FRESH
YARN presents:
The
Beard
By Doug
Gordon
Last year,
my wife Leora and I went to New Zealand for a month's vacation, a trip
of such duration that we easily settled into new routines. Commutes, meetings,
and social commitments gave way to hikes, beach picnics, and scenic drives.
Less than one week into our sojourn, I decided to use the time away to
buck still another daily routine: shaving.
With the exception of an unfortunate-looking goatee grown during my junior
year of college, I had lived most of my adult life as a clean-shaven man.
In the twelve years since that first ill-fated facial hair experiment,
I had probably spent as much money on disposable razors as some people
spend on their first car.
Kiwis are
renowned for their adventurous spirit -- for jumping off bridges with
a rubber band attached to their ankles and bodysurfing head-first through
whitewater rapids -- and I reasoned that the adrenaline-charged atmosphere
of New Zealand might be just the place to give growing a beard one more
post-college try. To top it off, I was about as far from home as one could
get and still be on this planet, meaning that consequences of failure
were nil. If I didn't like the beard I could shave it off and look like
my passport photo again before boarding the plane home. If Leora didn't
like it, that was her problem. I was the only authorized driver of our
rental car.
Two weeks
after stuffing my razor into the deepest recesses of my luggage, I found
myself sporting a fairly respectable beard. Nary a patch of skin was visible
as my whiskers completed their journey from my sideburns to my chin, and
the hair above my upper lip connected confidently to the hair below. Even
Leora approved, opining that the beard made me look rugged, an adjective
not typically employed to describe a man who eschews the fluorescent-lit
aisles of Duane Reade to buy his moisturizer at Kiehl's.
At home in
New York, getting used to the beard took as long as getting over my jet
lag, and I still didn't recognize my own reflection in a mirror for a
few days after our vacation ended. While going through hundreds of pictures
from our month away, I thought, more than once, what the hell is that
guy with the beard doing with his arm around my wife?
One morning
as I peered into the fridge contemplating breakfast, I found myself stroking
my beard. The act was subconscious, as if the beard itself wanted to help
me decide, and it wasn't long before the mere touch of a thumb and forefinger
to my whiskered chin helped me adjudicate other ordinary choices. Paper
or plastic? Venti or grande? Unlimited-use or pay-per-ride MetroCard?
Let's ask the beard.
When I stopped
shaving, I hadn't anticipated that wisdom -- or dare I say maturity --
would be a fringe benefit. Nevertheless, I had joined the esteemed fraternity
of Abraham Lincoln, Moses, and Obi Wan Kenobi, heroes to any child of
the suburbs, synagogue, and the seventies. I was thirty-three years old.
Didn't Jesus, bearded and Jewish just like me, do some of his best work
at my age?
"So,
do you like it?"
It was the
first question I asked my mother after arriving in Boston for a quick
visit a month later. She paused before answering, but the strained look
on her face and her stiff body language said it all. If it was possible
to hug someone close and keep him at arm's length, my mother had figured
it out.
"Well,"
she said. "You look like your father."
Your father.
Ever since my parents had divorced two years ago, my mother had been very
careful in how she described the man who had been her husband for over
three decades. His affair had been such a betrayal that she could not
bring herself to use names that kept him close. He wasn't Neil anymore
or even Dad. Instead, he was "your father." When parents divorce
in their golden years, their children are the ones who get custody.
For years,
people had pointed out that I had my father's nose, his smile, and up
until recently I had exercised enough to keep my inherited predisposition
for a potbelly at bay. (If not for the miracles of modern prescription
medication, I'd probably have his hairline, too.) How could I have thought,
even subconsciously, that my beard would defy Mendel's laws of genetics?
Suddenly I didn't feel wiser. I felt guilty. There may have been some
strange Oedipal complex at play that fueled my guilt, but all I remembered
from my college courses was that Freud had a beard.
The divorce
had upended my mother's world, and she had landed on her feet in a new
condo, the consolation prize for over thirty years of marriage, thanks
for playing. There was our dining table, still a place to share dinners,
even if our dinners would be smaller by one person from now on. Two floral-print
couches, placed at right angles to each other, remained as a place to
watch rented movies. Still, there were hints that something was not right.
A tall wooden armoire, too big to fit in my mother's new bedroom, stood
at attention against a wall in the living room, as if it was so unsure
about its new surroundings that it couldn't relax for even a second.
Neither of
us mentioned the beard again for the rest of my visit. Instead, I focused
my energy in the way a concerned parent might when moving his child into
a first apartment out of college. I bought her a gallon of emergency water,
a flashlight with spare batteries, and a small fire extinguisher for the
kitchen. When my mother wasn't looking I took two twenty-dollar bills
from my wallet and surreptitiously slipped them in my mother's purse.
It was the kind of thing my parents used to do for me: cash stuffed into
a palm after a hug at the airport, a check mailed to me for no good reason,
other than because they thought I needed the extra help. My beard wasn't
white, but playing Santa Claus made me feel a little better.
Had my parents
divorced when I was a child, splitting time between two households would
have felt normal. But coming late in my life, it was hard to get used
to the concept of truncating a visit with one parent to spend time with
the other. Thankfully, I had plenty of time to think about it as I searched
for my father's building in a garden-style apartment complex in Waltham,
Massachusetts, thirty minutes from my mother's condo, and light years
away from the life he once had with her. I circled endlessly on roads
named to suggest the woods torn down to make way for the residences that
stood in their stead: Brown Bear Road turned into Grizzly Bear Lane, which
led to Kodiak Drive, which inexplicably intersected with Kodiak Way. Had
my father not been waiting for me outside his unit, I might have circled
the woods forever, although part of me might have been more comfortable
doing that, nervous as I was to see his apartment for the first time since
the divorce.
