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New year, new hair? 2022 might be the year of the rebellious haircut

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An acquaintance of mine as soon as commented that I ought to “by no means lower my hair quick,” remarking that my lengthy, darkish hair appeared “cool” and made me look “even youthful” than my organic age. On the time, in addition to all through most of my grownup life, my hair has reached the center of my again with a extreme middle half, remaining simply unruly sufficient to evade being categorised as “mattress head.”

My hair embodied the perfect of effortlessness that fuels style and sweetness headlines and shampoo ads in making a false idea that there’s good or unhealthy hair — or any spectrum of measurement in between.

On the tail finish of my 30s, I latched onto the acquaintance’s comment in a approach that made clear how a lot of a blinding affect conventional societal constructs of magnificence, youth and age have on me. I wasn’t as immune to those pressures as I had beforehand thought. Lengthy (like, very lengthy) hair was a part of my recreation plan to look youthful and the way I’d maintain a “cool” issue firmly planted in my quick orbit with an impracticality that would solely be tolerated by somebody younger and carefree. I envisioned my unruly mane as essentially the most outstanding a part of my total silhouette — a cartoon-like sketch with outsized hair that made an impression earlier than you noticed my face or heard my voice.

Lately a pal with waist-length locks mentioned to me that she loves her lengthy hair as a result of “each inch longer is one 12 months youthful.” I agreed. That’s till the irksome weight entwined in my strands, first from an inaccurate (and maybe unhealthy) attachment to a false image of youth after which from the continuing psychological curler coaster of the pandemic, pushed me to shed my hair in quest of some levity. The shed entailed chopping 13 inches of hair off right into a textured and layered quick model with a deep aspect half, a end result that has shades of ‘90s skateboarder-meets-the iconic geometric NancyKwan lower created by Vidal Sassoon in 1963.

Let me be clear: I’ve not had challenges with my hair or due to my hair. I’ve not been discriminated towards, not been employed or been informed to alter my hair for any motive. I’ve not suffered hair loss due to an sickness or trauma. Nor have I been uncared for or underserved by the wonder or wellness industries relating to hair care or illustration. There isn’t a scarcity of individuals with hair like mine in mainstream media or within the films or on containers of hair-growth gummies. Quite the opposite, I’ve all the time had the angle of “It’s simply hair,” which is the privilege that comes when the strands of lifeless cells connected to your follicles are what society deems as “good.” I had by no means thought that a lot about my hair as a result of I didn’t should.

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Melissa Magsaysay’s hair earlier than getting a haircut and after.

(Michael Forrey)

In my case, hair has been the proverbial tip of the iceberg on the trail to self-realization and transformation — my coiffure the comparatively insignificant 10% above the waterline and the simplest factor to alter about my look, particularly when our pandemic expressions are presently, actually, masked. Such as you, I’ve been residing within the blur of the previous two years during which time feels marked extra by variants and vaccine availability and one Zoom assembly blends into the subsequent. My 13 inches of heavy raven strands, it appeared, was creating much more blur, and it was time for some readability.

Seems, I’m removed from the one individual on this explicit hair journey. “Hair does maintain power,” says Michael Forrey, the hairstylist at Beverly Hills salon Striiike who lower off greater than a foot of my hair in late November. “On a mobile degree, it’s attention-grabbing to assume our hair is lifeless cells. It’s life expertise in a approach. Slicing it’s a dramatic strategy to step out of a scenario and say, ‘I’m out, I’m carried out,’ marking some extent of renewal.” 

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Forrey says he hasn’t lower as a lot hair in his two-decade-long profession as he has within the final six months. Lots of his purchasers have come in search of dramatically quick cuts — shags, pixies and razored bobs.

“It’s the one factor connected to your individual that claims a lot,” Forrey says. “From a visible perspective, it modifications the face form. It pops your cheekbones. It evokes a lot character. It goes past only a bodily change. It really brings out a personality. That is the lady that’s been locked away, and he or she’s prepared to come back out.”

To determine to be another person, spin the wheel and see the place scissors within the deft arms of a stylist would take me felt like step one to readability. Who would I be with out 13 inches of deep-black hair (that always acquired tangled across the buttons on my jacket, caught below pillows or that my son would maintain on to when he slept)? 

Solely with much less hair might I springboard out of the present day right into a stratosphere of my very own making, exhausted of merely surviving and attempting to recall what hovering above the dense forest of a seemingly limitless pandemic appears like.

My hair story is one as previous as time, says Kiki Matoba, a Los Angeles-based reiki grasp and power healer. “All over the world many cultures imagine within the energetic significance of slicing hair,” she says. “Muslim and Hindu dad and mom lower their youngster’s hair ceremoniously to energetically cleanse the newborn of negativity and previous lives. In New Zealand, a spell is uttered at hair-cutting to avert thunder and lightning. Some Native People imagine slicing one’s hair is linked to creating a change in a single’s life, letting go of previous misdeeds and starting a brand new chapter.

