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Loving Bald Menby
Rebecca McClanahan
Months since my nephew slid otter-slick into the
doctor’s hands, I anoint his head with baby oil, brailling his fate: Is
baldness in his future? The first time I touched a bald man’s head I was
a grown woman, and I read in the elegant bones of his skull my future for the next few hours at least. Who could refuse such a
landscape? Bare of tuft or leaf or feather, sleek mountain summit,
undisguised, evident, in a word: bold,
as in bald, both arising out of shining,
white. My knight, this night of shining, my bald eagle hovering
above me, tell me there are more like you out there, more blank pates on
which to write a happy ending, seal it with a lipsticked pout. More men
like Gandhi and Dwight and Yul, and all those young men I pass on the
street, their scalps receding, retreating, who knows all the reasons hair
starts refusing to put its best foot forward. I know that’s a mixed
metaphor, but thinking about bald men mixes me up: army recruits, athletes
in spring training, Sumo wrestlers, Olympic swimmers skimmed hairless for
the crown, and even those bands of lonely boys aspiring to evil in the
name of good. We all want to be part of something larger, which may be why
a whole neighborhood of men--I forget just where but what matters is
why--shaved their heads in solidarity, to welcome home a boy bald as a
plucked chicken from his cancerous year away. I clipped the photo and
saved it all these years for its power to break my heart in all the right
places. There he sits on the brownstone stoop in the center of a shining
host. How can you not love men like that?
Even if later they begin the comb-overs and
side-winding, ointments and creams, weaves and implants, yes even the
toupees. I hate toupees, but love the need beneath, searching the web (baldmen.com)
just to read male pattern baldness, so
virile a phrase, with its rumors
of testosterone abundance. Imagine the stunning migrations: all that power
has to land somewhere. Even as a child I doubted the Samson moral. If bald
means weak, how to explain Mr. Clean, Popeye, cartoon genies swirling from
bottles, Barnum and Bailey’s muscled men?
I married my first husband chiefly for the promise in his high,
bare forehead, and almost refused my lushly-tressed second, but
twenty-five years later I’m glad I waited it out.
“You’re getting there,” I say, standing
on tiptoe to kiss the halo of scalp making its first appearance. Blessed
be haloed short men who allow short women a peek without straining. Oh,
lucky tall girls, who don’t have to ride escalators or lean over
balconies to glimpse sweat pearls clustering on the heads of tennis
players, freckles sprinkled on bald golfers, surfers, on uncles like mine
or yours whose history of farming is mapped across their scalps, like my
aunt’s second husband, a widower who showed up years after she’d
buried her first. Half a century since their high school prom, he knocks
on her door, lifts his hat, touches the worn tread beneath,
apologizes--for what? Time? Heredity? Survival? She fingers her own sparse
threads, invites him in for coffee.
Thus begins a real life story I call forth as I sit
beside my husband, caressing with one hand his bare temple (oh holy name)
and with the other my own meager strands, what’s left of youthful glory.
The fault, dear Samson, was not in your scalp but in the woman whose name
means She-Who-Makes-Weak. If she’d listened with her heart as you lay,
your head in her lap, the thick locks tangling, she might have hushed the
fear you whispered...that I shall be
as any other man.
“Enjoy to be bald,” types the Frenchman, and
hundreds of messages blink across the web site’s world map--in Asia,
Africa, Australia, from the Bald by Choice Men’s Club, the Bald Guys
Motorcycle Club, the Christian Chromedomes, from the maker of specialty
nightcaps warming dreams from Anchorage to Moscow, from the stylist
offering Wild Bill Haircuts to bald and hairy people alike, yes even to
women and children, to survivors of camps and chemo, the ones whose eyes
shine out large and dark, to all those weary of turbans and baseball caps,
to the last beautiful eunuchs, celibate priests, mourners shaved down to
ashes and sackcloth, saffron-robed monks who give themselves over, friars
with their limited fringe.
Rebecca
McClanahan's
most recent book is a collection of personal essays, The
Riddle Song and Other Rememberings (University of Georgia Press, 2002).
She's also published four volumes of poetry and three books about writing,
including Word
Painting: A Guide to Writing More Descriptively. "Loving
Bald Men" is part of a manuscript-in-progress that focuses on women and
aging, tentatively entitled Fifty on Fifty.
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