Style is what we're after, certainly, but it's easier to talk about tailors, personalities and buttonholes.
UC there are thousands of examples, but here is one:
“Getting down to a scratch handicap is what we're after, but it is easier to talk about new technology carbon graphite irons, the swing of Arnold Palmer and the latest generation of golf balls.”
A lot of Style duffers have the golf cart before the horse. This is essentially what I am trying to point out. Rather than go out and spend hours in practice and study it is easier to buy another golf club, the latest issue of XYZ magazine where all the secrets are revealed, a new sail, a new lens for the camera, a new saddle, a new set of gears for the bike, marry a new woman, join a new club, find new friends, take up Yoga, buy a new hormone enhanced after shave…..and it is easier to go out and buy a new suit on Savile Row.
Trillions are spent in marketing every year to convince us that anything we desire can be bought. The charlatans can be found on TV, in magazines, in books, chats, forums ready to sell us anything and everything. But Style, like most things of true and enduring value, cannot be purchased.
Having attained, or at least getting closer, to maturity some of us in the sadder but wiser set will advise young men to get their Style horse (and why not six horses) in front of their carts.
Style just is, it seems to me, the sum of everything a man is.
And we can study the various elements that make up the whole, and put what we learn into practice. That is what a student of Style would do.
We are in the process of identifying and cataloguing a set of characteristics and traits common in Stylish men here, in the “real” Style forum, and with this data we can draw a number of conclusions about what creates the mysterious attractive force we desire. Few of us will attain it, but we should have some fun trying and improving.
Cheers
M Alden