Yeah, agreed that kalus rosh is not appropriate there. But on the other hand, I'd rather smile and be happy there, light and not serious and somber. There are guys who go there and do not shmooze at all...it's kind of creepy. Somber is nice maybe on Yom Kippur...but when standing around naked with other men, it can be a little weird. I figure that some folks deal with the weirdness of standing there naked with people all around in two main ways:
1- Kalus rosh - make light of it, don't be too serious here, cuz yes - this
is very outside the norm that we are tzniyusdikeh ben Torahs walking around unclothed here, no?
2- Somberness and pretnding we don't see eachother - that makes it easier to take the abnormalness of the situation: "I just don't goreis you, so please don't goreis me, either, thank you....not that I noticed you, or anything!
" There is also the feeling that, "If I smile at you, you may misinterpret it as me being sexually inappropriate." Hard to admit that exists sometimes, no?
But don't you think that there has got to be a happy medium? A way to say, "Hey, yeah it's abnormal to get undressed in front of each other - but this
is a mikvah and not the hallway or street. So it's a-OK here. And we can say "Hi," and even be pleasant to each other here."
When I used to be religiously somber, it was just a way to build walls around me. I can't go back there, for that was the man who masturbated while being so frum... If we become anything new in recovery, it is 'less makpid' and less somber.
Hey - but I understood your post and agree that the kalus rosh is really out of place...but so is the somberness of the "I don't goreis you and please don't goreis me," crowd.