The great belt divide

Now that I am at a new office and among a new set of coworkers, I can officially confirm my suspicions that the generational divide between 20-something and 30-something men lies at the belt line. To be specific, men 30 years of age tuck shirts into their jeans while men under 30 do not.

Like other cultural phenomenon, such as goth or Jersey Shore, I cannot confirm why this exists or where it comes from. I can only hypothesize that the final glory days of network television, which impacted the style of now-30-somethings, supported the notion that tucking shirts into your jeans is stylish, a la Friends and Seinfeld. The proliferation of the Internet in the last decade, which has impacted the style of 20-somethings, opened Middle America up to an awareness that revealed the insensibility of tucking cotton into denim. Of course, 20-somethings continue to wear beards โ€“ as they have throughout history โ€“ simply because they can.

The belt line is but only one generational divide of many: Men over 40 years of age sport goatees. Men over 50 years of age sport ear hair.

Whatโ€™s most interesting is how these generational styles transcend races, but fortunately โ€“ in the case of goatees โ€“ do not transcend genders. Women have their own thing going on to define their age. I learned from my Mom that I ought not to comment on a womanโ€™s age, so I won't here. I also learned from my Mom that whatever hairstyle Katie Couric had going on was the style of the day throughout the 90s and 00s.

Iโ€™ve found that this awareness of generational divides has been particularly useful when meeting new people. If a guy has his shirt tucked in and no goatee then itโ€™s time to talk new babies and how Van Hagar sucks. If he has a goatee then I need to reach back to Led Zeppelin and whatever keeps his mind off his daughter and her impending boyfriends. If he has ear hair then we talk Beatles and I ask him where his daughter is going to college (for Sergio).

I know why 30 is the year when the shirt gets tucked, of course. A lot of people say 25 is the year when your metabolism goes to hell and I think thatโ€™s true. I also think your metabolism goes to a deeper level of hell every year after. Itโ€™s tougher and tougher to keep the six-pack from turning into a beer belly.

My former coworker who shall remain anonymous (whoops) is a victim of his age and frequently tucks his shirt into his jeans. His defense:

"There is a time and a place to tuck. When a shirt is too long or I need to dress โ€˜up.โ€™ I tuck! Youโ€™ll see. One day. You will tuck."

Yes, thatโ€™s true โ€“ but after Iโ€™ve turned 30.

***Update***

My anonymous source posted a packaged response that may not be suitable for young audiences.

Click here to view.

Last day at Weber

I've had too many good times and recounted enough of them on this blog since I started at Weber Shandwick in October 2006. #bittersweet A lot of people leave goodbye emails to the staff, but I opted to leave a goodbye song... in the style of James Blunt. Lots of inside jokes, but you get the idea.

Weber was extremely flexible with my quirks, except for that one time when a senior VP fake arrested me for wearing too little clothing. I won't repeat that mistake at Eddie Bauer, or it's not as likely.

The Italian Stallion Stag Party Cometh

My day has come! Tomorrow I am heading north to Vancouver BC with some good friends to celebrate all that has been my historic bachelorhood. Big thanks to my Best Man Scott for putting it all together!

Vancouver will be the perfect spot for us because it is a dense, international city, and Canada's fine liquor laws allow young Sergio to join us for the fun.

As Al asked, "Do I need to bring like a snake venom kit, rubber boots or a solid alibi?" Have you seen The Hangover? Of course!

Actually, I think this bachelor party will be more Bachelor Party circa 1984 than The Hangover. Man, Tom Hanks made some classics in the 80s.

Life goals

I mentioned in my TEDx Seattle recap how I was inspired by Cheezburger Network CEO Ben Huh and his presentation, 19 Life Goals, to list my own life goals here. For context, here are Ben's life goals that he discussed. This exercise isn't intended to swan dive into the deeper meanings of life or align myself with an amazing financial portfolio (though that by-product would be welcomed). This list is about keeping me on track to a) be productive b) contribute to something greater than myself and c) have fun.

Now that I think about it, those are my uber goals and the following are the list of activities I want to accomplish or be on track to accomplish to achieve those goals. Here's my list:

  • Get a bachelorโ€™s degree2005
  • Travel abroad frequently 2007, 2008, 2010 (more to come)
  • Find the perfect woman 2008
  • Buy a house 2009
  • Work in my field of expertise 2010
  • Get married to perfect woman (2010 expected)
  • Get a master's degree (2010 expected)
  • Start a company
  • Get a doctorate
  • Teach college classes
  • Pay off all debt (excl. mortgage and student loans)
  • Have children with perfect woman (2 max)
  • Donate a significant amount of time and money to charity
  • Write a book
  • (more to come)

Do you have a list of life goals? On paper? In your head? Do you need to make one? What's on it?

Much more interesting will be my "Do This Once" list, which is due up next.