Organizing my vanity the other day, my fingers brushed against an old horn comb.
Ten years later, its teeth still glow with a soft patina. Engraved on its back are the characters “Zhou Ji,” worn smooth from years of my touch. Suddenly, I remembered my grandmother clutching it on her deathbed: “This comb’s warmer than plastic. Using it is like me brushing your hair for you.”
Back then, I didn’t get what she meant by “warmer.” I thought it was an old woman’s superstition. Now, a decade later, I realize—a comb’s “warmth” lives in every stroke against your scalp, and in the creases of time.
First Touch of a “Living” Comb: Breaking Up with Plastic
In college, I used a plastic comb—quick, efficient, “swish swish” done. Then I visited my grandmother and she insisted I try this horn comb: “Doesn’t that plastic one hurt your scalp?”
The first stroke shocked me. Plastic felt like a tiny shovel, scraping and staticky. This horn comb? Soft as a cloud. Its teeth glided over my scalp, cool but not icy, smoothing frizz without a single zap. “Horn’s alive,” Grandma smiled. “It moves with your hair.”
Later, I learned: plastic’s “coldness” is in its bones. An insulator, it traps static. Hard, angular teeth lift hair cuticles, leaving you frizzier than when you started. But this horn comb? Natural keratin carries its own moisture. Its teeth, filed by Grandma over 49 days, “followed the curve of my head”—how could it hurt?
A Decade of Growing Together: It Learned My Hair’s Secrets
Over ten years, the comb traveled with me—from Nanjing to Shanghai, from short hair to long. And it changed, too.
At first, its teeth felt slightly rough, fresh from the horn. I rubbed tea oil on it three times until it gleamed. Then I noticed: it “absorbs scents”—jasmine perfume in summer, a hint of sweetness lingering in its strokes. On winter mornings, brushing wet hair with it? Smoother than any hairdryer.
Most magically, after five years, it developed a patina. “That’s your scalp oils feeding it,” Grandma said. “Like an old jade, it only gets richer.” Now, I touch it—warm in winter, cool in summer, its teeth just the right hardness. It knows my scalp’s moods better than I do.
Last year, Grandma passed. Rummaging through her trunk, I found old photos: a younger her learning comb-making in a workshop, holding a half-carved horn block. “Back then, we put heart into combs,” she’d said. “Machine-made are all the same. Handmade? Each has a soul.”
Now I get it. This comb’s “warmth” is material—softened horn, years of care. But it’s also emotional—Grandma’s touch, the old craftsman’s heart, a decade of quiet companionship.
It’s not like plastic, which gets tossed when it’s worn out. It’s a growing old friend, seeing me through rushed mornings, tear-streaked makeup, and every day it whispers, “Today, too, be gentle with yourself.”
If someone asks the difference between plastic and horn? I’ll point to “Zhou Ji” on its back: “This isn’t just a comb. It’s time, and love, woven into every strand.”
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