What It Means to Grow Up in the Barbershop
- tcutme

- May 22
- 1 min read
There is a difference between learning barbering and being raised in it.
I am Talib "T." I picked up my first pair of clippers at 12 years old in my stepfather's barbershop in Philadelphia. There was no tutorial. No textbook. I started by watching every cut, every technique, every conversation between barber and client from the time I was old enough to actually pay attention to what was happening. By the time I was a teenager I was already cutting hair. By the time I was a young adult I had more real hours behind the chair than most barbers accumulate in their first few years of professional work.
I cut throughout college. I started barbering professionally in 2015. In 2017 I brought the craft to Laurel, Maryland. In 2019 I moved into a private, appointment-only suite a deliberate decision to prioritize the quality and consistency of every client's experience over how many heads I could push through in a day.
Being a second-generation barber is not a marketing phrase. It is a different starting point entirely. The standards were modeled for me before they were ever taught to me. The attention to detail that clients notice at TCUTME is not something I picked up in a classroom. It is the product of decades of exposure, repetition, and a standard that was embedded early.
That is what you are walking into when you book at TCUTME.
Located at 8101 Sandy Spring Road in Laurel, Maryland. Full-service barbering for all hair types and textures. Women and children welcome. Appointment only.
Book at tcutme.com.
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