Thursday, September 4, 2014

Me vs. Ponytails

Madeline starting second grade is a big deal. But an even bigger deal is that for the first day, I, a dad, did her hair all by myself — and it looked pretty good. Or at the very least, not terrible. Certainly not bad enough that people were pointing at her and saying, “Geez, a dad must’ve done that.” And that’s something.

It’s not that the off-center top ponytail is a complicated style. There'd just never been much reason for me to learn how, which had grown into some kind of tress-related block. But Kelly was about to be out of town on a school day for the first time.

Back in the daycare era when Kelly travelled, I’d take a fistful of rubber bands with me and look traumatized until I could corner a teacher. “Please help hair ponytail me can’t do thank you, ack.”

However, it seemed a little gauche to walk into Madeline’s classroom and ask her brand new teacher if she could help a dad out. Nor could I simply throw in a barrette because there’s about a five-minute ceiling on Madeline’s ability to keep those in her hair.

The time had finally come for me to go ahead and master the ponytail already.

So Madeline, Kelly and I had a Saturday morning ponytail seminar, during which I took rigorous notes. “Wetting comb helps tame wispies.” “Hair goes through rubber band 3x.”

Kelly said she’d never seen me in such deep concentration. Then she took Madeline to buy some uniform-legal bows. “They’re your secret weapon,” Kelly said. “And they’re very forgiving.”

My first practice drill showed promise. Then at Madeline’s insistence, she had me do her hair every morning thereafter, smartly realizing she didn’t want my second go to be when it was for real.

On the first day of school, just to be on the safe side, I got her up 30 minutes early to account for multiple ponytail attempts and the slight possibility that I’d fail with every rubber band in the house and have to run out for reinforcements.

I am proud to say that with only a single re-do necessary, I executed a successful ponytail/bow combo. When Madeline joined me at the office after school, independent confirmation of my triumph was provided by some of my lady co-workers. They also told me they were disappointed I hadn’t taken their advice and tried to do this.

Of course, the day Kelly got back, Madeline asked her for an elaborate style involving multiple braids and flair and whatnot. Showoff.

But it’s a relief to know that in a pinch, dad is here with mad ponytail skills.

Okay, acceptable ponytail skills.

Quick — somebody hand me a bow.