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Peterson: Pure and simple, life can be complicated

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For the past 12 years, I have been consciously looking for ways to simplify my life because, as I discovered after 40-some years, life can become complicated.

Complicated isn’t easy. Neither is simplification.

The morning routine is a complicated dance of waking up to a new day. There are decisions to make about the snooze alarm, turning on the coffee-maker, brushing your teeth, taking a shower, getting dressed, retrieving the newspaper, eating breakfast, talking to your loved ones and remembering what it was you weren’t going to forget today.

The list goes on. Just for the morning.

My hair used to be longer, and there’s nothing simple about that. But I vowed to myself when I was 13 years old that I would never go to a barber again, not after what small-town Donnellson barber Clippie Dick did to me.

I was new to town. My hair was long and it needed to be trimmed. My dad and my two brothers and I had been getting our haircuts for a number of years at the Barber College in St. Paul, Minn. The cutters were learning the trade, but they were good. The Barber College replaced my dad’s clippers, which he used to cut our hair to the length of stubble.

Eldest brother Dave was the first to revolt. These were the 1960s, and he was not going to subject himself to the clippers anymore. A battle was waged, and he won. He could grow his hair out. The other two of us fell in line, and soon we were driving to St. Paul to have our hair cut. It worked out just fine.

Then we moved to Iowa – brother Dave was left behind to live with Grandma Jahner – and there was no Barber College to be found. So, eventually, I had to sit in Clippie Dick’s chair. I don’t remember the specifics of the haircut, but I cannot forget the razzing I faced that first Monday back to school.

Burr head. Or burr. That’s what I was called. And it was true. My hair was unacceptably short. And I did not need reason to give others cause to tease me. My Minnesota accent was enough in the southeast corner of Iowa, where twang reigns.

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