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“Hair can maintain previous power merely with the psychological and emotional attachment some should their identification with their hair,” Matoba says. “So, when making a change of 1’s picture by slicing one’s hair, a shift in a single’s power area can happen with the vibrational frequency of self-love and/or self-confidence.”

Mohar Chaudhuri, vice chairman of social intelligence at advertising and marketing and communications agency Edelman Information & Intelligence in New York, was prompted to chop greater than a foot off her hair final fall due to the burden of common pandemic stress and the stress round planning her pandemic wedding ceremony. 

“I’ve maintained lengthy hair ever since I used to be just a little child,” Chaudhuri says. “It was essentially the most recognizable bodily trait of mine. You would spot my unruly, wavy mane from a mile away. Raised in a South Asian family, my immigrant dad and mom had a cultural obsession with lengthy hair.” However, she had New York-based stylist Mark Bustos lower her hair right into a blunt razored bob that grazes her chin. 

“I really feel lighter. A lot lighter,” Chaudhuri says. “From an emotional standpoint, it’s as if I let go of a complete chapter of my life. I additionally really feel like I’ve this alter ego now. This quick, straight-edge bob feels extra style ahead, extra my vibe.”

Movie star hairstylist Ursula Stephens, who counts Rihanna, Zendaya, Jodie Turner-Smith and Pom Klementieff as common purchasers, says proper now particularly hair is usually about bravery and making decisions for your self with out the everyday pressures of the prepandemic society.

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“I’ve observed extra bravery relating to altering your look,” says Stephens, who’s primarily based in New York. “Individuals who had been so afraid to strive a lower now understand it’s actually not an enormous deal. There are such a lot of extra essential issues occurring. Lots of people are going by way of a interval of self-reflection and of embracing their pure selves. Now could be the time alone to determine if you like one thing with out the affect of everybody else — with out the noise.”

Quick hairstyles have seen a rise in searches 12 months over 12 months, in accordance with Marta Topran, an L.A.-based magnificence and style creator administration lead at Pinterest, which now has a hair sample instrument so you may get a glimpse of what a classy model will appear like together with your particular hair sample. Essentially the most-searched types on the social platform embody bob-cut wigs, shaved-head dye designs and mullet hairstyles (which got here in with a whopping 190% soar final 12 months).

“At Pinterest, we’re predicting 2022 to be the 12 months of the rebellious haircut,” says Topran, who acquired an enormous COVID-19 chop just lately, trusting Siobhán Quinlan on the Cutler West Hollywood Salon, to chop 6 inches from her hair. “[The cut] made me really feel lighter, extra optimistic, and nearer to my prepandemic self. By no means underestimate the transformative energy of a fantastic haircut.”

Outdoors of any existential which means or a significance to age, quick hair, I’ve found, is simply actually, actually stylish. I’ve taken on a brand new persona of kinds. One which feels harking back to a ‘90s Linda Evangelista in a Peter Lindbergh {photograph} — an androgynous alter ego that dons much less hair, completely different dimensions and, for the second, feels extra me.

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What is the 'shadow self' and why is everyone talking about their hidden desires?

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What is the 'shadow self' and why is everyone talking about their hidden desires?

Earlier this year, a spiritual coach and reiki healer who goes by the name Zen Oasis posted a video to TikTok explaining the idea of “the shadow self” to her 167,000 followers.

Sitting lotus-style in a yellow halter top with a stick of sage smoldering in one hand, the Atlanta native described an exercise she did to become acquainted with her own shadow — a term coined by the early 20th century psychologist Carl Jung to describe the parts of our psyches that we have buried deep in our subconscious.

“I sat down and wrote down all the things I can’t stand about people. The things that really got me like, yech, ick,” she said, one hand raised in disgust. “Then I looked at that really long list and took my top five, and I was just like, ‘You know what? This is me. This is me all day.’”

“It might sound a type of way,” she said. “But this was the best way for me to see the things I can’t see about myself.”

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The video, which has been viewed more than 36,000 times, is just one of over 48 million on the social media platform that explores the topic of shadow, and one more piece of evidence of a wide-ranging resurgence of Jungian fascination.

“People are really uncertain about the world and where it’s going to go and they are coming to Jung because they want to find solutions,” said Christophe Le Mouel, director of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles.

At a time when conversations around self-discovery are surging, the analyst’s theories on the collective unconscious, archetypes and shadow are increasingly influencing the work of social media-savvy healers, therapists and life coaches. It’s also the inspiration for new tarot-like card decks, thought provoking Etsy prints and the recently published “The Shadow Work Journal” that sold more than a million copies thanks in part to a wildly successful TikTok marketing campaign.

