Thứ Sáu, Tháng 6 20, 2025

What cutting my hair taught me about identity, attention, and regret

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When writer Alex Holder chopped her long blonde locks in pursuit of pixie-cut perfection, she wasn’t prepared for the existential spiral that followed. A year into the grow-out process, she reflects on hair as identity, unwanted attention, and why she’d probably still do it all again—even if it’s been one very stylish form of hair prison.

The fantasy behind the fringe

There’s something oddly romantic about the idea of a pixie cut. It whispers reinvention, cool confidence, and a clean break from the expected. For many, it conjures the graceful cheekbones of Mia Farrow or the sharp charm of a young Winona Ryder. For Alex Holder, the fantasy was intoxicating enough to justify taking the plunge—scissors, clippers, and all.

But the reality hit differently. “A pixie cut is hair prison,” she confesses. “I’ve been locked up for just over a year.” There’s no shortcut once you’re in. Whether you opt for the mullet route or the classic graduated bob, growing it out means submitting to awkward in-between phases—what she calls the “Princess Diana stage”—and surviving months of helmet-like hair and gel experiments.

Even so, the chop wasn’t entirely impulsive. After years of playing it safe with long hair, Holder began to feel like her look was, in her words, “a bit basic.” A snide remark from a friend about long hair being “needy” lingered. The cut was supposed to be a liberation. A fresh start. It didn’t quite turn out that way.

Identity under the microscope

It wasn’t just the hair that changed—Holder’s sense of self began to shift too. “I didn’t know who I was to the world,” she writes. The haircut coincided with what she suspects was a moment of hormonal upheaval, but instead of acknowledging that, all roads led back to The Hair.

alex holder long blonde hair to pixie cut

Where once she felt anchored by familiar cues—hair brushing her shoulders, a clean side part—she now felt disoriented. “At work I’d be talking to a customer and an intense feeling of exposure would wash over me,” she recalls. Compliments from loved ones only intensified the discomfort, acting more like pinches than validation.

Even her daughter got in on the commentary. “Let’s play Mummies with the long hair,” the toddler would chirp, flicking imaginary locks over her shoulders while her mum tried not to read too much into it. Holder, now invisible-flicking her own nonexistent mane, found herself longing for a part of her old self she hadn’t expected to mourn.

The awkward stage, documented

Eventually, Holder turned to the real experts: women on TikTok. Her feed became a balm, full of brave souls detailing the painstaking journey of growing out a pixie. “This is social media’s true sisterhood,” she says. “A thriving content stream of women doing God’s work by documenting that miserable stage where it’s more animal than human.”

Inspired by their courage—and perhaps out of sheer desperation—she began to let her hair grow. And to her surprise, something lovely began to happen: the new length suited her. “My hair grew into the cut I was always meant to have,” she says. “A longer, fringier version of the good old short-back-and-sides.”

Her short hair, now softened and intentional, gave her room to play again. It pairs well with a white vest, floats elegantly above a dress hem, and offers the perfect stage for oversized earrings. Even her daughter came around, dubbing it “circle hair”—a term too charming not to embrace.

What the mirror doesn’t tell you

michelle williams pixie cut

While short hair has its perks—air-drying, freedom from elastics—it’s not without drawbacks. “There are about four hours of the day when I can’t be seen, and the hair cannot be touched,” she jokes. Regular cuts are non-negotiable. Colour becomes high-stakes. There’s no messy bun to hide a dye job gone wrong.

Still, what surprised her most wasn’t the maintenance, but the mental toll. “Cutting my hair has been the biggest headfuck,” she admits. It forced her to reevaluate how she thought others saw her—and how little she really knew about those perceptions in the first place. And yet, she doesn’t regret it. “I also felt brave,” she says. “It unstuck me somewhat.” The haircut may not have delivered a Mia Farrow moment, but it cracked open something more honest and revealing. It’s changed the way she sees herself, both literally and metaphorically.

Would she do it again?

Holder ends her reflection with a caveat: the grow-out isn’t finished. She’s still avoiding that final frontier—the phase when the hair creeps awkwardly over the ears. “Maybe ask me then if I’m still glad I cut it,” she quips.

Until then, she’s owning her cropped crown, laughing through the compliments, and quietly redefining what femininity and beauty mean to her. Whether or not she ever returns to long locks, one thing is clear: this wasn’t just a haircut. It was a reckoning. A risk. And yes, maybe even a little bit of freedom.

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