I have blogged about this before and figured it was now time for an update on my situation. Some of you are probably thinking...meh...what's the big deal? So you wear earrings, who cares?
Others of you are rolling your eyes...come on I can see you rolling your eyes...and are thinking "he's cracked--the man has finally cracked".
But this is a huge step for me on many levels. You are right, It may be no big deal but it is for me. Because if you know me--or think you know me, then you might be surprised at the choice I have made and surprised at why I made the choice that I have. And that is what this post is all about.
This is why I wear earrings.
My journey starts in 1986. This was an important year for me. I became a legal adult and because of family issues, I would move out of my family home into an apartment.
I pierced my left ear myself late that year--in October I think it was when I was 21 years of age. This was back at a time when guys only got one ear pierced--left if you were straight and right if you were gay--or so the tradition was. My family was a little surprised at what I had done, but once the shock wore off I continued to wear a small stud, then a small gold hoop for a couple of years off and on.
I pierced my ear that night back in 1986, knowing that my father would not be happy about it, but hell, I was 21 and I was an adult, and even though I was still living at home, he was just going to have to accept it.
He wasn't happy about it, but he tolerated it. I honestly don't really remember what he said to me about it at the time, Something like "oh, you have an earring, hmmm".
I just remember that I was nervous as hell the morning after I pierced it and inserted into my newly pierced earlobe, a borrowed stud from my younger sister. But really what could he say? He had two tattoos, one on each forearm so something about a black kettle and a pot might have applied to this situation.
I just remember that I was nervous as hell the morning after I pierced it and inserted into my newly pierced earlobe, a borrowed stud from my younger sister. But really what could he say? He had two tattoos, one on each forearm so something about a black kettle and a pot might have applied to this situation.
I do remember the HR person at my job commenting when she noticed the earring one morning. "What's that in your ear? An earring?" I nodded and she rolled her eyes and shook her head. I think that was the only negative comment I got. At least that I remember.
But no one in my extended conservative family really made a big deal and I don't recall any negative comments from them. I was, after all, an adult and if I wanted to flush my life down the toilet, then that was my prerogative. I do think my older sisters thought I was cool.
Then I got bored with it and stopped wearing an earring altogether. The shock value had long since passed and I figured I didn't need it anymore.
Then I got bored with it and stopped wearing an earring altogether. The shock value had long since passed and I figured I didn't need it anymore.
Every few years after having removed the earring, I would get the urge to put the bling back in my earlobe but it would only last a few weeks or month, then back out the earring came.
I joined an ultraconservative church in 1993 that forbade men wearing earrings (among other things) and since I fell for their doctrine hook line and sinker, I finally stopped wearing an earring and was happy to do so. I figured my earring wearing days were over.
Then something very bad happened. I became judgmental and opinionated and thought that guys who wore earrings were stupid and silly. Earrings were for women, didn't you know? A guy had no place wearing earrings. I didn't wear one any longer so they shouldn't either. I convinced myself that it was kind of evil and bad to wear earrings. One ear was bad enough. But some guys had them in both ears. That was downright ludicrous!!!
I was quite smug in my assessment of other guys jewelry choices but didn't really realize what I had become. A judgmental jerk, or more correctly, a judgmental ass.
I stopped going to that ultraconservative church around the time I turned 40. In a bit of rebelliousness and a little bit of mid-life crisis, I changed my tune guys and earrings. They were now hip and cool again!!!
I started wearing an earring again and felt pretty damn good. I was snubbing my nose at the ultraconservative church and its teachings that earrings on guys were evil and dangerous.
But now it was 2005, not 1986 and times had changed in regards to the number and placement of the male earring. It was now OK to wear earrings in both ears!
Many more guys were doing it now and I was only too happy to jump on the "both ears pierced" bandwagon. Damn that ultraconservative church and its outdated and archaic views on the male earring. Obviously, this church didn't own stock in man earrings. But the number of guys with both ears pierced was on the rise, though at this point in time it not exactly universal.
Did I wear the earrings to fit into a certain (cool) segment of society, or was it really about being rebellious? Not really sure at this point in my life journey. I pierced my right ear and wore small tasteful studs in both ears..for about 3 days.
