The frightened young woman wanted to take her two children and leave her abusive partner, but then the beating began.
"I'm going to make you ugly; no one's going to want you," her abuser said before hacking off her long hair with a knife, leaving her not only battered, but humiliated.
The 23-year-old mother, whose name is being withheld to protect her, took refuge at the St. Paul Domestic Abuse Intervention Project.
Her abuser "was going to do anything he could to not relinquish that control and not let her leave," said advocate Bree Adams Bill, who helped her get a restraining order and find shelter for herself and her children.
That grim episode in October 2010 kicked off a Minnesota salon's effort to provide abused women with free haircuts and makeovers. It's a godsend for the demoralized victims, particularly those who have had abusers slash off their hair, a not uncommon form of physical abuse.
Brian Horst, who owns Details Style Lab in downtown St. Paul, said its stylists are participating in a nationwide campaign to help abuse victims called "Cut it Out."
The help stylists can provide goes beyond giving battered women a fresh look; for instance, in a previous job in western Wisconsin, Adams Bill trained some stylists to recognize signs of abuse when working on clients, then offer them information about how to get help and support.
The salon's project helps victims heal, said Kelli, another victim. The 26-year-old St. Paul woman, who asked that her last name not be used, was invited to Details' free makeover day on Jan. 21. During a violent attack three years ago, her assailant didn't hack off her hair, but he hurt her body and the way she saw herself.