Sixty-three years after his death, Jung’s ideas — especially the concept of the “shadow” — are having a moment.

“Reading his work, I was like man, this stuff is 100 years old, but it resonated so deeply,” Zen Oasis said in a phone call. “It helped me synthesize what I already knew intuitively.’”

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How did Jung define the shadow? And why is the idea having a resurgence today? To learn more I called up Lisa Marchiano, a Jungian analyst from Philadelphia and co-host of the popular podcast “This Jungian Life,” which itself has more than 50,000 subscribers, and author of the new book “The Vital Spark.”

In an interview, Marchiano discusses how Jung defined shadow, why we all have one and the reasons behind people’s renewed interest in the concept.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

What is the shadow self?

If it’s referring to Jung’s concept of the shadow, I will say that he didn’t use the term “shadow self.” He talked about the shadow.

The shadow is the part of ourselves that we’ve disowned. Jung once said the shadow is everything we don’t want to be. It’s something that we think that we’re not. “Oh, we’re not like that.” “I’m not like that.” Well, actually, we are like that, we just don’t have a conscious relationship with those parts of ourselves. But we could, and that’s the really constructive part about getting curious about shadow.

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Is it a fundamental idea in Jungian psychology?

Jung had so many insights that have entered everyday parlance. Shadow is one of them but also synchronicity, introversion and extroversion, the collective unconscious. But shadow is certainly a fundamental idea of Jung’s. He felt that doing shadow work was really the first part of the work of analysis and the work of what he called individuation because it’s the entry point into the depths.

Does everyone have a shadow?

In Jungian theory we all have a shadow and it’s made up of two components. There’s a personal shadow and then there’s the collective shadow. To keep things simple I’ll talk mostly about the personal shadow.

Where do our shadows come from?

So, we’re born with all kinds of potential and in the course of growing up and developing a healthy, functioning ego, we find there are parts of ourselves that we have to push aside. This is normal. It’s necessary. It’s healthy. It happens to all of us. Some of what gets relegated to the shadow is stuff that really might cause a problem in a collective society like aggression or greed. But also a lot of what gets pushed into the shadow might be more constructive.

What are some ways to identify what’s in our shadow?

In every family there is usually something that you are not supposed to be. In some families you are absolutely not supposed to be lazy and if you wind up sitting around watching TV that is the worst thing and it means that you’re lazy. Other families you might not be allowed to be impractical or whimsical. In my family you were not allowed to be immodest or boastful. If you’re wondering about your shadow, it can be helpful to ask yourself what was the one thing you were not allowed to be in your family. That will often be a clue to what might be in your shadow.

Why is it useful to examine one’s shadow?

When shadow is totally unconscious we tend to project it. When you feel really hot outrage at someone else, you need to ask yourself: “Where is that in me? What’s that about internally?”

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The other reason that it’s helpful to do shadow work is that a lot of what is in the shadow is actually full of vitality and energy that we can use in service to life and growth. Jung reportedly said once that 99% of the shadow is pure gold.

To use myself as an example, I was like, “I can’t seek center stage, I can’t look for attention, I have to be very modest.” But when I got over myself a little bit and did my shadow work, my ability to put myself out there has proven to be very vivifying and enlivening and it has helped me in my career.

How does one embark on shadow work?

The first answer to that is to get curious about what’s in shadow. Notice what gets you really hot. When do you have an outsized reaction of outrage to someone or something? When do you notice that sense of self-righteousness and that huge inflation that comes with being just and on the right side of history? It might be good to say, “Hmm. Wait a second. Who am I hating on right now? And where might that be in me?”

And then just continuing to be open to that. Where might we be a little greedy, a little selfish? Where might we be behaving in shadowy ways?

Why do you think this idea is resonating so strongly right now?

I think that Jung’s ideas have a perennial quality. They always return and with renewed freshness and interest. I definitely think “The Shadow Work Journal” helped it initially, but why did it catch fire? Why did it explode in the public imagination?

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I think people appreciate Jung’s ideas and return to them because they sense that there is just an inherent truth in it.

Jung said our ability to do this work could make the difference between whether or not the human race survives. And given how polarized we are, I don’t know that I disagree with that. So in a way, it’s very gratifying to hear that this kind of language is permeating social media.

But I know that things can get flattened and oversimplified and changed on social media so I’m not without some concern about it. One of my concerns is the idea that shadow work is something you can do and be done with. That’s not the way it works. You’re always working on shadow — you can’t make it go away. What you can do is strive to be more conscious of it.

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A member of the 'T-Shirt Swim Club' chronicles life as 'the funny fat kid'

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A member of the 'T-Shirt Swim Club' chronicles life as 'the funny fat kid'

“The first place I learned to be funny was on the schoolyard trying to defuse this weird tension around my body, says Ian Karmel. He won an Emmy Award in 2019 for his work on James Corden’s “Carpool Karaoke” special with Paul McCartney.