My new family wasn't keen on the two earring thing. Now I will be the first to admit I'm not the most masculine guy on the planet. No, no I can take it. I wouldn't say I was effeminate, but I don't really do a lot of "guy" things. I don't really watch sports on TV unless it's a gold medal Olympic hockey game or the World Series. Nor do I play many sports for that matter. I have the coordination of a lopsided weeble ("weebles wobble but they don't fall down..."). I don't hate sports, I'm just not co-ordinated and felt that for the safety of everyone around me that I refrain from participating in sports. I don't really care about cars, either. I just like to drive one. (I do like "man type" movies though so that's a good sign at least). And I don't usually use a knife when I eat--and that's a guy thing, right?
A natural outcome of not being involved in sports is that I am a bit (OK, a lot) overweight. The argument at the time in 2005 was that the earrings made me look just a little bit effeminate. I never really put this theory to the test. I just removed the earrings and went back to being my old boring self. Keep in mind that this was still 2005 and guys with both ears pierced, though on the rise, were not that common--yet.
I was disappointed about the earrings and got over it a few weeks later, but about a year after all this transpired, I started attending the ultraconservative church again and like before the same judgments and opinions surfaced. Guys wearing earrings were just a little bit silly and stupid, I would tell myself. I used to be one of those silly and stupid guys, but no more!
Boy, I was brainwashed, I realize that now. But back then that was my new updated opinion. I would see a guy with an earring or two at the mall or grocery shopping and just shake my head. How pathetic! It was all I could do to resist the urge to inform them of the error of their ways. If I was more of an extrovert I probably would have told a few guys what I thought about their earrings.
Boy, I was brainwashed, I realize that now. But back then that was my new updated opinion. I would see a guy with an earring or two at the mall or grocery shopping and just shake my head. How pathetic! It was all I could do to resist the urge to inform them of the error of their ways. If I was more of an extrovert I probably would have told a few guys what I thought about their earrings.
After almost 19 years of being pummeled and pushed around (and brainwashed..don't forget brainwashed) by the church, I left it for good in 2012. This was a very confusing time for me and it took a few years to sort out my feelings and find out what kind of a person I was. I was a judgmental ass when I was a member of that church, I realized that. But I was slowly losing that bad part of myself. I became more accepting of other people and stopped judging them but what they wore and what they looked like.
I don't really know what the defining moment was for me, but earlier this year around my 50th birthday, I got the urge to put the bling back in my earlobe. I was ready to do the earring thing yet again. No longer encumbered by that churches outdated doctrines regarding the male earring, I was free to sport some serious bling. This time there was no stopping me!
I think it was a combination of rebellion against an organization that had manipulated and brainwashed me for years, and turning 50 that made me take the plunge yet again and join the masses of the earring-wearing male. I was also a different person than I was even 10 years ago. Back in 2005, I had left the church but it wasn't a permanent choice. But now in 2015, I was finally free of it. Completely free. I was a lot more confident now, the kind of confidence that comes with age. I no longer worried so much about what other people thought of me or my choices. That too comes with age. You get tired of worrying about it because you can't please everyone, no matter what you do someone will always think it's a wrong decision or just not a good decision.
I was, however, a little worried about the family and what their reaction would be to my wearing an earring again and especially at my age. They had rejected me with earrings back in 2005 but this was 2015, surely the age of enlightenment. Fifteen years into the 3rd millennium certainly guys with earrings would be finally accepted by society, and more importantly, my family?
This time I did some research. I googled and googled some more. What was everyone's opinion on the matter? Here I am, a 50-year-old guy wanting to wear an earring. Would I be accepted? Would I have to turn in my man card? Would I be laughed at? Or would I be like the coolest 50-year-old dude on the planet?
A surprising thing happened during the research. I got some responses on forums about this very question, but they weren't what I expected. But it turns out they were exactly what I had hoped.
No one really cared.
That was what I discovered. No one really cared anymore. Guys have been wearing earrings for many years and it's just not shocking or weird anymore. People on these forums had opinions, Of course, they did. But they were mostly in the vein of "you're an adult and can do whatever the hell you want with your earlobe and your life" and "what will help you pull it off is confidence. If you are confident wearing the earring, people will see that and respond accordingly".
The fact that I am 50 didn't really matter either. Sure, there are some people who still think that a 50-year-old guy wearing an earring is really silly. And stupid. And ridiculous. And...well the list could go on. You want to know something. Sometimes do I feel silly and stupid and ridiculous. But what's wrong with that? Does it really matter at the end of the day if you felt silly and stupid for those 3 minutes that day? I really don't care if anyone thinks I'm silly and stupid. I understand why you think that, but really I honestly don't care.
