Haircut
I get off the IRT in front of the Schomburg Center for
Research in Black Culture after riding an early Amtrak from Philly to get a
hair cut at what used to be the Harlem “Y” barbershop. It gets me in at ten to
ten. Waiting, I eat fish cakes at the Pam Pam and listen to the ladies call out
orders: bacon-biscuit twice, scrambled scrambled fried, over easy, grits,
country sausage on the side. Hugh is late. He shampoos me, says “I can’t
remember, Girlfriend, are you tender-headed?” From the chair I notice the mural
behind me in the mirror. I know those overlapped sepia shadows, a Renaissance
rainforest, Aaron Douglas! Hugh tells me he didn’t use primer and the chlorine
eats the colors every day. He clips and combs and I tell him how my favorite
Douglas is called “Building More Stately Mansions," and he tells me how
fly I’d look in a Salt ‘n’ Pepa ‘do, how he trained in Japan.
Clip clip, clip clip. I imagine a whoosh each time my hair
lands on the floor and the noises of small brown mammals. I remember, my
father! He used to get his hair cut here, learned to swim in the caustic water,
played pool and basketball. He cuts his own hair now. My grandfather worked
seventy-five years in Harlem building more stately mansions. I was born two
blocks away and then we moved.
None of that seems to relate to today. This is not my turf,
despite the other grandfather and great-aunt who sewed hearts back into black
chests after Saturday night stabbings on this exact corner, the great-uncle who
made a mosaic down the street, both grandmothers. What am I always listening
for in Harlem? A voice that says, “This is your place, too," as faintly as
the shadows in the mural? The accents are unfamiliar; all my New York kin are
dead. I never knew Fats Waller but what do I do with knowing he used to play
with a ham and a bottle of gin atop his piano; never went to Olivia’s House of
Beauty but I know Olivia, who lives in St. Thomas, now, and who exactly am I,
anyway, finding myself in these ghostly, Douglas shadows while real ghosts walk
around me, talk about my stuff in the subway, yell at me not to butt the line,
beg me, beg me, for my money?
What is black culture? I read the writing on the wall on the
side of the “Y” as I always have: “Harlem Plays the Best Ball in the World.” I
look in the mirror and see my face in the mural with a new haircut. I am a New
York girl; I am a New York woman; I am a flygirl with a new hair cut in New
York City in a mural that is dying every day.
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