A Young Liberal at the Barbershop

A Young Liberal at the Barbershop

KOREA EXPOSÉ
KOREA EXPOSÉ

When I say barbershop I am not mistaken. I’m talking about one of those old-fashioned barbershops exclusively for men where an old barber sticks to what he knows: the 50’s clean-cut look, and nothing else. I’m talking about the barbershops that are now going extinct in Seoul; you have to find them by luck. They are unusual places, almost like time-traveling to the past.

The one I go to is a shabby little hut — everything in it seems to be at least a couple of decades old (except the fresh blades). My barber, who’s been cutting hair for the past 40 years in the same spot, himself isn’t sure how old the barbershop is. He just emphasizes to me that it’s much older than I can possibly imagine. I just assume that he must be right.

Because my barbershop is that old, the bond between the barber and the regulars is tight. There’s always an elderly gang watching TV or talking among themselves, with the barber sometimes laughing at their jokes. They still call the Bears — a baseball team — “OB” as it was known sometime ago by the former corporate sponsor’s name. They talk of mutual friends’ “men problems” with the casualness befitting a weather discussion. And they always, always worry about the country’s future as old men tend to do. That’s the routine. More often than not the conservative channel TV Chosun is on the old television set, and they — ever loyal to the conservative Saenuri party — discuss how the president should make most of the situation to raise more political support. (That day, yet another North Korean nuke test took place.)

Whenever it’s my turn to get my hair done, surrounded by the gang, my barber ever so often brings up the political questions: Who do you think should be the next president? What does the younger generation think of the president’s new bill? Then the whole room falls silent in anticipation of my answer, a rare young voice in the house.

I have a lot to say, of course, but I act a fool because I know it’s simply impossible to be real me.

I mean, I’ve tried. Until very recently, too. When President Park promoted her labor reform bill on TV Chosun, the barber asked me what I thought, but only after first telling me that he thought she was trying so hard to boost the economy and yet other politicians were trying to screw her effort. I pointed out that while I didn’t doubt her intentions, there also was a lot of reasonable concern over possibly unfavorable outcomes of her plan.

Didn’t work.

She is doing it all for the “gungmin” — the people, the nation! — and for the economy, he said. I again tried to explain how some oppose the bill because certain people might benefit more from it, possibly at the expense of others. I thought I had made an objective observation but, of course, he wasn’t impressed. Next couple of visits were an exercise in repetition and I learned to shut up and just politely smile after that.

You must be wondering why I still go there. I’m telling you, it’s the shave. When he shaves, it’s unreal. The massaging of my face and the strokes of foam and finally the detailed shaving — it’s the perfect dose of care I need. I am content from the bottom of my heart and It makes me miss the good old days I never lived. Seriously, with a shave this good, does it really matter who the president is?

Actually it does. I’m experimenting with vegetarianism, agree with feminists on most things, never vote for the governing party, think the police cornered and abused protestors during the big anti-government rally three months ago — unlike how TV Chosun portrayed the event — and cannot fucking stand TV Chosun.

But it will take too long to explain to the barbershop crowd what some young people like me are actually like, and the reality may be too much for them to take.

And I don’t want to lose my terrific barber.

Daunnara Chung, 25, South Korean

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