I wore an earring for about a month and then gradually got the old urge to wear earrings in both ears. Wearing an earring in one ear is a bit dated as a fashion trend.
Sure, I still see guys with one earring and they are mostly older guys (like me) who probably pierced their ear back in the '80s.(like me) and either don't want anything more than that and are comfortable with wearing one earring. To me that's perfectly fine. I don't see anything wrong with that. It's a style and a choice. like any piece of jewelry, you decide where you want to wear it and how many pieces you want to wear. If you only want one earring, then that's great. Rock on.
Sure, I still see guys with one earring and they are mostly older guys (like me) who probably pierced their ear back in the '80s.(like me) and either don't want anything more than that and are comfortable with wearing one earring. To me that's perfectly fine. I don't see anything wrong with that. It's a style and a choice. like any piece of jewelry, you decide where you want to wear it and how many pieces you want to wear. If you only want one earring, then that's great. Rock on.
But I wanted more. Like 10 years ago, I wanted to be just a little more "hip" than the regular older guy. I feel I have to overcompensate because if you see a picture of me, I don't exactly scream "hip" or "cool". I look downright boring--or at least I think so. So I need a little more "edge" than the usual guy.
Most of the guys I see have earrings in both ears, both young and older guys alike. That just happens to be the trend nowadays, Both ears pierced guys are more accepted and the old stereotypes of wearing earrings meaning that you are gay have been slowly dying away if they're not already dead. Does anyone really think that anymore? There may be a few people, but most people don't think this.
Most of the guys I see have earrings in both ears, both young and older guys alike. That just happens to be the trend nowadays, Both ears pierced guys are more accepted and the old stereotypes of wearing earrings meaning that you are gay have been slowly dying away if they're not already dead. Does anyone really think that anymore? There may be a few people, but most people don't think this.
So about 2 months ago, I pierced my right ear and now happily sport earrings in both ears. I admit that I am a little impatient and have been changing out my studs every few days so my right earlobe is taking a bit longer to heal up but I am confident that it will heal up eventually. There is no pain or swelling any longer and no infection.
I like wearing my earrings! There is nothing like the feeling of walking around the mall, or walking around at work and sporting earrings in both ears! My confidence level has skyrocketed over the past few months. I can't really explain it, but other guys on internet forums have experienced the same euphoria. It's like you're saying "see me I have both ears pierced and I don't give a toss what you think of me". I have to admit this is very liberating.
At my workplace, I counted 5 guys who wear earrings (including myself) and they all wear them in both ears. And as far as I know, none of them are gay.
Now I got nothing against guys being gay. This is not meant as a judgment, but I don't want to look or appear gay for the simple reason that I'm not.
I honestly don't think guys wearing earrings in both ears makes them look gay.
I honestly don't think guys wearing earrings in both ears makes them look gay.
Well, hold on. Let me rephrase that. I don't think any guy wearing "masculine" earrings in both ears makes him look gay. There is no correlation between earrings and sexual orientation. There just isn't. This is a fact, not just a theory.
I will take it a step further and correct me if I'm wrong, but most gay guys don't wear earrings. I'm sure some do, but most don't.
Let me repeat. There is no correlation between earrings on guys and sexual orientation. If this is what you think, then you are wrong, I'm sorry to tell you.
And the family? They don't really care anymore either. I went to two family functions sporting the new bling in both ears...and no one commented. At all. A little surprising, but I was happy about that.
So that's my story.
Today I still see guys in their 50's and 60's still wearing earrings and I will proudly be a part of that club and I will continue to wear my earrings until such time that I feel I no longer like the way they look on me--or I forget to put them in at the old age home.
I was at the mall yesterday and saw about 10 guys with earrings, some young, some middle-aged and some older dudes like me. They all rocked the earrings. Every last one of them.
So for all you naysayers, guys with earrings are here to stay. And if you don't like it and don't think its appropriate--then I don't really care.
And the family? They don't really care anymore either. I went to two family functions sporting the new bling in both ears...and no one commented. At all. A little surprising, but I was happy about that.
So that's my story.
Today I still see guys in their 50's and 60's still wearing earrings and I will proudly be a part of that club and I will continue to wear my earrings until such time that I feel I no longer like the way they look on me--or I forget to put them in at the old age home.
I was at the mall yesterday and saw about 10 guys with earrings, some young, some middle-aged and some older dudes like me. They all rocked the earrings. Every last one of them.
So for all you naysayers, guys with earrings are here to stay. And if you don't like it and don't think its appropriate--then I don't really care.