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Barbershop Talk Why Men Keep Spilling Secrets in the Chair

By Daniel Agusi

The barber’s chair has witnessed more drama than a movie set. And no, that’s not an exaggeration. Men walk into the barbershop for a lineup but end up confessing like it’s a live episode of Pastor, Please Pray for Me.

But here’s the thing, no one ever calls it therapy. Because therapy? That’s for people with scented candles and journals, right?

Wrong.

The Fade, the Football, and the Feelings

Let’s not lie, we don’t go to the barbershop just for the cut. It’s the vibe. The smell of aftershave. The buzzing clippers. The soundtrack of Afrobeats or 90s hip hop. The guy in the corner selling wristwatches no one asked for. It’s familiar, it’s safe, and it’s ours.

While waiting your turn, someone’s already heated about Arsenal’s latest heartbreak. Another man is venting about fuel prices. A third is quietly nodding as the barber listens to him talk about how his wife hasn’t smiled at him in three weeks. And nobody says, “You should see a therapist.” Instead, the guy next to you throws in a story of his own, and just like that, the healing starts with no couch needed.

Where No One Judges (Except If You Ask for a Ponytail)

Let’s be honest, African men aren’t always encouraged to talk about feelings. We’re expected to be tough, silent providers. But something happens when we enter that small tiled room with two mirrors and one aging magazine.

The barber asks, “How you dey?” and somehow you answer with, “Omo, this week rough.”

He nods. He doesn’t rush you. The mirror reflects more than your face, it catches all the tiredness you’ve been hiding. And if you dare ask for a ponytail? Well, expect the entire room to roast you affectionately. But even that laughter is love, a reminder that you’re seen.

The Therapist with Clippers

Let’s give barbers their flowers. These guys are often the first people to notice you’ve lost weight, or look stressed, or haven’t shown up in two weeks. They know when you’re glowing, and they know when something’s off. And they’ll never say “mental health” but they’ll say, “Oga, hope say you dey alright?”

They don’t wear white coats or glasses, but they know how to hold space. They listen while lining up your sideburns. They know when to offer advice and when to just let the music play louder. And some of them? Natural-born counselors.

Lessons from the Chair

It’s not all therapy though. There’s mentoring happening too. Teenagers sitting and watching older men swap stories about life, work, love, money, heartbreak. Real life lessons passed on with no syllabus, no PowerPoint. Just game.

And maybe that’s why we keep coming back. Because inside those walls, we’re not just clients, we’re brothers. We’re students. We’re men trying to make sense of this mad world, one haircut at a time.

A Little Laughter, A Little Healing

Let’s not act holy. Some of the things said in barbershops should never see daylight. Gossip, wild predictions, fake news, and full-blown exaggerations flow freely. Someone once said he met Wizkid at a petrol station in Ojuelegba and got investment advice. No one believed him, but we all let him shine. Because sometimes, the truth isn’t the point, the laughter is.

So, What’s the Takeaway?

We need more spaces like this. Not fancy, not formal, just open. Spaces where men don’t have to armor up. Where we can be vulnerable without being called weak. Where it’s okay to not have it all figured out. And if all we have is the barbershop for now? Then maybe that’s enough.

So, the next time you sit in that chair and the barber asks, “How you wan make I do am?”

Don’t be afraid to say, “Low fade… and maybe a bit of peace of mind too.”

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