Saturday, February 25, 2023

Hero of the Week: A Maine Barber - offers free cuts to those who can't pay

This week's hero is a barber in Maine who helps the poor by giving free services. After all, everyone needs a haircut. Here's her story.

Photo:   Maine-based hairstylist Lynn Cressey first opened her A Little Off the Top barbershop in 2007.

A Maine barber knows struggle. It's why the great-grandmother offers free cuts to those who can't pay.

Ashley R. Williams, USA TODAY, Feb 1, 2023 

For anyone short on a few bucks at A Little Off the Top barbershop in Brunswick, Maine, it won’t turn into a hairy situation. Shop owner Lynn Cressey’s got you covered.

“I’ll work with you,” reads the sign in front of the Woolwich, Maine, native’s shop.

In September, she added a note to the sign beneath the hair and beard cut prices. It said: “If this creates a hardship for you, please let me know. Nobody will be turned away for lack of ability to pay.”

Cressey’s customers, many of whom she says are retired or military, come from various situations: they may be on fixed incomes, out of work, disabled or simply going through a rough patch. Lynn Cressey, owner of A Little Off the Top barbershop in Brunswick, Maine, added a note to the sign outside her storefront informing customers they won't be turned away if they can't afford to pay for a haircut. “As I'm cutting somebody's hair, I know by talking to a lot of them how much they're struggling, and a lot of times I'll just tell them there's no charge,” Cressey, who opened A Little Off the Top in February 2007, told USA TODAY.

She's had customers who have offered to pay the next week.

“I know they’re going through a lot," said Cressey, a mother of nine children, with 38 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.

One customer with an upcoming job interview had raided his child’s piggy bank for $6 worth of change. He’d promised to give Cressey the remainder later. She cut his hair. Took his change. Opened her drawer. “I took (money out) and said, ‘here – put this back in your kid's piggy bank, the haircut’s on me, and here's $10 for gas to get to the interview,” Cressey recalled. “He was so grateful.”

Giving back to a community that is 'like family' The hairstylist, who runs her shop solo, is no stranger to difficult times. A three-month shutdown during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 was tough, she said. At the same time, her husband, who died last January, was "extremely" ill. The hairstylist used the time away from the business to care for him.

She’s a believer in people looking out for each other. It’s what her community, which she describes as “like family,” did for her. “People would call just to check up on me,” Cressey said. “They sent cards, gave me a few donations and I was able to pay the rent at the shop.”

As she chats with customers between every snip of her shears, signs of hardships sometimes linger beneath the facade of an “I’m fine” in response to “how are you?” she said.

“Fine’ is not a real answer when really, you're actually there struggling, and if you look closely enough, you can see it, you can sense it,” Cressey said. “Sometimes, even if they can pay, they just need a hug, they need to know that somebody's out there that cares about them.”

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I'm a simple guy who enjoys the simple things in life, especially our dogs. I volunteer for dog rescues, enjoy exercising, blogging, politics, helping friends and neighbors, participating in ghost investigations, coffee, weather, superheroes, comic books, mystery novels, traveling, 70s and 80s music, classic country music,writing books on ghosts and spirits, cooking simply and keeping in shape. You'll find tidbits of all of these things on this blog and more. EMAIL me at Rgutro@gmail.com - Rob

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