Every family has its traditions.
Some gather around the
dinner table. Others meet for holidays. And then there are those monthly Zoom
calls, where stories are shared, jokes are recycled, and, in my family, hair
quietly becomes the main event in my mind.
There I am, camera angled
just right. Not by accident, of course, this is a deliberate production. The
lighting catches the flow, the volume, the unmistakable presence of hair that
has clearly not seen a barber in quite some time.
My wife loves it long. My
brothers? Well, let’s say their relationship with hair has become more
historical than current. So naturally, this becomes a moment. A subtle,
unspoken victory lap.
“Still got it,” the
camera seems to say.
Now, here’s the twist: this
wasn’t entirely planned. It started, as many things do, with a bit of
procrastination.
“I should get a haircut,”
I thought… about five months ago.
But life gets busy. There
are errands to run, people to see, afternoons that feel better spent doing
almost anything else. And besides, the hair wasn’t bothering anyone. In fact,
it was becoming something of an asset, part style, part statement, part sibling
rivalry.
So, the six-week haircut
quietly stretched into six months.
To be fair, this is one
of those areas where procrastination can feel harmless, even beneficial.
Growing your hair out? That’s a choice. A style. A bit of fun. There’s no
urgent consequence, no late fee, no alarm bell going off in the background.
Sometimes letting things go a little longer gives you a new look, a new story,
even a new sense of identity.
And honestly, there’s
something to be said for enjoying it. Life doesn’t need to be perfectly trimmed
and scheduled at all times.
But here’s where the
gentle truth steps in.
What starts as a style
can slowly turn into avoidance.
Because somewhere along
the way, the thought shifts from “I’m choosing to grow it” to “I really should
deal with this.” The edges lose their shape. The mornings take a bit more
effort. What once looked intentional starts looking… negotiable.
And underneath it all,
there’s that familiar phrase again: “I’ll get to it.”
The thing is, a good
haircut isn’t just about appearance, it’s about reset.
It’s that small act of
taking care of yourself, of saying, “Alright, time to tidy things up.” You walk
out a little lighter, a little sharper, maybe even a little more put together
than you felt walking in. It doesn’t change your life, but it does change your
day.
And interestingly, it
doesn’t erase the fun you had growing it out. It just gives you a new chapter.
Picture the next Zoom
call.
Same group. Same jokes.
But this time, the camera angle isn’t doing all the work. The haircut is fresh.
Clean. Intentional. The brothers notice, of course, they do. The comments come
quickly.
“What happened? You join
the military?”
But underneath the
teasing, there’s a quiet shift. This isn’t just about having hair, it’s about
owning it, taking care of it, deciding when it’s time for a change instead of
drifting into one.
So yes, let it grow.
Enjoy it. Have your moment in the spotlight.
But don’t let “someday”
be the only stylist you trust.
Whether it’s six weeks or
six months, the real win isn’t how long you wait; it’s knowing when it’s time
to sit in the chair and take control of the story again.