Every so often I write something that tries to capture a feeling we all recognise but rarely articulate. Lately I’ve been thinking about the idea of cool – not the shallow, commercialised version, but the deeper cultural force that shapes creativity, identity, and resistance. This is my attempt to defend coolness as something meaningful, necessary, and worth celebrating. I hope it resonates.
Cool isn’t just a vibe. It is a cultural engine – the pulse that jolts us awake when everything starts to look the same. Defending cool is not about protecting elitism. It is about protecting the spark that breaks monotony and keeps culture moving. Cool is not a closed club. It is the arena where boldness shows up, takes a risk, and dares the rest of us to evolve.
Think of cool as the art of breaking moulds without breaking the rhythm. It is the effortless stride, the rebel’s grin, the beat everyone feels before they know why. Cool thrives in contradiction: standing out while somehow belonging, pushing boundaries while still respecting the roots. And the reason it is hard to defend? Because cool does not look the same on everyone – and that diversity is exactly its power.
Cool has always come from the margins. From jazz musicians in smoke-filled rooms, poets in basement cafés, skaters carving their own rules, and creators who refused to wait for permission. These people did not chase approval. They chased authenticity, and the world followed. That raw, stubborn authenticity is the heart of cool. Not a trophy for a select few, but a signal fire for anyone daring enough to be real.
Cool is also cultural currency. It rewards originality and creativity. It can feel elitist because it raises the bar – but those bars are not gates. They are launchpads. Cool pushes society forward by spotlighting those who colour outside the lines and expand what culture can be. Without cool, everything flattens into sameness. Innovation suffocates.
Yes, cool demands confidence, risk-taking, and vision. But that is true of every meaningful pursuit. We do not call bravery elitist. Or innovation. Or excellence. Cool is simply excellence in authenticity – a salute to the people who make culture worth paying attention to.
Cool is also universal. Whether you are in Lagos, Tokyo, São Paulo, or London, cool speaks the same language: break the rules, stay true, make it resonate. It brings people together not through privilege but through shared creativity, shared nerve, and shared originality.
Defending cool means defending the fearless side of humanity. It means defending the idea that being unapologetically yourself is not only admirable but essential for cultural evolution. Cool keeps tradition fresh, keeps innovation restless, and keeps us leaning forward instead of falling back.
So the next time cool is dismissed as elitist, remember this. It is not a whisper meant to exclude. It is a rallying cry meant to inspire. Cool is the wave that moves the tide, the spark that refuses to fade, the rhythm that refuses to flatten. It is worth defending – boldly, fiercely, and yes, coolly.