I was trimming my beard the other day when it suddenly
occurred to me that shaving is a silly concept. Why is it an accepted practice
to scrape the hair off our skin with sharpened metal? Who decided that was a
good idea?
If you think about it we do a lot of pretty silly stuff to
make ourselves look like we think we should. Men shave some of our hair but we
selectively trim the rest and women pluck their eyebrows just to pencil, paint
or tattoo new ones in their place. It’s no mystery that humans grow hair in
pretty much the same places yet we spend a lot of time and money to only keep
the hair we think is appropriate.
Looking back at art and portraits of historical figures you
can usually guess what period of time they lived by their clothing and hair.
Let’s face it; Julius Caesar would have a hard time being taken seriously as a
world leader today if he showed up in a toga with leaves on his head. Even
though we all know that Vladimir Putin is itching to show up at a G-8
conference in a chariot in full Roman battle gear, no modern leader would dare
dress like that.
It’s always been that way; George Washington and our
founding fathers were known to wear tights and a powered wig as was King George
III and his whole band of idiots. Less than a hundred years later General Grant
wouldn’t be caught dead dressed like that. Who changed the rules?
It doesn’t take that long for things to change; who hasn’t
looked back at their high school yearbook and cringed? If you haven’t yet, you
will. In the course of my lifetime the grooming and fashion rules have changed
over and over again and I missed the memo every time. I always noticed it after
it happened which is why I always check with my wife before I go out … I’m a
fashion mess.
There’s more to this than just the length of our hair and
the clothes we wear. We alter our natural appearance in painful and permanent
ways for religious, cultural and even fashion reasons. It’s mind boggling when
we see other people do it … but we all do it.
We’ve all heard about seeming cruel stuff like the Japanese
binding little girl’s feet to keep them small or the African tribe using rings
to elongate their kid’s necks. It all sounds bizarre and cruel to us but they
would probably wince at the thought of injecting butt fat or Botox into their
lips; it’s not that much of a stretch … so to speak.
It almost seems like humans have the need to deform
ourselves to conform to … fill in the blank. When previously undiscovered
tribes wonder out of the Amazon forest, they are often completely naked but you
can bet that the men will all be decorated one way and the women another. No
society can really take the high ground on this one, but we all try.
It’s easy to scoff at the seeming barbaric things other
people do to themselves but just yesterday I passed a billboard along the
freeway advertising “Brazilian Butt Injections” for the low price of only
$2500. I don’t know if that was per cheek or the entire package … I was going
65 MPH at the time.
To quote Jimmy Buffett (and you should always quote Jimmy
Buffett) “it plumb evades me” why anyone would pay to have a foreign substance
injected into their backside or anywhere else. I’ve never cared enough about my
appearance to wear uncomfortable shoes let alone endure pain in order to look a
certain way.
I don’t know who makes these rules or why we do the weird
stuff we do, I don’t even have a good guess, but it’s hard to say whose stuff
is weirder. Before you criticize a tribesman for putting a huge thing in his
lip ask yourself why you’d tie a random piece of cloth around your throat for a
job interview. That’s weird!
I’m willing to do my part to stop the madness; I’ll promise
right here to never put a huge thing in my lip or to wear a tie ever again.
Just call it my sacrifice for humanity … I’m that kind of guy.
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