Emo Haircuts Might Ruin Your Eyesight

The Wooster

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Jul 15, 2008
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Emo Haircuts Might Ruin Your Eyesight


A Tasmanian optometrist warns teens against the dangers of the "emo cut."

You've seen the "emo cut" before. It's that odd, lopsided haircut that makes kids look like they're trying to cosplay as Tim Burtonesque version of Dr. Blight from Captain Planet. [http://www.rankopedia.com/CandidatePix/89096.gif] Well not only does it look a bit silly, but according to to the director of the Optometrists Association of Tasmania, the haircut could lead to amblyopia - better known as lazy eye.

Talking to The Mercury, [http://www.themercury.com.au/article/2012/05/14/328111_most-popular-stories.html] optometrist Andrew Hogan laid it out straight for tight-pants-wearing teens who might be ruining their vision.

"If a young emo chap has a fringe covering one eye all the time, that eye won't see a lot of detail," he said. "And if it happens from a young age, that eye can become amblyotic [sic]."

Roseanne Anderson, a hairdresser and salon owner, also offered her medical opinion on the haircut.

"I have to wonder how they don't get a stiff neck," she said. "I have seen lots of fashions come and go, but this is probably the only hairstyle in my forty years of hairdressing that could be a health hazard."

Anderson and Hogan's apocalyptic vision of a future filled entirely with half blind, stiff-necked teens with stupid haircuts picking aimlessly through the ruins of civilization, occasionally bumping into each other, seems unavoidable at this point, but The Mercury did give the opposition a fair hearing.

"My parents would like me to have a haircut," declared "emo cut" owner, Hamish Harrison, 17, "but I'm not cutting my hair at all."

Unfortunately, MSNBC had to go and ruin all the fun with their "facts" and "research." They contacted one Dr. Leonard Press, who responded with the following:

"The story would only be true if you had somebody young enough, and if that person never looked out of that eye -- if it was blocked 24-7. The reason it's false is that you don't have that constant deprivation."


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aPod

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Jan 14, 2010
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"My parents would like me to have a haircut," declared "emo cut" owner, Hamish Harrison, 17, "but I'm not cutting my hair at all."

I'm too busy cutting my wrist.

I always knew there were health benefits to a classic buzz. Sweet vindication.
 

Vault101

I'm in your mind fuzz
Sep 26, 2010
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I don't get how anyone could stand having somthing covering their eye all the time

it would drive me mad

EDIT: just realised the "eye"-ony of that statment...huur hurr
 

PurpleLeafRave

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Feb 22, 2009
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"And if it happens from a young age, that eye can become amblyotic [sic]."


OT: Now I can laugh at people I know. My hair might be bland, but at least I'm not going to get lazy eye!
 

Dogstile

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Jan 17, 2009
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RT-Medic-with-shotgun said:
Letting your unwashed greasy hair hang in your eyes is bad for eyesight? Who would have thunk it.
Unwashed greasy hair? Have you seen most emo's? They care for their hair so much its insane.

Anyway, I thought this got proven wrong here: (Mods, feel free to ask me to remove if needed)

http://bodyodd.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/05/14/11703098-no-side-bangs-will-not-give-you-a-lazy-eye
 

Tony2077

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it makes sense if it blocks the vision from that eye but i'm not certain after that last post
 

The Wooster

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Jul 15, 2008
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dogstile said:
RT-Medic-with-shotgun said:
Letting your unwashed greasy hair hang in your eyes is bad for eyesight? Who would have thunk it.
Unwashed greasy hair? Have you seen most emo's? They care for their hair so much its insane.

Anyway, I thought this got proven wrong here: (Mods, feel free to ask me to remove if needed)

http://bodyodd.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/05/14/11703098-no-side-bangs-will-not-give-you-a-lazy-eye
Added that to the article, thanks for the tip.
 

VonKlaw

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Jan 30, 2012
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That's it then, emo haircuts need to be banned FOR THE SAKE OF THE CHILDREN (that works for everything else, right?)!!!
 

rosac

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Sep 13, 2008
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Urm, I'm fairly sure its common medical knowledge that if you block out one eye it'll eventually get lazy eye...
 

Andronicus

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Mar 25, 2009
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I don't get how they'd get a stiff neck. From constantly flicking their head to move their hair? If so, why don't girls with long fringe hair all have stiff necks?
 

putowtin

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Jul 7, 2010
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it's fake, the only way amblyopia can truly occure is if an eye is completely covered, I.E with an eye patch,

Snake style!

 

AndyRock

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Dec 22, 2009
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Well as a hater of the whole emo scene, I am glad that if their hair is so thick that at a young age no light reaches their eye, and they keep the hairstyle for several decades that they have a chance of developing a lazy eye. But yeah... as a heavy metal fan, I hate emo's (I could rant on why, but I won't).
 

Screamarie

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Mar 16, 2008
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donkey9125 said:
Gosh, such hostility towards us people with emo fringes. For starters, those who say our hair is greasy and filthy and so on, I care for my hair more than most girls care for theirs. I shampoo and condition it everyday with moisturizing shampoo and repairing conditioner to keep it soft and clean. I straighten it nearly everyday since my hair is curly, and I get it done at a salon every 1-2 months. There has also been countless research that shows that it does not do any damage to someones eyes. The only evidence they have is if someone is like under 7 and their eyes are still developing can it do some harm in extreme cases, and that in worst case scenario means they'll need glasses/contacts.

And for people assuming all emo's are hardcore wrist cutting angsty rebels, we're not, typically people who act like that are posers doing it for attention. I like the style, I love the music, and emo is short for (and who would've known this) emotional. We're caring people(I have a lot of friends who have the emo style too), and a helluva lot less judgmental then some of the responses I just read here.

/end rant
Not an emo here, but I have to agree with you. I honestly don't understand emo hate. Yes, some emos are posers that just really want daddy to give them a hug or something, but for the most part it's just people wanting to like a certain style and share certain sensibilites.

I say if it's okay to hate on emo's then all the nerds around here can't get hurt when some jock makes fun of their Legend of Zelda t-shirt or the fact that they play video games.

OT: Yeah from the moment I started reading this I was thinking "Anyone else think this may be a ploy to keep kids from being emo?" Glad MSNBC was there to clear it up...now if only they could prove video games don't cause killers.

And to those who to make fun of the teenager who doesn't want to cut his hair, don't be a hypocrite. We were ALL there once. Maybe we weren't all emo, but we were all "rebels" and "individuals." In the end I don't really give a damn about a kid's style, I give a damn about a kid's ability to be polite and well-mannered.
 

JoesshittyOs

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Aug 10, 2011
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I think anyone who put's too much time into looking unnatural has some attention problems. Seriously, you're gonna fucking hate yourself in 10 years.

Though to be honest, I find this a little shoddy. Maybe someone who rocks that haircut constantly might start developing problems, but really? Probably means they've been rocking that haircut for a long fucking time.
 

Suicidejim

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Jul 1, 2011
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Personally, I quite like the style. Were it not for my inherent laziness and unwillingness to pay more than 2.5 minutes worth of attention to my hair in the morning, I'd probably give it a go myself. I'm pretty skeptical of these claims though, to be honest. I'm not thinking we'll have a new wave of partially blind, stiff-necked teens.