishes haircuts, unless her goal is to make her clients feel self-conscious about their head shape.
I guess that's the main point. Other than the one on top of my skull, that is.
Reach Brad Stanhope at bradstanhope@outlook.com.








