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  • It could seem bizarre quite how long we spend on those strands of stringy keratin that sprout

  • unreliablyfrom our scalps. We will, over a lifetime, devote thousands of hours

  • and even more money on hairdressers' careful attempts to coax and sculpt our coiffure into

  • exactly the right colour, shape and dimension. There are days when our entire mood will be

  • supported by a sense that our hair is cooperating and others when our spirits will be just as

  • powerfully ruined by an unfortunate glimpse of our disobedient locks in an elevator mirror.

  • Why does it matter so much? Becausehowever odd this may soundwe are using our hair

  • to speak. We're trying, through the syntax of coloured protein filaments, to express

  • key aspects about who we are.

  • It is always precarious for us to transmit our identities to those around us. We

  • rely on other, accompanying details: our shoes, our

  • jewellery, our clothesand of course, most centrally, those strands of hair. Everyone's

  • hair speaks in a slightly specific dialect, but we can with relative ease define some

  • of the main entries in humanity's vast and nuanced Dictionary of Hair:

  • Tightly pulled back: We're letting the world know that we are busy, organised and not to be interrupted

  • lightly. Long, flowing and tangled: We are reminding society of our opposition to some

  • of the demands of modern capitalism. We're spiritual beings, our hair is saying, we have a heart

  • and make the time to notice what really counts. Emphatic side-parting: We're using hair

  • to tell others that we're careful, modest, patient, sensible and very willing to be realistic.

  • We can be relied upon. Brushed forward, closely cropped, in the manner of a Roman General:

  • We're too immersed, our hair informs society, in the real battles of life to care about

  • trivia; we make our hair obey. We have grown indifferent to criticism andin a good

  • wayhard to impress. Hair truly is a subtle and intricate language. The problemor

  • even the tragedyis that other people aren't necessarily paying very much attention

  • to what it is saying. We encounter this awkward reality in the difficult moments after our

  • return from an expensive and slow-moving hairdresser. We rejoin our friends or lovers with an expectant

  • 'what do you think?' only to receive mildly confused responses: 'those trousers suit

  • you' or 'have you lost weight?' We felt that it mattered so ardently that the locks

  • are now combed just a little more to the left and are one shade closer to blonde: others

  • don't give a damn, though in the privacy of their own bathrooms, they too will take

  • immense care about what their hair is saying. The conversation we have with hair appears

  • close to an immensely expensive, laborious, self-conscious dialogue of the deaf. And yet

  • what we're encountering, in the limited context of hair, is simply a problem that

  • haunts us throughout our lives: the essential loneliness of the human animal. We have an

  • extraordinarily limited power to get others to care about and understand us the way we

  • so crave to be grasped. And vice versa. We should not mock others for caring so much

  • about their hairor berate ourselves for doing the same. We're just engaged in the

  • poignant business of attempting to communicate who we are. With all those dyes, curlers,

  • tongs and scissors, we're just trying to make ourselves a little more clearly understood

  • in a world with painfully little inclination

  • to care. .

  • Did you know that The School Life is actually a place? Ten places infact.

  • Campus' all over the world from Melbourne to London, Taipei to Istanbul

  • with classes and books and lots more. Please click on the link below to explore more.

It could seem bizarre quite how long we spend on those strands of stringy keratin that sprout

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為什麼我們對自己的頭髮想得那麼多 (Why we think so much about our hair)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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