How Do I Look?

I’ve been Zooming around a lot lately. I’ve had virtual dinners with friends, virtual classes (on both sides of the virtual desk), virtual doctor visits, and some virtual interviews about my new book. (Yes, this is a shameless plug for 25 Great Sentences and How They Got That Way, which debuted this week.) What I haven’t had is the ability to ignore my appearance while Zooming. I suspect I’m not alone. In fact, I bet the first humans fretted over their skin and hair whenever they knelt to drink from a pond.

These New York City signs, snapped pre-pandemic, indicate a whole new level of obsession. First up, skin:

I admit that German Black Forest sounds authoritative, though why those ingredients should surpass, say, the Appalachians I could not explain. And what has to happen for something to be wild crafted? Is a deer or a bear involved? A squirrel? For me, the words that tip this sign into lunacy are the last three. Does anyone create a system designed not to work?

A little more skin:

Given the lack of hyphens, this shop may be offering a consultation about the camera you use to check your scalp. Or, the store may have its own special scalp camera. Either way: eww. Why would you want to stare at follicles and record the experience for posterity?

Now, hair. Here’s a message I agree with:

Keep each tress to yourself, please! It should be easy to avoid passing one, if you’re Zooming. Not so easy, but much more important: stay safe!

6 thoughts on “How Do I Look?

  1. R, J, Jeffreys

    Thanks for this humorous and excellent post, and for the laughs that it caused for me, Gerri! And, I am very much looking forward to your next post here.
    Best regards,
    Jeff

    Reply
  2. Ellie Presner

    Great post, Gerri!
    Now: you know how sometimes a word looks wrong, and even more wrong the longer you stare at it?
    Well, sometimes the opposite happens. I looked at “tresspassing” above and it looked right. So finally I had to look it up!! Am I deteriorating or what? Good grief!

    Reply
  3. Junior Santos

    This staring at TRESSPASSING also occurred to me. What was wrong with it? I couldn’t find a flaw. Defined it with my own words: entering a place where you’re not allowed. Finally looked it up and found that the second ‘S’ is the only one who’s trespassing.

    Reply
    1. Geraldine Post author

      Hi, Junior. I was playing around with their spelling error, as “tress” refers to hair. I probably should have defined both words in the post. Sorry about that!

      Reply

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