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f/k/a archives . . . real opinions & real haiku

December 12, 2005

hair-brained priorities

Filed under: pre-06-2006 — David Giacalone @ 10:29 pm


For some unfathomable reason, the Lifestyles editor of the

Schenectady Sunday Gazette decided to feature the article 

Caution Bad Hair Day” yesterday (by Elysia Nest, H1, Dec.

11, 2005, $ub$cription only!)  The article rehashes findings

from a 2000 study by Marianne LaFrance of Yale University’s

Gender Communications Laboratory and from a March 2003

‘Hair Drama Stress Survey’ conducted on behalf of Sunsilk

hair care products.

 

CautionBadHair

 

Since understanding human nature makes us better lawyers,

judges, haijin, and persons, I thought I’d salvage the time wasted

on that article by sharing it with you.   Also, if misery loves

company, and we all love a little schadenfreude, knowing the

pain that bad hair causes others might be personally rewarding

for all of us.

 

A quick look at LaFrance’s Impressions column in the Lamas    BadHairDayN

Beauty Magazine, (Oct. 2003), reveals that “bad hair days “affect

individuals’ self-esteem increasing self-doubt, intensifying

social insecurities, and becoming more self-critical in general:


tiny check “Interestingly, both women and men are negatively

affected by the phenomenon of bad hair days,” says

Professor LaFrance. “Even more fascinating is our finding

that individuals perceive their capabilities to be significantly

lower than others when experiencing bad hair.”


tiny check  “Most notably, just the thought of a bad hair

day caused both men and women to feel they are not as

smart as others. Surprisingly, the impact on performance

self-esteem was more pronounced among men.”

 

tiny check  “Women tend to feel more disgraced, embar-

rassed, ashamed or self-conscious when experiencing bad

hair. Men on the other hand, feel more nervous, less con-

fident and are more inclined to be unsociable.”

 

BadHairDayG

 

tiny check “Evidence shows that bad hair causes one to

be more negative about oneself. Specifically, results

indicate that a ‘bad hair’ day leads individuals to find more

personal character flaws that go beyond their appearance.”

  

The Sunsilk study found that “More than one in five women (22%) will cancel a

date or hide to avoid seeing someone they fancy, if they are having a bad hair day.

And one in 20 would actually give up sex or their boyfriend in exchange for great

looking hair for the rest of their lives.”  Even worse, “nearly all women (97%) believe

that having attractive hair is essential to their self-esteem, and it therefore acts as

an emotional barometer – a simple means of gauging their well-being.”

 

According to Dr Aric Sigman, psychologist and body language expert: “Hair is the

only fashion accessory that is part of a woman’s body and, as such, she takes it

more seriously. . . .  She knows that people will make judgements about her based

upon the state of her hair and – more to the point – she makes judgements about

herself based upon the state of her hair.”


“tinyredcheck” The study also found that “Amazingly, one in ten (11%)

women would rather suffer PMT than endure a bad hair day.” 

[Over at Acronym Finder, your Editor concluded that “PMT

probably means Post-Millennium Tension, Pacemaker-Mediated

Tachycardia, or Pre-Menstrual Tension (UK Variation of PMS).]

Before you accuse me of misogyny or male chauvinism for stressing these

results, please let me repeat the sentence above from the LaFrance Study:

“Surprisingly, the impact on performance self-esteem was more pronounced

among men.” 

 

boy writing neg

 

Although I make light of the Bad Hair Day issue, let me confess that

I also empathize.  My three-dimensional, curly-brillo Sicilian hair was

impossible to tame in my youth and is impossible to tame as it rapidly

abandons my pate.  Believe me, I can relate.  I just hope that age has

given me enough common sense to laugh rather than cry on my own

bad hair days.

 



again, the bald barber

cuts my hair

too short

 

 

 

 

 




as the professor speaks

only his bald spot

is illuminated

 


 

 

bad hair update (Dec. 13, 2005): a pair from ed “the walking saijiki

markowski:




 

           late day showers…

                   my hair gel

                      reactivates

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


                       winter pines…

                             the ski instructor’s

                                  spiked hair

 

 

 

 

 





                     holiday rush

                          the barber speaks wistfully

                        of the sixties

 

 

 

 

          ed markowski 

             “holiday rush” – bear creek haiku (Winter 2004)

 

 

 


 

George Swede bonus (forget this hair stuff):



 

 

 

the frozen breaths

of the carolers   disappearing

among the stars

 

 

 

 


 





 

A cloud, a gull, a sail

            all
in the last sunbeam

 

“the frozen breaths” – Almost Unseen

“a cloud” – Mainichi Daily News Dec. 5, 2005 (No.678) 

 

potluck


tiny check  I can’t believe I’ve spent all this time fretting over bad hair days,

when I could have been clicking through the new links collected by Walter

Olson, at Point of Law, on Alito and Antitrust.  You know, some of my very

worse bad hair days happened while I was an antitrust lawyer.  Don’t remind

me!  I wonder how many millions of billable hours have been attributable to

Hair Dramas over the past half century?  Maybe Walter knows. 

 



                                                                                                                             CautionBadHairN

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