He held back
Roxy, the chocolate lab who as a puppy had filled my parents' empty nest,
as she tugged at her leash. As I stepped out of the car, my father's hand
landed on my shoulder, pulling me close.
"Hey,
nice beard," he said.
"Thanks."
"Yeah,
it looks good. Looks good. Really good."
A man of
few words, my father often repeated them for emphasis.
"I'm
not sure how long I'll keep it," I said.
"You
should keep it. Definitely keep it. It looks good."
"Well,
we'll see."
My words
surprised me. Up until now, I had imagined keeping the beard forever,
seeing as how it gave me an identity beyond such non-descript characteristics
as brown hair, brown eyes, and a slightly below average height. I had
hoped the beard would make me stand out from the crowd, but now I barely
stood out from the only man standing next to me. My mother was right.
Our beards
looked nearly identical, the flecks of gray in his a preview of what mine
might look like in twenty-five years. My father must have seen my beard
as a sign of allegiance, something he must have craved in the wake of
the divorce. He had been ostracized by most of our family's friends, their
moral compasses pointing solidly toward the one partner who didn't have
the affair. But swearing allegiance wasn't possible for me, clarity being
a luxury only distance can provide. My father had taught me everything
I knew about being a man and husband, but what did it mean now that he
had made one of the worst mistakes a man and husband could make? Could
I look like him but not be like him? As my father showed me up the stairs
I felt the urge to pull all the hair from my face.
Barely two
steps beyond his front door, I instantly classified his apartment as less
a home than a storehouse for a downsized life. A wooden chest that used
to be in our formal living room now supported a television set and cable
box, the horizontal surface of this makeshift entertainment center covered
by a layer of dust that looked as if it had developed at the same rate
as my beard. Pictures and framed art posters that once hung throughout
my family's four-bedroom house now shared the limited wall space in his
one-bedroom walkup. The entire living space was set up on an oriental
rug that had once covered our dining room floor. It had survived dozens
of dinners, Passover Seders, and Thanksgiving holidays without so much
as a drop of wine spilled on it. Now it was covered with dog hair.
My father
and I were not practiced in the art of heart-to-heart conversations, as
it had been my mother who had dutifully served as the emotional conduit
between us. In the past, if my father picked up the phone on the occasions
when I called home, it was an instant sign that my mother was out running
errands. When he and I did talk, our conversations were about as substantive
as the 11 o'clock news: all we ever covered was news, weather, and sports.
That's why
we sat, finding more room in the awkward pauses than in his cluttered
apartment, unable to sustain much in the way of conversation. I couldn't
talk about the past two days with Mom; he wasn't interested. I couldn't
ask him about his love life; I wasn't interested. I tried to tell him
about New Zealand, and opened his laptop to show him some pictures online.
He offered an occasional comment on the scenery, but mostly seemed more
interested in my beard's progress in each picture. "Looks like it
was coming in good there," he said.
I excused
myself to the bathroom even though I didn't need to use it. It wasn't
filthy, but there was a sailing magazine on the floor by the toilet, a
ring around the tub, and a towel on the floor by the sink, hardly the
markers of a man who regularly hosted friends at his apartment. I splashed
some water on my face, and noticed tiny hairs scattered around the drain.
An electric razor stood on the bathroom counter, its base plugged into
an outlet next to a light switch. If I kept my beard, I'd have to get
one, too. I came back out into the living room and told my father that
I had to get moving.
He put the
dog on a leash and walked me to the car outside. Just as I was about to
turn to open the car's door, my father pulled me close and hugged me,
holding me as if he knew I was likely to be the last visitor he'd have
for a while.
"Keep
the beard, keep the beard," he said.
"Okay,"
I said.
He told me
he loved me and let me go. As I climbed into the driver's seat, the dog
stood on her hind legs and pressed her nose against the car's window.
She and I were about the same age, at least in dog years, and I noticed
the grey patch that was coming in among the chocolate hair on her chin.
Did everyone here have a beard?
My mother
hated the beard because it made me look like my father. My father loved
the beard for exactly the same reason. Would shaving it off mean conceding
to my mother's fragile emotions? Would keeping it mean siding with my
father, ignoring or even excusing his graceless exit from the marriage?
Are there two forces any more opposing but equally powerful as one's parents?
And what did it mean that I stroked my beard as I asked myself these questions
on the drive home? Was it even possible for a beard to bestow wisdom and
maturity? Maybe I had invested too much transformative power in my facial
hair. I reminded myself that I had initially chosen to grow mine simply
because I wanted to see if I could.
The final
word came from my wife. I returned home and immediately noticed that Leora's
affection for my beard was suddenly replaced with an unease impossible
to ignore, especially one morning when she pulled back as I tried to kiss
her.
"What's
the matter?" I asked.
"Your
beard," she said. "It's starting to creep me out."
"I thought
you liked it," I said, wondering if she could sense my own insecurities
about the beard.
"Now
that it's grown in," she said, "you remind me too much of my
father."
I had to
laugh. I had spent the weekend so torn between two competing parents,
that the idea of someone else having conflicting feelings about a father
or a mother seemed impossible. I pulled Leora close and we stood together
in the hallway of our apartment, quiet for a moment, my beard pressed
against her face. My parents' marriage may have fallen apart, but mine
was just beginning.
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