Kenny McMillan/Penguin Random House


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Kenny McMillan/Penguin Random House

Comedy writer Ian Karmel spent most of his life making fun of his weight, starting at a very young age.

“Being a kid is terrifying — and if you can be the funny fat kid, at least that’s a role,” Karmel says. “To me, that was better than being the fat kid who wasn’t funny, who’s being sad over in the corner, even if that was how I was actually feeling a lot of the time.”

For Karmel, the jokes and insults didn’t stop with adolescence. He says the humiliation he experienced as a kid navigating gym classes, and the relentless barrage of fat jokes from friends and strangers, fueled his comedy.

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For years, much of his stand-up comedy centered around his body; he was determined to make fun of himself first — before anyone else could do it. “At least if we’re destroying me, I will be participating in my own self-destruction so I can at least find a role for myself,” he says.

Karmel went on to write for The Late Late Show with James Corden. He has since lost more than 200 pounds, but he feels like he’ll have a lifelong relationship with fatness. He wrote his new memoir, T-Shirt Swim Club: Stories from Being Fat in a World of Thin People, along with his sister Alisa, who channeled her experience into a profession in nutrition counseling.

“Once we lost a bunch of weight … we realized we’d never had these conversations about it with each other,” Karmel says. “If this book affects even the way one person thinks about fat people, even if that fat person happens to be themselves, that would be this book succeeding in every way that I would hope for.”

Interview highlights

On using the word “fat”

There’s all these different terms. And, you know, early on when I was talking to Alisa about writing this book, we were like: “Are we going to say fat? I think we shouldn’t say fat.” And we had a conversation about it. We landed on the determination that it’s not the word’s fault that people treat fat people like garbage. And we tend to do this thing where we will bring in a new word, we will load that word up with all of the sin of our behavior, toss that word out, pull a new one in, and then all of a sudden, we let that word soak up all the sin, and we never really change the way we actually treat people. …

I’ve been called fat, overweight or obese, husky, big guy, chunky, any number of words, all of those words just loaded up with venom. … We decided we were going to say “fat” because that’s what we are. That’s what I think of myself as. And I’m going to take it back to basics.

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On the title of his memoir, T-Shirt Swim Club

T-Shirt Swim Club: Stories from Being Fat in a World of Thin People

T-Shirt Swim Club

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Penguin Random House

Thank God for learning about the damage that the sun does to our bodies, because now all sorts of people are wearing T-shirts in the pool. But when we were growing up, I don’t think that was happening. It’s absurd. We wear this T-shirt because we … want to protect ourselves from prying eyes — but I think what it really is is this internalized body shame where I’m like, “Hey, I know my body’s disgusting. I know I’m going to gross you out while you’re just trying to have a good time at the pool, so let me put this T-shirt on.” And it’s all the more ridiculous because it doesn’t change anything. It doesn’t actually cover you up, it hugs every curve!

On how bullying made him paranoid

You think like, if four or five people are saying this to my face, then there must be vast whisper campaigns. That must be what they’re huddled over. … Anytime somebody giggles in the corner and you are in that same room, you become paranoid. There’s a part of you that thinks like, they must be laughing at me.

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On how fat people are portrayed in pop culture

Fat people, I think, are still one of the groups that it’s definitely OK to make fun of. That’s absolutely true. … I’m part of this industry too, and I’ve done it to myself. … Maybe it’s less on the punch line 1719964293 and more on the pity. You know, you have Brendan Fraser playing the big fat guy in The Whale. And at least that’s somebody who is fat and who has dealt with those issues. Maybe not to the extent of like a 500- and 600-pound man, but still to some extent. And good for him. I mean, an amazing performance, but still one where it’s like, here’s this big, fat, pathetic person.

On judgment about weight loss drugs and surgery

It’s this ridiculous moral purity. What it comes down to for me is you [have] your loved ones, you have your friends. And whatever you can do to spend more time on earth with those people, that’s golden to me. That’s beautiful, because that is what life is truly all about. And the more you get to do that, the healthier and happier you are. So those people out there who are shaming Ozempic or Wegovy or any of that stuff, or bariatric surgery, those people can pound sand. And it’s so hard in a world that is built for people who are regular size, and in a world that is also simultaneously built to make you as fat as possible with the way we treat food. It’s like, yo, do the best you can!

Therese Madden and Joel Wolfram produced and edited this interview for broadcast. Bridget Bentz, Molly Seavy-Nesper and Beth Novey adapted it for the web.

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Christopher Reeve's Son Will Reeve to Cameo in James Gunn's 'Superman'

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Christopher Reeve's Son Will Reeve to Cameo in James Gunn's 'Superman'

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