Thursday, May 23, 2013
twitter
  
facebook
  
youtube
  
  
 
3. Gay Men’s Hair Loss Experience - Hair Loss Culture - hairloss
  
 

3. Gay Men’s Hair Loss Experience

Part 3: “I Am a Gay Man, and I Am Losing My Hair”

gayBald

A provacative look at true gay men's hair loss stories, up close and oh so personal.

Free_Treatment_Inset_Promo

“It starts with a bad angle in a candid photo,” says Blair Lawhead, proprietor of Blair Hair, a Chelsea (Manhattan/New York City) hair studio that has a large gay clientele. Such a moment often provides the guy a glimpse of the fact that his hair is thinning, something he hadn’t noticed before. “With hair loss, you become your father in a rapid period of time.”

Harsh words from someone who has worked with New York’s sometimes famous and frequently fabulous for more than two decades. And in the city that never sleeps, he absolutely sees hair loss as a factor in how one might sleep around.

“All of a sudden you’re an old guy,” says Lawhead. “You might be the cute boy who turns into the sugar daddy you didn’t want to be.” While that may work for some, the transition might be difficult. “You suddenly don’t know your market. You may not be as successful with the type of guy you succeeded with in the past.” And, there’s a matter of economics when you become the daddy: You’re expected to have some sugar, too. “No one is really wealthy anymore. And age has connotations on who foots the bill.”

But if that candid photo is somehow withheld from you, there are plenty of other ways gay men realize they are losing their hair. Once they do, they deal with it in ways that work for them.

No, you won’t be able to style it that way

Andrew Brown, who runs a graphic design firm in Chicago, said he came to realizing his hair was irretrievably leaving him at about the time of his 40th birthday.

A businessperson whose calling card with major household name clients was his creativity, Brown was always willing to have that sartorial edge, a look that extended to his hair as well. In Chicago that’s not always as “out there” as on the coasts. But in a town where bread-and-butter consumer brands are made, managed and marketed (think McDonald’s, Quaker Oats, Kraft Foods, Sara Lee, Sears, Walgreen’s and Wrigley’s gum), he would push the envelope.

“I would go in for a haircut and ask to try new things,” says Brown. “The problem was my hairstylist kept telling me, ‘Your hair isn’t going to do that.’ It was painful to hear.”

But then he saw Bruce Willis one night on the The Late Show with David Letterman. Prior to shaving his head, Willis dyed his remaining follicles a white blonde -- and the macho star got a huge reaction, mostly positive, from Letterman’s audience when he walked onto the show.

“I said, ‘I can do that,’” says Brown. Which he did, with varying degrees of satisfaction, for about a year. But it was time for a change and he followed Willis’ next move -- he clipped it off. “I felt then that I had found my look,” he says. “And I received not one negative reaction.” And contrary to his previous style adventures, he has stuck with it for the more than 15 years since that decision. “Now I spend about 20 minutes every three or four days clipping it very close to the head but not actually shaving it.” He also cultivates what he calls “gay designer,” a facial scruff look that takes elaborate planning and timing for meetings and events on his busy calendar.

A hair/hair-not relationship

Interestingly, Brown’s partner of more than 20 years, Michael Zudonyi, is himself a hairstylist. And he has a full head of hair that is often shoulder length. He wisely took a passive role in Brown’s journey but sees hair loss in his own clients every day. “We get high school kids who are losing their hair, fighting it with Propecia and Rogaine. But confidence defines the look. I never want Andrew to grow his hair back.”

The fifty-something couple have observed that gay men have learned to deal with hair loss better, and in a greater variety of ways, over the past few decades. For Brown, it was an evolution of his own sense of what hair meant to him (and what was possible). Zudonyi sees a big difference in the shift from the world of bars to the online dating scene. “In bars, people are in their own circles, their cliques,” he says, noting that most guys’ entire presentation of themselves is defined by those groups. But online, you’re a whole new you to the people you meet, he notes, suggesting that in such places an enhancement is more likely (and it doesn’t stop with just hair).

With matters of the head largely settled, the couple has a little more fun sparring back and forth on the subject of body hair. From Zudonyi’s perspective as a stylist, he believes that men with early hair loss tend to have excessive body hair. Neither thinks a forced hairlessness on the body is a good thing, but some trimming here and there, as well as bleaching, is a good idea.

