Still crazy cool after all these years*
You may or may not recall that a few years back it was
revealed that certain areas of my beard stubble were turning gray. This
existential crisis resulted in a brief experiment with Just For Men. Eventually
I got over it and allowed those grays to roam free and unaltered on the
sporadic occasions of growing my beard out. Recently, however, I discovered
that the gray culprits had crept up to my sideburns.
Note: This column appears in the 6/14 issue of The Glendale Star and the 6/15 issue of the Peoria Times.
Beard grays are one thing, but sideburn grays are quite
another, since I cannot shave them to stubble without appearing as a
bowl-headed crazy person. I had been attempting to stifle their impact with the
use of an extremely tiny pair of scissors, but recently my wife looked at me
and commented gracefully, “Omg—your sideburns are turning gray!”
This ultimately resulted in me trying to pluck the hairs out
with tweezers in front of the bathroom mirror. My wife walked in and said,
“You’re not plucking those grays, are you? Oh no! For every gray you pluck,
seven more grow back!” I asked her if this was an old wives' tale or a
scientific fact, and she said I could accept it as the former at my own risk.
I put the tweezers down. Besides, my wife and I had plans to
watch the MTV Movie Awards, because even though we are in our mid-thirties, we
remain on the cutting edge of what is hip and cool (see above “Omg” comment).
The show opened with a song that was literally about being young. I thought to
myself, “I can totally relate to this,” as I sat there with a pair of recently
plucked sideburns, calculating our monthly bills on the computer.
My wife and I barely knew or recognized anybody who appeared
on screen, and we didn’t understand half of the references made in the opening
monologue. We were mostly annoyed by everything that was happening. I am not
sure there is a dumber thing on television than the MTV Movie Awards, which has
award categories like, “Best Homeboy,” and “Bloodiest Murder.” I was reminded
of why I wasn’t allowed to watch MTV as a kid, not because it was
inappropriate—although it is very inappropriate—but because it makes you
considerably dumber. (Obviously, I watched anyway.)
As further proof of how young and hip I am, I had to DVR the
remainder of the show because it was waaaaay past our bedtime. (It was 9:15 p.m.)
Before we headed upstairs, I put some recently air-dried Tupperware into our
pantry—play on, playa—and noticed the box of Fiber One cereal. It wasn’t ours—that day
we had cleared out my in-law’s house because they are back east and we didn’t
want any food to go bad. I even made fun of the cereal when we brought it home.
But as I stood there looking at it, I thought, “You know, I probably could use
a little more fiber in my diet.”
And with that I retired to sleep, confident that the gap
between my generation and the new generation was narrower than ever.
*Referencing Paul Simon lyrics is another way to
remain hip, by the way. You’re welcome.
Note: This column appears in the 6/14 issue of The Glendale Star and the 6/15 issue of the Peoria Times.
Comments
Sorry for doing this this way, I couldn't figure out a better (or even worse) one. So please go ahead and delete this after you read it. I just wanted to let you know that I've got a new record out. I've really come to enjoy your work a lot, so I wanted to shoot you the link in hopes you got even a fraction of the enjoyment I've gotten from you. If you're interested, you can hear the record at thetwex.com, and go to the Videos page to see a couple-- well, I bet you can figure it out. Anyway, thanks again for being you.
Also, no worries whatsoever for alerting me to this in the comments. I'm not exactly fighting off comments with a stick over here, and I wouldn't care either way. That said, I am now going to "Like" you on facebook ...