Expat Magazine

Expat Life: Getting Sheared

By Miss Footloose @missfootloose
Expat Life: Getting Sheared Expat Life: Getting Sheared

Is your hair out of control? Are you desperate for a hair cut? This is the infamous year 2020 and you may well be out of luck with all the hair salons closed in your corner of the globe. If getting sheared is not in your immediate future you may have started hacking away at your tresses with scissors, as I have, and it's not a good look. I know. I'm trying to avoid looking in the mirror.

But don't get too depressed

To cheer you up I have a story for you about a shearing I once experienced in a country far, far away. It wasn't pretty.

This photo below is of the town of Yerevan, capital of Armenia, in the dead of winter. I'm now living in France, enjoying warm spring weather, but some years ago I started a new expat life in Armenia, arriving in the middle of an arctic January.

Expat Life: Getting Sheared
Expat Life: Getting Sheared
Wintry Yerevan. Photo © Manan Tevosyan used by permission

My second day in my new habitat I had my first adventure: I got a haircut! Here's the story. May it give you a chuckle.

Getting Sheared in Armenia

I've been in the Armenia less than two days. Yesterday someone from my husband's new office took me house hunting, and this morning someone else took me around to show me where to do the shopping. Now it's afternoon and while my man labors away at his new office, I'm scouting around town on my own to see what I can see, walking very carefully in my new boots, shivering in my also-new down-filled coat.

It is so cold, so cold!

I'm not in this photo taken by my (later to be) friend G. Peterson, but I might as well be.

Expat Life: Getting Sheared
Expat Life: Getting Sheared

Ice-covered sidewalks threaten broken limbs, grim stone buildings exude bleakness and gloom, and why is everyone dressed in black? I asked one of the office staff this question and she gave me a blank stare for a moment, as if she had never noticed or thought about it. "Because we like it," she said finally. "Black is our national color."

Not surprisingly, one of the other things I notice is Armenian words everywhere, on road signs and billboards and shop windows. Written in the Armenian alphabet, which is unique and indecipherable. There is no way to even make educated guesses.

Yerevan Cheese Shop Photo ©

Expat Life: Getting Sheared
Expat Life: Getting Sheared
Deb Collins used by permission

I hail from the country of tulips and cheese. Growing up European, you learn a couple of languages here and there, and usually you can fake your way around the continent. But not here. Not only the alphabet, but the Armenian language itself is unique, not related to any other languages in the universe. I see Russian on signs and buildings as well (Russian was the official language in Soviet times), but that doesn't do me much good either.

So I am not a little bit ecstatic when . . .

in the center of town near Independence Square I spot the English words hair saloon on a sign with an arrow pointing into a courtyard. This gives me great hope for an English speaker inside. And because I really do need a haircut and because maybe it's warm inside, I'm thinking I might as well give this a try. Since this is not the perilous year 2020, I sense no danger lurking. I find the "saloon" and push open the door.

Hope shatters as soon as I enter. It's only just above freezing inside the tiny space and none of the three girls (wearing serious party make-up) speaks English. With no other clients there to help, they try Armenian on me, and then Russian. Then they give up.

I've never felt such an illiterate in my life

But next week I still won't speak either language and hey, a haircut is not rocket science. I make a snipping gesture and then indicate a couple of centimeters, about an inch, between my thumb and index finger. So far so good. I settle myself in a chair and the fake blonde goes for it while keeping up a running conversation with her buddies shivering in their shabby fur coats. I don't want to sound paranoid, but I suspect they're discussing me by the way they're checking me out - my funny light-colored coat, my inelegant flat-soled boots. All three are wearing seriously sexy boots with 4-inch spiky heels.

Some time later my stylist is finished with me and I look really interesting.

What I meant when I indicated the inch or so was to have that much hair cut off, not to have that much left.

I've been sheared

And just in case you didn't know this, hair keeps your head warm, if you have it. I stare at my funky self in the mirror. What to do? Screaming is hard work, so I decide to be Zen about it. It is what it is. Hair will grow back.

My stylist writes down the amount I owe her, in standard numerals, thank God, and I pay it. It's only three times as much as I should have been charged, or so someone tells me the next day. My sincere hope is that these shivering girls get enough suckers like me to be able to save up for a functioning space heater.

*

NOTE: Living the expat life, you know you get suckered at times. It's part of the deal, part of the price you pay for living such an exotic life (I hear you laugh). Sometimes it makes you furious, sometimes it doesn't, and sometimes it even makes you laugh. I've found that laughing works best.

As an innocent abroad, or an experienced expat, have you ever been cheated but you didn't really mind? Please share your tale and make my day!

Expat Life: Getting Sheared
Expat Life: Getting Sheared


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