My son, Aaron, is a cute kid. I’m not just saying that because I’m his mom. People tell me all the time – family, friends, strangers. There is just something about him. Maybe it’s his glasses, people seem to love little kids with glasses. It might be his impish smile or his adult manner of speaking or maybe it’s that he’s naturally funny. Mostly, though, I think it is his hair. Aaron has lush, dark curly hair. People, especially old ladies, can’t resist it.
Ever since he was a toddler, people would come over to the shopping cart or stroller drawn in by his wide smile. “Oh, what a happy baby!” they would say as the reached over and stroked his hair. ”I love his hair. I just had to touch it.”
As Aaron grew older, his hair continued to attract attention. “Where did he get that great head of hair?” they would ask, looking at my poker straight locks, accusingly. “Must be from his dad, right?”
“Oh, what a shame to waste such beautiful hair on a little boy. Too bad he’s not a girl. Do you have any daughters?” people would say right in front of Aaron. He would always smile politely. Then, when we would walk away, he would tell me that it hurt his feelings.
“Why are people always saying that I should be a girl?” Aaron would ask. “I like being a boy. It makes me feel bad when they say I should be a girl.”
I wanted to tell Aaron that sometimes adults are rude and stupid, but since I knew Aaron would turn that around on me some day I told him that people were trying to complement him. “Yeah, well, they’re not very good at it,” he said, dissatisfied with my explanation.
It’s not that I haven’t tried to protect Aaron from these people but they just sneak up on you. I am trying to select apples, I turn around to someone touching Aaron’s hair. I load my groceries onto the checkout counter and look up to see the cashier reaching out to stroke Aaron’s hair. I bend down to tie his shoe as we wait in the bank line, the lady in front of us turns around to touch his hair.
The day an older gentleman came up to me at a garden shop and said, “Excuse me, I’m not a pedophile or anything, but your sons are beautiful. Do you mind if I touch the little one’s hair. It looks so supple,” I had had enough. Now, when I am out with Aaron, I keep him very close to me. When I see someone walking toward us with that I-just-have-to-touch-his hair look on their face, I put my hand on Aaron’s head and give them an I-dare-you-to-even-try look.
It has always amazed me how adults will treat children as if they are not people. No one ever asked Aaron if they could touch his hair. The only person who ever asked me was the “I’m not a pedophile” guy. It seemed that adults didn’t think they had to ask, they had no sense that they were invading Aaron’s space. I doubt they would have done the same to an adult. Heck, they wouldn’t have done the same thing to a dog. You often hear people ask before they pet someone’s dog. I have always told my boys that they should never pet a dog without asking the owner first. Maybe I should get a t-shirt for Aaron. It could say: My Son is Not a Dog, So Please Don’t Pet Him. His Mom’s a Bitch and She Bites.”
The same thing happens to my son … except he has spiky blonde hair. No matter how long we grow it, it stands straight up! Children, old ladies at church, Japanese tourists all want to pet him. My last straw was when at our very first (and last) Scout meeting, the Scout Master’s son kept walking around patting his head. That organization creeps me out as is (unjustly so, I know … but I can’t help it). I knew then Scouts was not for him AND I’d forever have to keep his hair as short as possible.
I love it! Japanese tourists! That is so funny. I haven’t had that happen but one time, we were visiting a nature reserve in our area and some Buddists were visiting from Tibet. They had Dali Llama like guy with them (sorry, I’m not making fun, I just don’t know what they are called). Anyway, they wanted to take a picture of Aaron with the Llama because they thought it was so funny that Aaron was curly and the Llama was bald. Thanks for reading Imperfect Mommy! (By the way, the Scouts give me the ick, too. Can’t say for sure why, they just do
This happened to my brother and I when we were littler, our hair was very pale blonde and we lived in Texas. Apparently our hair was lucky or something…
And while annoying at least the one guy ASKED rather than just touching
Hey Nutmeg_25, thanks for visiting Imperfect Mommy! I lived in Texas for a while – they sure do love their blonde hair down there. People used to tell me they knew I was a Yankee because I still had brunette hair.
Even though it was annoying to be touched, at least your hair was lucky!