If you know me, or rather, if you have known me long enough,
you will see that I don’t have a specific “style” of dress, in fact, it is
rather an antithesis to having a style, and that has been true all my life.
Currently I am wearing a white linen “hippie” shirt cut low
enough to have my Buddha necklace pop out from my chest hairs, with 501 jeans
and leather sandals. Yesterday I was wearing cords, a “rodeo-style”
button-down, long-sleeved collared shirt with rather conservative leather
walking boots. Or, I might one day be wearing lululemon shorts and work-out
t-shirt, or another, a hand-made silk paisley shirt from India with hemp pants,
or if formal, an Ike Behar silk tie, Hugo Boss shirt and Brooks Brothers’
slacks with rather expensive hand-stitched Italian shoes from Bologna. This is
not to pat myself on the back, but rather to say, depending upon the day that
you meet me, you may get a hippie, a yuppie (though I am pushing the “y” on
that one…) a jock, or a fashionably dressed man.
In Jr. High and High School, I was considered both the best
and worst-dressed person, at the same Time! My nickname was “slob” on the swim
team as I would wear my Uggs (as in the original ones, 25 years ago) down to
holes in the sole, and toes sticking out and ripped shirts and sweats to swim
practice at 5am, though also wore a skinny tie and parachute pants with spiky
hair later that day to High School.
Am I fashionably schizophrenic then?
I have known people for decades who look exactly the same
every day, in every picture, and yet, when I look back at pictures of myself,
it is literally like looking at someone different every time. Although I have
been somewhat conscious of doing this, though not as a “statement,” but now
that I am in my fifth decade of life, I have left quite a wake of fashion
mistakes and triumphs behind me.
My facial hair is no less dramatic. I have had a
Nietzsche-style moustache that looks like I have a hamster on my upper lip to a
quite unassuming soul-patch, a Van Dyck goatee, a full “grizz” beard (already
in 11th grade, getting yet another nickname…) or a pencil-thin John
Waters-esque moving to a Salvador Dali twirl-able stache as well as being clean
shaven for years at a time.
Hair? From shaving it down to the scalp with a bandana when
I took my PhD comprehensive exams (freaking most of my colleagues out when I
walked in) to have a ponytail when I played college water polo at UT-Austin.
Spiked, gelled, and even bleached with peroxide at one time out of vanity.
Body hair? I like to think that I have “just enough.”
Luckily I did not inherit my dad’s hairless chest, but rather from my maternal
side where all the men have a decent v-shaped shrubbery, though not
excessively, and thank god, no real back hair save for some stray hairs that I
bend into contortions to pluck out every now and then. When stressed or excited, I can literally
“flash” a 5 o’clock shadow within the span of a day, so my shaving patterns can
be adjusted within a few days to have a goatee, beard, or clean. And, being a
swimmer, I have been shaved my body from head to toe numerous times…
So, who the hell am I?
If it came down to fashion, hairstyle, facial hair, or what?
The Goon Squad is definitely coming for me I fear if it
comes down to the Fashion Police.
It makes me wonder then, how do others “see” me on any given
day? Given Malcolm Gladwell’s concept of “Blink” I could be a million different
people to anyone whom sees me, and who wishes to make a snap judgment, they
might get quite a different blink from day to day..
So, what stays the same?
The Eyes, I guess.
When I was in college, on the swim team, there was a contest
on campus for the “eyes” and I was voted “Mr. Eyes” for the team and my “eyes”
were used to represent the team on campus for the contest. Though I did not
“win,” I guess that is the one thing that really has not changed on me. I have
gained weight, lost weight, changed fashions, but, the windows to my Soul, I
think, really are my Eyes.
And, if you know me, or as before, if you know me long
enough, you know that when I look you in the eyes, I am present, and I am
listening to you, and it really doesn’t matter what I am wearing, or what my
hair looks like, or if I have a beard or clean shaven, the true test of a
person is simply, can you “look someone in the eye?” If someone can do that
with me, then I really could not care less what you look like. Next time you
talk to someone, really, deeply look into his or her eyes, and try to forget
being part of the Fashion Goon Squad.
Be-ing Human.
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