So there you are guys, climbing through your fifties. Every time you go to the garden center, that great little market with the fantastic meat and produce, the home improvement center, your favorite wine store, your fitness club, around the neighborhood or even, heaven forbid, the mall, you see them. Attractive, often surprisingly friendly young women---young by your standards being any woman under forty.
You feel that familiar twitch. Admit it, you've followed more than one tight young ass down the supermarket aisle that you've already been down. So what's the difference between being just another dirty old man and getting lucky? Luck has nothing to do with it. Let's examine the ground rules.
Forget the little cutties under twenty-one; the reasons they are not for you might be the subject of another article, not this one. Nineteen year old cuties who want to fuck fifty-seven year old men generally have some serious psychological problems rooted in incest and I just never got off on that kind of stuff. Then again, if your idea of a good time is some nubile little slut whose just invited you to fuck her in the ass while she screams, "oh yes, daddy, fuck your little girl's tight little butt", well, to each his own but I can't really help you. Back to the guidelines.
First, get rid of the beer belly, the love handles and/or the fat ass. You need to get in shape. It just makes good health sense. You don't need to be Mr. America but you need a little muscle tone and good cardiovascular health.
If you are losing or have lost your hair, eschew the comb over or the old man's side fringe with the shiny dome. You're one step ahead if you still have good hair but if you don't, live with it, embrace it and accept it---and consider going for shaved bald as opposed to trying to kid yourself.
If you have good hair, for God's sake don't try a cheap dye job in the home shower. There's nothing wrong with gray; at the most, consider having a professional hair stylist do a first rate, "pull through" highlighting. Get your hair cut regularly, every two weeks or so and stop going to Larry the barber; find a good stylist. Avoid growing it unfashionably---unfashionable for a mature man---long and stay away from poofy styles that come across as an old man trying to say, "look at me, I still have lots of hair!" Consider what I like to call an, "executive" cut. Most good stylists will know what you mean.
Clothes make the man...sort of. Don't try to dress as if you are twenty-five; you will look silly. At the same time, stay away from old man clothes. Avoid polyester of any type. Once you lose that lard ass and those love handles, consider, jeans, Kakis or slacks which accentuate your trimness without looking as if you were poured into them. Brand name Polo shirts are classic and ageless in warm weather. I wear them as does my twenty-five year old, buff, surfer son.
The LL Bean look in flannel shirts when the temperature drops is always good. Sweaters---good ones with some color and an interesting design---are always good choices. White Nikes are not. Slip on boat shoes are good in the summer. Classic loafers work well when you decide to be a little more dressy. Thet need to be brown or black and leather, not white and plastic. A nice pair of leather hiking shoes---Orvis, Land's End, Bean---for cooler weather. Stay away from bling; a conservative dress watch and an understated sports watch should be part of your wardrobe. Nothing wrong with a class ring from a top university. No earring---please!
If you've got liver spots, funny moles or warts, go see a dermatologist and get them taken care of. First, they may be cancerous and second they scream, "I am old!" Get your teeth cleaned regularly, at least twice a year. If you've got gum problems, get them attended to. Learn to floss. Use a whitening tooth paste. Throw out any cologne in your medicine cabinet.
Facial hair is a mixed bag; a fifty six year old man with a soul patch looks silly. If you look good with a beard---and I don't mean you look like Santa---then go with it, but have that same stylist keep it neatly trimmed on a regular basis. A well maintained, day's growth, on the face but not on the neck, which says, I didn't shave on purpose, can make you look rugged as opposed to, "hell I just didn't feel like shaving today." While you've got the electric clippers out, a little careful public hair shaping---don't shave it all off---might be in order. If you can get your---preferably, young and female---hair stylist to handle this chore also, you really don't need to read any farther along.
Unfortunately, your vehicle says a lot about you. Men over fifty in sports cars look desperate, as in, I'm desperately trying to recapture my youth. I won't even comment on min-vans. Classic luxury sedans of foreign origin are good if they fit your persona. SUVs are fine but for heaven's sake pick one that has a distinctly rugged, male look, as if to say, yes, I actually drive this off road. The, I haven't bothered to wash my vehicle in a month, look is not good but a little fresh mud from a recent off road adventure is okay. Keep the inside clean and tidy. Pickups are great and they don't have to be new since truck manufacturers don't change styles that often---but they should be well maintained. As Joe Diffie once said. "Every Girl Loves a Pickup Man" or something like that.
Music says a lot about a person. Occasionally read the style section in the local paper and see what's hot. Go to a good record store and listen to an eclectic mix of recently release albums for free. You might well find something new that you like; if you have kids, talk to them about what they like.
I'm fifty seven and I still love Hendrix, the Doors and Tommy James, but I also like Maroon Five, Gwen Stefani and a number of the newer rockers with a distinctly jazz bent. Don't pretend you love rap, dance pop or hip-hop...unless, heaven forbid, you really do. Ipods are fun, but a well chosen selection of music which demonstrates eclectic taste in CD allows a visitor to your home or vehicle to get a sense of who you are musically. Please stay away from fifties doo-wop and anything by Abba or Seals and Croft.
Now you don't need to thump up to every stop sign, but at least put in a decent auto sound system. Burn your cassette player. If you looked at the CDs in my ten year old pickup truck, you'd find jazz, Coltrane in fact, a little classical, Mozart always, some classic and modern country, George Straight, Toby Keith, Miranda Lambert, Hank and Patsy---and Maroon Five. My radio is usually tuned to a local progressive, pop/country station. No easy listening allowed!
Carriage is defined as how you carry yourself. For God's sake, don't shuffle. Walk with purpose and stand up straight. Be conscious and aware of what is going on around you. Keep your head on a swivel and your eyes moving. Smile easily but maintain that overall look that says you can take care of yourself. It will not only make you seem younger but it also will help you avoid being mugged.
When you acknowledge another person and greet them, make eye contact---particularly if they are female and interesting. When you stop to examine something or read a label in a store, don't get that glazed look that makes it appear that you are having a senior moment. Be purposeful.
Let me relate a quick anecdote. A very dear friend of mine had a very sudden and unexpected heart attack and died a couple of years ago. He was seventy-four; I thought he might have been in his early sixties but wouldn't have guessed his age. I met him at a private shooting club I used to belong to. We both shot pistols competitively; he was really, really good. I used to watch him practice. He'd set up realistic scenarios, fire on the move, hot reload, engage moving targets---he was phenomenal.
He had a custom made, short style combat pistol with a beaver tail grip that had been designed for his small hands. He had a concealed carry license and had done a short stint in law enforcement after he retired from the military. In practice and competition, he always worked from a holster; he was fast and first shot certain.
We had a lot of law enforcement people in the club. Immediately following 911, the government tried to reconstitute the air marshal program and were asking people from other agencies to apply. The problem was, most of them couldn't pass the outrageously difficult shooting qualification. Sadly, they ended up watering down the requirement in desperation.
Getting back to the story, one of the guys in the club who was an air marshal set up a couple of ranges to duplicate the qualification requirements. Our club had a number of nationally ranked competitive pistol shooters, including two of the best female shooters in the world. The long and the short of it was, that only one person successfully qualified on the first attempt, our dear seventy-four year old friend, and he damned near shot a perfect score.
There is a moral here. That old man, through a thirty year military career and twenty years which followed, had carried a gun almost every day of his life. Other than in war time, he'd never had to draw it, show it or fire it in response to a real life threat. He wasn't a millimeter over five foot eight and not over 150 pounds dripping wet. If some gang bangers had decided that they wanted to hurt him, they would have lost---none of us ever had any doubt about it.