There are times when it becomes painfully obvious to myself that I must look like the biggest child at work. It doesn't help that I'm the youngest by a wide margin, and that I'm one of the only males; but firmly clinching the title of Child in A Man's Body doesn't really bother me too much. I find it funny for the most part.
For instance, my desk is littered with toys. I've got a couple Tanlges, a rubber/bendy thingie, a couple flexible action figures of some cartoon characters, a table-top football setup; and the wall behind my chair is papered with photos from racing events, Vegas trips, and the like.
My wardrobe is probably a joke amongst my co-workers as well. Although I usually where dress shirts and slacks, I only occasioanlly wear a tie or designer shoes; and I only shave like every three or four days. I looked down at my shoes this morning, and as I was coloring in the worn spots on the black leather with a Sharpie I realized that I've had these shoes since I was in college. I mean, I've got a nicer pair of shoes, but I don't want to fuck them up, so I don't wear them every day. If I come to work wearing my Florshiems, a silk tie, and a fresh shave; it means I'm going to be sitting down with the million-dollar club and hashing out strategy. Unfortunately that doesn't happen as often as I'd like; but I'm working to change that.
And then there's my personality: highly informal, colloquial and humorous. I tend to fun around with my higher-ups when most other people wouldn't. Not in a disrespectful manner or anything; some of them just have that open-door type of style and don't mind a little back and forth. Plus, those guys are really funny if you can get them going; so I don't rib them unless they're in that comfortable mode.
So basically when you put all this together, I look like a typical kidployee. I suppose it would strike some people as highly unprofessional behavior - except I tend to produce satisfying results. I get lots of accolades and praise, but part of me wonders if that's just because they don't expect good work from a dude that looks like Shaggy most days. I'm pretty sure the praise is just their way of trying to motivate me to dress more for the office instead of the playground, and for the love of Pete, put the goddamn toys away. Personally? I get a kick out of it.
I'm a 43 year old professional who just doesn't dress the part. I get a haircut about once every six months (when I finally cant' stand myself), and typically wear sandals and a hawaiian shirt around the office unless I have to meet with someone.
Of course being their best engineer helps me get away with it...
So, is it age? Or just attitude?
I'm a 43 year old professional who just doesn't dress the part. I get a haircut about once every six months (when I finally can't stand myself), and typically wear sandals and a hawaiian shirt around the office unless I have to meet with someone.
Of course being their best engineer helps me get away with it...
So, is it age? Or just attitude?
I'm 36 and I dress more like a twenty year old, and look maybe 30 if that. The unfortunate thing about that is some people think you are as old as you look so they treat me like a kid. I guess I'll be laughing when I'm 50, but right now it fuckin' pisses me off. Of course if I'm 50 and I'm still in tech support then I won't be laughing...
I am *not* the typical teacher-type (my line of work, btw) and when I tell people that I teach middle school I get "the look." You know, the one that says, "are you serious? you couldn't possibly be a teacher," - yeah that look. But, I'm cool with it... cause the kids like me, the other teachers tolerate me, and I do get a lot of respect. I have to work a little harder to get the administration to notice me (and I know a whole lot more about their jobs than they do because of my experience) but that's alright with me, cause when I pop off with something genius, I love the looks I get from it.
Be who you are... you will be more appreciated for being yourself than for pretending to be someone you are not.