To Blair Lawhead, it’s a matter of which costume one chooses. “It’s all drag; it’s all theater,” says the man who once worked in theater himself. “Whether your look is leather or gym bunny, you tend to go with it. But you have to accept time and aging. If you’re toward the end of your 30s, you can’t be the guy out dancing all night without seeing bags under your eyes the next day.” Lawhead’s business is largely in providing hair replacement systems, which is a very customized, high-end toupee that defies stereotype (crafted to convincingly fit the remaining hair and the age of the wearer). “Why complicate the process [of getting laid] without figuring out what is helping you to look better -- or worse.”

Why indeed?

Hair loss appears to be a journey for most guys experiencing it. And when the answers come, they might be in phases. It certainly helps to learn from those who have been down that road already -- even if your ultimate destination is somewhere altogether different.

 

8 PART SERIES

bald-barbie
Mar 04, 2013

Is It Time for a Bald Barbie?

A Bald Barbie Would Send a Strong Supportive Message An online campaign is pushing strongly for the creation of a Barbie who is suffering from a nonspecific hair loss condition. Barbie, arguably the world’s most famous doll, has been through a lot of…Full story
Skinheads_When_Bald_Isnt_Beautiful
Mar 04, 2013

Skinheads: When Bald Isn’t Beautiful

Extremist Skinhead Subcultures Are a Dangerous Problem Shaving your head can be empowering, but racist skinheads use empowerment destructively. “Bald is beautiful” proclaim many men who proudly shave their heads to achieve a look that suits them and makes…Full story
Limericks-and-Hair-Loss
Mar 04, 2013

Limericks and Hair Loss

The Issue of Hair Loss Is Well Represented in Limericks Limericks are tremendously popular, so much so that we find many that deal with hair loss, which isn't so popular. The limerick packs laughs anatomicalInto space that is quite economical,But the good…Full story
Bratz-and-Moxy-Girlz-Dolls-Go-Bald
Mar 04, 2013

Bratz and Moxy Girlz Dolls Go Bald

New Bald Dolls to Benefit Children's Hair Loss Charities MGA Entertainment has created the True Hope collection of its Bratz and Moxy Girlz dolls to support children suffering from hair loss. In recent months, you've undoubtedly heard all the buzz about the…Full story
Hair_Loss_You_Cant_Say_That
Jan 29, 2013

Hair Loss: You Can't Say That!

A Hairy Situation: Words People with Hair Loss Can’t Use There are phrases in the American lexicon that just don't apply to to those who are balding or suffer from hair loss. “Choose your words wisely and with care,” we are told. Good advice, especially for a…Full story
southasia_05
Sep 29, 2011

Hair Loss in South Asia: Conclusion

What South Asia Can Do to Stem the Rising Tide Of Hair Loss Postscript: Can anything be done to stop hair loss in South Asia? If we could initiate solutions to hair loss in the South Asian region -- India, in particular -- they would be as follows: 1. Improve…Full story
southasia_04
Sep 29, 2011

Hair Loss in South Asia: Economics

Asia's Harsh Economic Realities and Dubious Hair Loss Cures Hair loss treatments in South Asia include legitimate practices, but economic realities drive widespread use of poor substitutes and folk medicine. In the United States, where thinning hair and…Full story
southasia_03
Sep 29, 2011

Hair Loss in South Asia: Causes

There Are Many Causes of Hair Loss Conditions in South Asia In South Asia, as anywhere else, heredity, hormones, stress, diet and disease can each cause hair loss. Just about everything we see in English-language media out of South Asia represents those…Full story

REFER ME TO A HAIR LOSS TREATMENT EXPERT

Please fill out the form below to be referred to a hair loss treatment expert in your area. You will be contacted by a hair loss treatment expert who will offer you a free consultation and offer you recommendations based on your own individual hair loss condition.

Expert Referral
Refer me to an expert on *

Invalid Input
Name *

Invalid Input
Email *

Invalid Input
Phone

Invalid Input
Postal Code *

Invalid Input
Country *

Invalid Input
Comments *

Invalid Input
Type in the security code: *
Type in the security code:
   Refresh
Invalid Input



Share this Articles

Submit to FacebookSubmit to Google BookmarksSubmit to Twitteryoutube
  • Copyright © 2013 HairLoss.com. All Rights Reserved.
  • Site developed and maintained by MVI Solutions

Login Form