I saw a photo of Alexa Chung in a magazine while mooching about in leggings and one of those breastfeeding tops that are a great idea but not very fashion forward. She has a fringe, that Alexa Chung, and green eyes and brown hair. She’s very thin. I have no fringe, brown eyes, blonde hair (dyed) and a wobbly just-had-a-baby paunch.
At the time, I hadn’t showered in about three days and was existing largely on fried goods. I took a photo of myself on my phone, examined it closely and thought, ‘You know what? I would probably look as good as Alexa if not for this side part.’ Ergo:
I should totally get me a fringe.
Yes. A fringe.
So I booked a time at a hairdressing salon I found reviews of online. Five stars, four and a half stars, so many stars. Only criticism was it was a bit expensive but how much could a cut cost?, I thought. ‘And you’ll look just like me,’ encouraged Alexa, folded carefully and tucked into the side pocket of my handbag.
On the day, I was pumped. I fed the baby and handed her to my husband, washed, dressed, ran a comb through my hair and arrived at the allotted time, maybe even early.
My stylist – the Head Stylist – came over. Her name was Natalia. She had a sleeve of tattoos, bluebirds in cages and snippets of poems. Her hair was a deep shade of burgundy and her outfit was the combined effort of an emerging Icelandic designer (pants), her musician boyfriend (singlet) and a market in an obscure French town (cardigan).
She was so incredibly cool that later I found myself willingly inhaling the smell from her underarm. Even that exuded the faint scent of awesome. Luckily, I was there to be transformed. My new self was about to emerge like a shiny haired, luminous-skinned, fringed butterfly.