About Chris Alden

I am a freelance writer living in Cyprus.

As a journalist, I specialise in travel, environment, technology, business and general interest features for UK and international titles.

As a copywriter, I write advertorials and web content for companies large and small.

Blog roll

Complete Tosh
Hack of All Tirades
Horticultural
Road Remedies
SimonWaldman.net
Wages of Spin

Wednesday March 5, 2008

Beard heaven, beard hell

I love Peter Aspden’s article in FT Weekend on the social struggles of wearing a beard.

Like him, when I was a boy visiting relatives in the southern Mediterranean (in his case Greece, in my case Cyprus) I would be scratched and sandpapered by the chins of older men – though in my case, I was more afraid of the cheek-tweaking inflicted by the women.

Like him, I woke up one morning recently and decided I couldn’t face shaving any more. I believe I might also have used the phrase “quotidian act of emasculation” to describe the deed, though in my case, being freelance, shaving was never particularly quotidian. But emasculating, yes.

Like him, I am a follower of the Orthodox faith and I have always admired the Byzantine look, though I have to say I have never thought it mournful. I think it is bold. Perhaps it is both.

Like him, after my beard grew, I had my bluff called by a fellow journalist. In his case, the FT beauty editor told him he looked like the shoe bomber. In my case, an editor on the Guardian website told me I looked like … the shoe bomber.

The only difference here is a question of degree – it’s a measure of just how far the pendulum has swung against beards that you can be mocked for having one by a Guardianista.

Reading Peter Aspden’s article, it becomes clear that, appropriately enough for the business-minded FT, it was the remarks of his colleagues that swayed him back to the path of smoothness. A dismissive shot from an editor is all it takes for him to fear that bearded men are old, irrelevant, not career-driven – and so he shaves.

This is where our paths diverge.

In my case, being a freelance, it was my nearest and dearest – family, girlfriend, close friends, followers of the Orthodox faith among them – who kept up the campaign of insults. “Haven’t you shaved that effing beard off, yet?” said Dad, every time I met him, conveniently forgetting his own beard experience of the 80s. My girlfriend waged a war against it, threatening me with a complex series of blackmails and underhand bribes. Worst of all, it became a topic of conversation everywhere I went, as if I was making a point. “For heaven’s sake,” I wanted to shout, “it’s only a bloody beard.”

In the end, after about a year, I got drunk and shaved it off on a whim. I walked out of the pub I was in, went down to Boots, bought a razor and some foam, returned to selfsame pub, locked myself in the bathroom, and started hacking away.

There was a slight hitch when I realised there was no hot water, but I am a resourceful soul – and I ordered a cup of coffee to do the job with instead.

Quite what the patrons of the establishment thought seeing a man going into the toilet with a beard and a cup of coffee, and coming out clean-shaven and carrying an empty mug, I hesitate to think.

But you know what? Like Peter Aspden, I did get a few people telling me I looked younger without the beard. But I still looked in the mirror and saw an older man, a man who had had the beard and come out the other side.

And I’ll never say never again. I may have admitted defeat once, but I’d like to think there is a Byzantine in me yet.

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