Hi there, if your gut instinct is saying no, especially if you already agreed to one trim, ABSOLUTELY DON'T DO IT! If you really like this guy, you're gonna have to train him not to ask you anymore. My stylist only sees me for relaxers now, and she is very scissor happy. After telling her, "no thank you" for more than a year now when she asks if I want a trim, she finally gets the point. Now she even tells me, you're doing a really good job taking care of your hair, and it's getting so long. I want to be ugly and say, "yeah, that's cause I don't let you near me with those scissors!" But my point is, don't let them decide what's best for your hair. You know your hair, and you know how it should look, feel, maintain curl, etc. Don't let his "pressuring" make you doubt yourself and end up unhappy. I've done that too many times in the salon.
I'm a DIYer for weekly maintenance, but I still go to the salon for relaxers and TGF Haircutters for trims. A friend recommended those inexpensive haircutting places because they specialize in precision cuts and cut hair all day long. It's not like many of our stylists who rarely encounter long hair or have had enough practice with trimming and maintaining length. I had my first trim in four months this week, and this was my conversation with the stylist:
*Are you comfortable working with longer, African American hair? Yes
*Okay, I will pay you a big tip if you do exactly what I'm asking you to do:
-I want a trim, not a haircut. I know my ends are not bad because I regularly take care of them, but they are starting to get tangled a bit.
-A trim to me is minor. I've evaluated my own ends and probably don't need more than a 1/4 inch cut in some areas (dusting).
-I don't want to get out of this chair and look like I've had a haircut. My boyfriend should not look at me when I get home and ask, "why did you let them cut your hair!"
-Finally, before you trim anything, show me in the mirror how much you plan to cut.
The lady passed all these tests and did a great job. My ends are cleaner, and I don't feel like I lost anything. (Remember, the whole point of protecting ends is so you don't have to get a major trim). My SO didn't even notice the trim until I mentioned it to him. She also got her $20 tip.