Wednesday, June 18, 2008

InEquality Of The Sexes - Social Conditioning With Respect To Hair

Social Conditioning - The Hair Shows It
It all starts from a young age when we attend schools here.

We are told long hair is a strict No-Go here. The discipline master or mistress is always on hand and on the look-out and on the prowl to enforce this rule. Dudes with stray hair. Hair that strays from the slopy slopes on all sides of our profile that all uniformed dudes are supposed to follow.

Hair has to be short so we all look like boys. Long hair means messiness, untidiness, dirtiness and worse it means being feminine.

The ubiquitous Malay, Chinese or Indian barber is always ready on hand to tear out hair off and leave us bald. This also marks the initiation phase into the army that we should be shaven and kept clean.

So there you have it folks! Social conditioning at its worst!

Look at the Japanese! They wear their hair long but cut and styled in so many different ways. And the only feminine trait is their long hair (or so our culture here seems to say what hair tells about a person or reinforces the stereotypical image of what is masculine and what is feminine) but they are all men.

They behave like men and they fuck like men too.

It is the mindset that has to change.

Barbership is in business here only because the schools and the army are still at it. Once we dudes are out of school, some of us eventually migrate to the salons.

Commercial Hair Salons Compromises The Very Integrity And Health Of Our Hair
A very sad state of affairs unfortunately prevail at the salon.

A commercial culture of getting patrons to buy up hair products that usually do not work, go for unnecessary hair treatments and worse, mis-diagnosing your hair condition and then getting your hair in a fix.

Hopefully not damaging it too much.

But not a single shred of skill to cut a hair the style you look your best in or the style you want.

Meaningless To Drag Life On Like That, Better To Live A Full Life And Then Go Peacefully
To totter, to be wheel-chair bound and to be in a poor state of health. We have seen how some of our old people are like all around us. At the malls. Everywhere.

Life is simply not worth living anymore like that.

No comments: