By the time the twenty first century rolled around haircuts were becoming more and no expensive. A srilankan chain opened shop and charged an arm and a leg for a hair cut but the hairdressers were trained,had many awards to their credit and could make a clear diagnosis o n what would suit me. I fell for it and made friends with the boy who came close to making me look good. I though my quest was over. But he moved on and once again I grew my hoar got along with sub standard hairstyles and was never really happy about it until an international chain opened shop near my place. Now here was a salon that only cut hair . The whole place was air conditioned,the lobby had comfortable leather sofas,the girls at reception were so smart they made me feel positively scruffy,the hairstylist was trained in London,did a full clinical analysis of my hair,while offering me coffee tea or a soft drink. This was luxury and I paid dearly for it. At a whopping fifteen hundred quid a hair cut was not only becoming a one a month affair but also burning a large hole in my pocket,add to that a hair colour or two (this when the bag lady looked like she should be in vogue....me all grew and old) and I was watching the bank balance beginning to look like a bad hair day. But ofcourse I was paying for a lot more than just the haircut,the hairdresser and I had long chats and he would take a hour to cut my hair,wash it condition it blow dry it and there I would look so good I would always turn around to see if the person in the mirror was really me. Ofcourse that lasted only until the first wash at home and I would look nothing like my salon self.
Now all things considered I decided to grow my hair till Christmas and then spend a bit of money. But as luck would have it some one or the other kept mentioning this girl who cut hair for a hundred quid. Now where was hundred compared to fifteen hundred? And as none of them looked too bad I simply had to try out this girl and her skills. So off I went to this hole in the wall,the reception stuffed with washing machines and in tears,no air conditioning,reception girls who couldn't speak English. Curtains that had seen better days and no shampoo or conditioning. The girl made me sit in a chir she just about dusted,combed my hair out with a comb that had just been used on someone else,cut my hair in five minuted and charged me eighty quid,which is less that the tip I pay at the fancy place. Well I looked ok nothing great and maybe a bit like I did when I was ten and used the barbe shop but could I complain? I doubt it,I mean at that price what did I expect and it wasn't a bad job either. I am in two minds now. The snob in me says go back to sofistication and the practical in me says well as the look isn't very different why not use her services till Christmas and the use the posh chap only for a treat. It's hard when one has got used to the good things in life but I am going to be less of a snob,I think in times of recession,simplifying life is the key so for now,economics wins over style but who know when tempation overpowers me....will wait and see
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