After much dithering I had a hair cut yesterday and entered
a new world: the Mancave.
Close your eyes and think of Oxford. If nothing turns up
then this particular blog probably isn’t for you, but please come back later.
Most people drag up images about the university: dreaming spires, icononic
buildings such as the Sheldonian Theatre or the Radcliffe Camera, students in
their gowns, dons on their bikes, particularly beautiful colleges that they may
have visited, famous figures whose minds were moulded there, or perhaps floppy haired students punting,
partying, debating, drinking or pontificating. And yet the city is not just
about the university. The population of Oxford is about 154K and the combined
figure of staff and students at the University of Oxford is 38K, though how
many of the students register as residents of the city is unclear. Added to
that we also have another university, Brookes which has a combined staff and
student figure of over 21K. That’s a lot of university people by any stretch, but what
does the rest of the population do? Serve them all beer, food and entertainment
of course. Well, not exactly, there are something like 10 million visitors to
the city each year, and they have to be accommodated, transported, fed, watered
and, of course, guided (I do my best). And there are jobs outwith the service
industry including the Mini factory, Oxfam and many start up companies some of
which have been spun out of the universities.
Socially Oxford can, coarsely, be divided up by the points
of the compass. I live in the northern quadrant where all the rich and famous
people reside (I wish), but used to live to the west in paradise. Yes really,
my address was 18 Paradise Square which lies on the edge of what is now a huge
new shopping centre (with a John Lewis store for the shoppers amongst you). South
Oxford is mostly given over to low to medium level residential, bisected by the
River Thames, which just leaves the east. Overall the city is very diverse: it’s
reckoned to have the third highest ethnic minority population in south-east
England and 28% of its residents were born outside of the UK. It is East Oxford
that’s the main contributor to this diversity, and so back to my haircut.
Though I have few restraints on spending regarding the
essentials - beer, wine and travel - I can be parsimonious about other expenses
such as food, clothing and haircuts. That is how I came across a barber shop
intriguingly called the Mancave. On the phone I was given an attractive price and
the information that there were only two people waiting. I cycled quickly down
to East Oxford where the Mancave is located only to find that there were five
people in the cave: three waiting, one in mid cut and the barber. He told me
that I would have to wait for about an hour. Later, I noticed that he gave
everyone that same estimate. I shrugged and sat down in the window seat, just
beneath the dart board! I looked around. On a big screen coupled to a graffiti
covered laptop I watched computer-game-like characters repeatedly killing each
other to a background of repetitive computer-game-like music. The wall on my
left was papered with old newspapers featuring blaring headlines such as The bomb that has changed the world, and
on the wall beyond the barber’s chair there was display of maybe fifty vinyl
LPs, all of which I’m sure contained better music than that playing in the cave.
There were other things lying around that I did not really understand – or want
to. So this was someone’s idea of a mancave!
The barber was a thin-faced man wearing a cap. He had a slim,
agile body that wove around his current client like a snake deciding when to
attack. Part way through my hour long wait, he asked me if I would like a beer.
I made my usual reply that “I did not drink in moderation”, but I was touched
by the gesture.
I found later that the young men waiting for a cut were from
Colombia and Ecuador, though I am ashamed to say I understood nothing of their
Spanish so we did not get to discuss their troubled neighbouring country.
However, I did talk to the man who came in after me. He was from Italy and told
me that he was a post-grad at Brookes Uni which is just up the road from where
we sat. He told me that he was taking a masters in motorsport management. Now
they don’t do that Oxford University do they? And yet it seemed such a suitable
subject for discussion in the Mancave.
Finally, I was called to the chair. And yes, I found that my
barber was from Lebanon, that his father had owned a house there, but was
displaced from it because the place sat on Roman remains, that he had been ill
for the last few days – hence the queue, and that he wore a cap because he was
bald and potential customers might doubt the competence of a barber without
hair. What a diverse haircut. I will definitely have to go to the Mancave
again.
Reading this through I thought maybe, to some, it might seem sexist. But then I reasoned that there are plenty of Womancaves. However, they have more attractive names, have greatly refined decor, and are very much more expensive.