The Middle Ages: Itâs a tight race as readers decide whether I should âtrash the âstacheâ
My mustache is the color now, as I turn 60, mostly associated with the outdoors. Like the mottled tail of an aging raccoon. Like a burger wrapper left too long on the side of the road.
So last week, I asked readers for input on whether the mustache should go. You thought I was serious, which I always am (I hate humorists who make jokes out of everything).
Hence, in the first pivotal election of the new year, the mustache was in a close race for its political life. Public sentiment seemed slightly in favor of keeping the âshaggy soup strainer,â or the âold cookie duster,â as some readers put it.
Some pundits pointed out that I could always grow it back, which seems a little too wise.
A common theme in the reader feedback was a fear that, after all these decades, the facial hair might be holding my face together, like some sort of exoskeleton. Or that, as with an old roof, we might find another mustache underneath.
In any case, thanks for the impressive turnout. Voting seemed to break down âalong gender lines.â Men seemed inclined to want to keep it. Women mostly suggested that the âstache go away. Red states liked it more than blue states.
One reader, evidently confusing me with sports columnist Bill Plaschke, noted that I am a âgood-looking guy and the mustache adds a certain dignity.â
To that I say: âThanks, Mom. Glad youâre getting the paper up there. In heaven, do they still throw it under the car?â
Your historical perspective is what I appreciated the most. Geppetto was a reference point, as were Clark Gable and Tom Selleck, who had the Monet of mustaches. Snidely Whiplash and Yosemite Sam, two of our greatest Americans, were also mentioned.
Also mentioned was the biblical Samson, who when he lost his hair, lost his fastball. âWonder if you are no longer funny?â one reader asked.
Really? Thatâs never been my goal.
At best, I am only grindingly good looking â of Irish-pagan-Viking ancestry, with the pallor of a Valentine card. Meanwhile, my mustache grows whiter by the hour. To me, good mustaches have always seemed dark and saturated, though I always liked Teddy Rooseveltâs scruffy salt-and-pepper âstache, as American as sagebrush.
âI grew a beard because I had no chin. When I shaved it off years later ... I had two.â
— Reader Terry Wimmer
Three voters suggested going to a goatee, and four others came out in favor of a full beard, with which I am pretty sure I would now resemble Santa Claus.
âSince [you wrote that] it is âwhiter than a Mormon ski trip,â I think you should remove it. You would look much younger and after 35 years it should go,â wrote Audrey Guidry.
Some votes were simple:
âBe bold. Lose it,â said one reader, which appealed to my sense of drama.
Similarly, Holly Hall said, âBe brave, do something that you havenât done in 35 years!â
What, shower? Watch a CBS sitcom?
âNo, no, no ⌠never, never!â said Liz Richell. âYou would be completely unrecognizable. Children would scream and hide; small dogs would yap and bite you in the ankle; big dogs would probably hide with the children.â
Honestly, most of that happens anyway.
âI grew a beard because I had no chin,â cautioned Terry Wimmer. âWhen I shaved it off years later... I had two.â
Like I said, Terry, nobody likes a wise guy.
âSHAVE IT!â shouted Maya Zigler, a psychologist. âNot because itâs in style/out of style/handsome/not handsome, but because I believe that despite our reluctance to change, itâs a great way to re-energize and move forward in life.â
Yewwwwww. Anything but that.
âCan you imagine Groucho without his?â Dennis Bain asked. âSalvador Dali? Hitler? Ohhh, sorry thatâs a bad example, but, maybe if he had shaved it he would have just been a failed painter.â
âJust trim the left half,â wrote Peter Mehlman (speaking of wise guys).
One crank (must be a relative) suggested that no one really gives a hoot about my mustache. That couldnât be more true.
Nonetheless, the âTrash the âStache?â campaign provided an interesting public discourse on the limits of love, aging, vanity, family, fashion, masculinity, personal hygiene, and the very limits of democracy itself.
âIâve always appreciated the cowboy and most cowboys have âstaches,â wrote Rich von Lossberg. âThese are real men and you are a âreal man.â
âRight, Chris?â he wrote.
Obviously.
By the way, Robert Redford used to sport a pretty decent âstache. But remind me: In any of his movies, did he ever get the girl?
The final tally? Well, there isnât one yet. Weâre still awaiting returns from Iowa, and there are some hanging chads in Chattanooga. As of press time, âKeep the âStacheâ was leading âTrash the âStacheââ by a single vote.
As they say in Chicago, âVote early and often.â
To vote, email the columnist at [email protected]
Twitter: @erskinetimes