Mark Twain said it well:
Clothes
make the man. Naked people have little or no influence on society.
True enough, but what about adult males, corporate tycoons,
who go to work dressed in tee shirts and jeans? Silicon Valley billionaires,
like Mark Zuckerberg and Steve Jobs dress like overgrown
adolescents.
The same does not apply to successful women in Silicon
Valley. You never see Marissa Mayer, Sheryl Sandberg or Meg Whitman dressing
down, dressing casual.
Society’s leaders set an example. They provide an image that
others can emulate. They set standards of good behavior, of decorum and
propriety. When they fail to assume the responsibility, the rest of society still follows their lead.
They are not dressing like corporate leaders. At best, they are
dressing like artists, like creative geniuses.
There is nothing wrong with an artist dressing like an
artist, but artists do not set social standards. They are not role models.
Besides, they are very likely to get their hands and their clothes dirty while
doing their job.
Normally, when a grown man dresses like an adolescent we
think less of him. We treat him with less respect. He commands less authority.
Unless he is Mark Zuckerberg.
Extremely successful men who dress down are exhibiting arrogance. They dress the way they do because they can get
away with it. Anyone else would pay a heavy price.
When the bad habit trickles down to the rest of society, the
result is anything but inspiring.
P. J. O’Rourke describes the way men dress for airplane
travel:
When I
board an airplane these days, all the middle-aged men are dressed like me—when
I was an 8-year-old. They’re in shorts and T-shirts. And it’s not just on
airplanes. It’s in business offices, teachers’ lounges, and churches.
CNN (via Maggie's Farm) reports on the way people dress to go to church:
If the
Rev. John DeBonville could preach a sermon to lift the souls of churchgoers
across America, his message would be simple:
Stop
dressing so tacky for church.
DeBonville
has heard about the “come as you are” approach to dressing down for Sunday
service, but he says the Sabbath is getting too sloppy.
When he
scans the pews of churches, DeBonville sees rows of people dressed in their
Sunday worst. They saunter into church in baggy shorts, flip-flop sandals,
tennis shoes and grubby T-shirts. Some even slide into the pews carrying coffee
in plastic foam containers as if they’re going to Starbucks.
“It’s
like some people decided to stop mowing the lawn and then decided to come to
church,” says DeBonville, rector at the Church of the Good Shepard in Massachusetts.
“No one dresses up for church anymore.”
Unless you have attained to a celebrity status, unless your
face has become iconic, dressing down will work to your detriment.
O’Rourke explains the cost of looking like an overgrown
adolescent whose clothes don’t fit:
The
kid-who-stayed-40-years-too-long-on-the-playground look doesn’t inspire trust.
If dressing up as a third grader is your idea of how to treat yourself, what’s
your idea of how to treat me?
And
what’s the rest of the world’s idea of how to treat you? When I was growing up,
I was told, “The way you dress is the way you’re regarded.” See Dennis the
Menace in the funny pages of your local newspaper to discover how you’re
regarded.
Another
maxim from my youth was, “Don’t dress for the job you have; dress for the job
you’d like to get.” Checked the ad listings lately for WANTED:
GRADE-SCHOOL-RECESS BULLY?
With
the overgrown-brat image, we also shed our adult authority. The only advantage
to being a middle-aged man is that when you put on a jacket and tie you’re the
Scary Dad. Never mind that no one has had an actually scary dad since 1966. The
visceral fear remains. When I set my jaw and stare over the top of my
tortoiseshell half-glasses, everyone under 50—from waiter to law-firm
partner—thinks, “Grounded for life.” This doesn’t work when you’re wearing
shorts and a T-shirt.
There’s a lack of seriousness, a lack of a sense of being a
responsible adult, a failure to assume the role of leader. But, there is also an abrogation of authority, a sense that you
should not be taken seriously, that you do not know more than anyone else,
that experience has not taught you anything that you should pass on to the next
generation.
At the least, it doesn’t bode well for
America’s future.
And it helps with the lady's, when everyone men around you is dress like a adolescent and you are look like the boss, you get the women looking at you.
ReplyDeleteDressing in a manner commensurate with the job demonstrates respect for the job, your customers and the people you work with. It demonstrate a seriousness as to one's approach to business.
ReplyDeleteI'm tracking with everything you've said here, but I'm going to push back on the O'Rourke comment about flying. It seems that so many older people are nostalgic about flying and what it used to be like with Trans World Airlines, Pan-American Airlines, etc. It was a rare treat, an event. The planes were new, they served decent food, the stewardesses were attractive, etc. Not anymore. Flying has become something just short of hell. If I have to do a garage sale with my belt, shoes, etc., and then be cramped into a long tube that's too hot and serves lousy food (for a fee), I'm going to wear whatever is most comfortable. If that means I look like an adolescent, then I'm okay with that… that's how I'm treated by the government and airlines today. I am a "processing unit," treated with the dignity of a snail, with no attention whatsoever paid to the quality of the experience. If all you get to look forward to is an on-time departure or on-time arrival, I can do that in comfort and not worry about smashing decent clothes. I can always arrive at my destination and change into something substantial.
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