Bearded lady who taught me the truth about beauty
Sunday 02 March 1997
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Hair again. I popped into a loo while I was waiting in Denver Airport for a connecting flight to Santa Barbara and there I met a woman with a beard. Not just facial fuzz, but a full face of hair. My natural assumption was that this was a male who'd gone through the wrong door, until we got to talking. In my mind, bearded ladies and circuses go together, and sure enough, Jennifer worked in a circus - her own, 12 people, one ring. But that is the only predictable element in her story. Jennifer was raised by her mother and grandmother - both dynamic, non-conformist educators - to believe that it was important and beautiful to be who you are. So, when she first grew a little facial hair in her late teens, she left it. At 20, a brush with electrolysis felt like self-mutilation and strengthened Jennifer's conviction that her beard was a learning curve, rather than a curse. Now she is in her mid-30s. Unsurprisingly, life has been tough. She withdrew from the straight world in her twenties, turning her back on college and career paths, so she is ill-equipped to follow in her mother's footsteps and teach, much as she'd like to. Besides, the beard would make it hard, just as it turns public places into an ordeal. Jennifer has taken to using the men's bathroom - fewer questions asked. Or she'll take a girlfriend into the ladies' loo so people will hear her talking and know she's a woman. Why bother, I can sense you thinking. Just shave the damn thing off. I thought of the women I met in Japan who shave their faces every day with tiny little pink razors, to ensure smoothness and grip for their foundation. Jennifer has shaved once or twice but she felt even more self-conscious, as if people were thinking she was trying to hide her imperfections and not really doing a very good job of it. This way at least, Jennifer is indubitably herself, just the way God planned her, and profoundly independent and dignified with it, though you'll also be pleased to know she has a sense of humour about the situation. I liked her take on life and felt lucky that, in my fifties , I could learn from the way she has chosen to express herself as a feminist. There is no male counterpart for such insights.
To Me, America is a sequence of these odd and interesting encounters. That is just one reason why I love the place so much and talk about it so often. I don't think I ever got over the thrill of finding out in my teens that my real father was Italian-American, and when I went to Ellis Island, it was an extraordinary experience seeing my family name on the wall. I like the tactility of Americans. They don't know how to be cynical or how to wordplay. In fact, they're confounded by their terror of language in a way we could never be. Yet they're so able and easy when discussing themselves and their psyches. Americans talk about the geography of their minds the way Canadians talk about their land, and those interior landscapes make for a huge mass of uncharted territory. Perhaps that is the sense of limitless opportunity on which the American dream thrives. Unfortunately, the downside is an expectation of instant gratification and a whole lot of waste. It drives me nuts. Huge undrunk glasses of ice water, great plates of half-eaten food, a need for fresh flesh for entertainment, a chronic inability to wait in queues or hear someone out. If reflection does breed anxiety, as I'm beginning to think, it makes sense that America is running as hard from itself as it can.
- 1 Kate Allen: It's time for America to put an end to this shameful scandal
- 2 Rhodri Marsden: What we like and what we don't like are often closer than you'd think
- 3 The Daily Cartoon
- 4 Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: We've become experts at sex – but losers at love
- 5 Patrick Cockburn: All the evidence points to sectarian civil war in Syria, but no one wants to admit it
- 6 Robert Fisk: John McCarthy knows the value of history
- 7 Robert Fisk: Could there be some bad guys among the rebels too?
- 1 Kate Allen: It's time for America to put an end to this shameful scandal
- 2 Spotify: 1 million plays, £108 return
- 3 Chemotherapy is 'safe during pregnancy'
- 4 Rhodri Marsden: What we like and what we don't like are often closer than you'd think
- 5 BBC to issue global apology for documentaries that broke rules
- 6 Lightning kills an entire football team
- 7 I was born to be a killer. Every night I see the Devil in my dreams
- 8 Henry does it his way, ending on a high note
- 9 Modern lovers: The 'sexual body warriors' and pioneers transforming 21st-century relationships
- 10 Redknapp hints at same old faces for England
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