The Cut of All Cuts
March 28, 2019
Over 1,300 hair donors, stylists, volunteers, performers and guests came from around the world to attend The Great Cut, with entire families traveling from as far as Boston.
Others traveled from Canada, Thailand, and the UK, as well as Maine, New York, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Michigan, Louisiana, Wisconsin, Colorado, Texas, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Florida, Indiana, Arizona, Oregon, Washington, and many other places.
Mail-in hair donations from nearly every state in the U.S. and a dozen countries as far as Australia and Japan contributed. Between these and haircuts in person, The Longhairs received over 2,834 individual hair donations.
As for those who attended, 349 hair donors cut their hair at the event.
Many of them were young guys, in their 20’s or 30’s, who came alone, cross country, guys who had been following The Longhairs for years, grown their hair out with them, and now, when they asked them to cut it, they traveled thousands of miles to come and cut it. Of those bros, there was a group of eight or more who shaved their heads completely.
There were lots of older guys: greyhairs, silver foxes and longhair lifers. Some had been growing for decades and came to cut it for the first time. Others made a habit of donating every few years, or had been waiting for the right time to donate.
Local San Diegans came and cut their hair. Kids and entire families cut their hair. Their own friends and family cut their hair. People off the street cut their hair. And of course, The Longhairs boys themselves cut their hair. El Rubio donated 14 inches from his mane, while El Moreno shaved his head completely for a donation of 24 inches.
All this cutting necessitated hair professionals, who came in force and brought the heart, with 100 hair stylists and barbers on hand to perform the cuts. They were comforting and compassionate, taking the time to meet each hair donor, ask where they came from and why they were donating. They did their work professionally, and we were in good hands.
Nearly 100 kind volunteers showed up, many of whom volunteered and cut their hair. These folks worked all day in many cases, running registration, checking in donors and ushering them to their cutting stations, sweeping, sorting hair, working security, and other jobs The Longhairs hadn't anticipated or planned for. When the chips were down, they figured out what needed to be done and they got their hands dirty.
The team from Jon Renau came through in a huge way, sponsoring six hair professionals and sending another ten volunteers, from running orientation at the cutting zone, processing hair into the late hours, and sticking with The Longhairs until the very end.
Performers came, and they performed, many traveling long distances at their own expense to be there. They brought music and magic, giving it all they had on the stage, blessing the day and The Longhairs' mission with their art.
We were proud to donate the commemorative Let It Ride Fast Lanes to every person in attendance for The Longhairs. While other sponsors also stepped up to help make this event happen. James Coffee Co. kept everyone caffeinated with complimentary artisan roasted coffee. Henebery Spirits coordinated and served libations, while red drawstring backpacks were provided by Q Swimwear. 30 other business sponsors contributed, please give them a visit here to help The Longhairs thank them.
The Longhairs were also joined by recipients: kids with alopecia, trichotillomania and other ailments, and their families. Having them at the event was special, offering a clear and present visualization of why everyone was gathered. They were happy to be there, and grateful, and their parents were friendly and kind.
Children With Hair Loss came with no fewer than 10 staff and volunteers, traveling all the way from Michigan to be there. It was certainly the largest gathering of families and friends. One man even proposed at The Great Cut, and she said yes.
The support was nothing less than extraordinary, with remarkable participation, effort, teamwork and leadership. Meanwhile temperatures hovered consistently at 71° with bright sunshine and a cool Pacific breeze, capped off with a stunning sunset over Coronado Island.
All throughout, there was an undeniable energy, seemingly permeating from the very walls of the venue, filling hearts with excitement and positivity. It was electric, and every person there was affected by it.
The World Record
As to the record itself:
The Great Cut was initially planned with an understanding that the record was 181 pounds, which it had been since 2015, only to learn one month before the event the record had been broken with a donation of 338.67 pounds at the San Juan Beauty Show in Puerto Rico.
Despite the record weight nearly doubling, The Longhairs carried out their plan to execute The Great Cut. Donors, stylists and volunteers rallied to perform haircuts and process mail-in donations from 9:00 AM through midnight into the early hours of March 17.
Shortly after 1:00 AM, Guinness World Records Adjudicator, Brittany Dunn, announced The Great Cut had successfully donated 339.14 pounds of hair, breaking the world record by less than half a pound.
With the attempt having officially begun on March 16 at 9:01 AM, we would have had another eight hours to reach the record weight. However, when Ms. Dunn asked if the effort would continue through the remainder of the 24-hour period, El Moreno replied,
“Hell no. We’re gonna kick the field goal, take the 1-point victory and walk out of here champs.”
And that’s what happened.
In the final analysis, breaking the record by such a slim margin carries the profound implication that every single hair donor and every ounce mattered. Those who pondered a few extra inches, or decided to cut at the last moment; the people who mailed their hair overnight so it would arrive in time; those who came in off the street, waking that morning with not the slightest inclination of cutting their hair that day; every single donation counted.
The Greatest Cut
In almost every respect, The Great Cut was an overwhelming success, so much more than perhaps anyone expected. It was a coming together of people giving, and a celebration of the good everyone can do for one another.
In all the efforts, The Longhairs only fell short on their GoFundMe campaign. Though it had raised over $20k by the day of the event, it has yet to hit the goal of $200k. The GoFundMe remains open for donations in hopes of reaching that mark by the end of 2019.
Their financial goal notwithstanding, what happened on Saturday, March 16th was something truly special. The sun shone, the music flowed, the children played, people laughed and talked and shared and were happy together. It was a blessed day.
And from that day forward, no matter what happens, forever...The Longhairs did it. They pulled it off. In doing so they brought goodness into the world, the ripples from which will continue to have an impact for years to come.
Nice work, fellas. Phenomenal job!
For more info on The Longhairs and The Great Cut, click here. To buy the Let It Ride Fast Lanes, click here.
Written by El Rubio from The Longhairs (first person narrative adaptation by Knockaround). Original source: https://blog.