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Regina's hairstylist asked "Is your mom dead?" It worked.

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Your hairstylist gets it, eh?

Oh, you are not going to believe this one, but it's pure Regina, eh? There's a hairstylist, right here in our Queen City, who offered a Mother's Day discount, but not for the usual "treat your mom" crowd. No, this was for folks whose mothers have passed on. "So your mom's dead?" was the question, apparently. And look, I know what that sounds like on paper, eh? But it actually sparked this huge, heartfelt conversation all over about grief and how we navigate holidays like Mother's Day when you're carrying that kind of loss. It’s a bold move, but honestly, it’s the kind of direct, no-nonsense honesty that this city's built on.

It got people talking, big time. And that's what we do here, isn't it? We might not always use the prettiest words, but we get to the heart of things. Think about it: so many people walk around with that quiet grief, especially around a day like Mother's Day, and this hairstylist, from somewhere maybe in the Cathedral or even out closer to Parliament Place, just put it right out there. It’s not about a discount, really. It’s about being seen, about acknowledging that some folks' Mother's Day is just different.

Here's why this matters for us in Regina:

* **Authenticity:** It's a reminder that we value real talk over polite fictions.

* **Community Support:** Shows how local businesses can tap into deep emotional needs.

* **Opening Conversations:** Makes space for discussions about grief that are often pushed aside.

This is Regina — yeah, we know what it sounds like, and we've heard your joke. Now sit down and listen. This story, eh? It’s a little raw, a little uncomfortable, but it's real, and sometimes that's exactly what you need in a city that’s always been about keeping it real. It reminds you that even the most everyday places, like your local salon on Albert Street, can be where important conversations begin.

Darlene Chicken-Lawson, MiTL Sports Desk, Regina.

Oh, and for more stories that'll make you say "only in Saskatchewan," you gotta listen to Keith and the gang every morning. Catch 'em live at mornings.live.

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More from Darlene Chicken-Lawson

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →