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DARE TO ASK: What’s best way to handle breast issue?

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

If you’re a male client, where does your female hairstylist expect you to look when she’s leaning in front of you, exposing ample cleavage?

Lee, 37, male, Fairfax, Va.

Replies

Good boys always look forward and behave when they get their hair cut. If there happens to be a pair of enormous breasts there, it’s not your fault. Enjoy your haircut, and when she asks you if everything looks OK, just keep telling her your bangs need to be trimmed up more.

Joey, 25, Houston

Women earn little money and have mouths to feed. They need the tip to fill their kids’ bellies. Showing cleavage = good tips = well-fed kids. To men: In order to be polite, look elsewhere and tip well. If all men didn’t look, but tipped well, a woman wouldn’t have to manipulate men’s weakness and lower her standards.

A., 34, female, Tampa

Expert says

Phone call to the spokeswoman for the National Cosmetology Association in Chicago = lots of good-natured laughs on the other end and a promise to get back quickly with a great response = no way in hell will she actually be calling back because you can keep dreamin’ if you think she’s getting mixed up in this one.

Therefore, it is left to Leah Ingram, certified etiquette and protocol consultant and author of nine books, including The Everything Etiquette Book: A Modern-Day Guide to Good Manners (Adams Media) to address this most-titillating question.

She breaks it down thusly:

The stylist either a) has no idea what she is exposing, or b) is an exhibitionist.

“In the first case, pointing it out may embarrass her and affect any long-term customer relationship with her – and she may think you’re harassing her,” Ingram said. “In the second, if she’s trying to get a rise out of a client, do you really want to put yourself in a situation where you’re in the stylist chair and she’s trying to turn you on? It’s really a lose-lose situation if you verbalize anything.”

Regarding where to cast thine eyes, Ingram advised keeping them shut.

“If she’s in your face with her rack, try not to make a big issue of it. If the guy’s uncomfortable – which he appears to be or he wouldn’t have asked the question – he needs to find a new stylist. So often people are surprised to hear that doing nothing is the best way to handle these things. The initial instinct is to say something to try to fix it. But it doesn’t always work.”

In general, it’s a breach of etiquette to “have a look,” because wearing a revealing blouse, no matter how low-cut, does not constitute an invitation to ogle, especially in a public place such as a salon, Ingram said.

Besides, your time with a hairstylist is just that: your time. Ingram advises using it to relax or even meditate.

“That’s what I do when I’m getting my hair cut. So unless the stylist needs me to refer to something, I’ve got my eyes closed. If this guy were to do the same, he wouldn’t be faced with her bosom and tempted to say, ‘Um, could you put those away?’ “

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