CarolAnnSFO:
I would be
so tempted to wear a Yankees ball cap, but that would get me lynched, where I live.

I’d wear a hat. Our custom in the past was hats or babushkas, but I’d rather wear a hat then a babushka.
Crazy Internet Junkie Society
****Carrier of the Angelic Sparkles Sprinkle Bag
See, I knew I liked you Carol! It was hats, hats, hats before the headcoverings came off. I have tried to explain this to people until I am blue in the face…it was NEVER always veils!!! Hispanic women wore a type of scarf that was not necessarily a lacey mantilla, but very ulitarian, to keep out the cold as well as cover the head. Other immigrants wore their shawls over their heads. But in this country, it has been the HAT, or the babuska, or the triangle with the strings that tie under the chin, or the bandana, or those shades of the 50s/ 60s chiffon headscarves my mother so loved. Little girls had nasty, itchy elastic cords that fit under the chin of their hats. Grown-up ladies used hat pins or had combs sewed into the back of the hats to keep them from falling off. But they were HATS.
So hats are not my favorite thing, and I can never find one that looks good on me. If I could find a hat that looked good on me, I’d be tempted to wear it. I procured an Easter bonnet one year as an adult, a boater with a band around the crown, wore it to Mass. From the photos, I’d say I looked as if I were trying out for the British Royal Family, frump division.
Jimmy Akin and one other guy whose name escapes me at the moment (Colin Devlin?), both excellent, professional apologists, have explained that this was a tradition that is NO LONGER BINDING. The Pope has nothing thus far, and the Curia has not spoken. I am sorry that some people think in these days of major public sinning and murder of innocents, angels are going to wreak major havoc because women do not cover their heads in the church building in front of the Presence.
Know what I think? Get mad, Other People, this is my
opinion, as I am not the Pope or a member of a curial committee. I think a lot of Catholic guys are romanticizing something that never really happened, mostly because many of them didn’t have “the headcovering rule” when they were growing up. They’ve misinterpreted a scripture passage that was meant for a set time and really involved propriety and modesty, not an actual, factual veil. The rest don’t remember very well, mostly because they were not the ones who had to wear said headcovering. And I think some (not all to be sure) of these men think it is alluring that women place lace over their heads, with or without the conviction to do so, or the legal requirement. Even the term “veiling” seems romantic and a call to days-gone-by, because they are not thinking Talliban veiling, or at least Saudi chador-type veiling, which is probably close to biblical veiling- but lacey, feminine, filmy veiling.
BTW- It is also biblical to for women of a certain age to go to a public, relgious bathouse once a month and take an immersion after their monthlies.
As to the ladies who desire to return to this practice on their own- fabulous! You go right ahead and cover your heads. Most of you do this as a pious practice, and that’s fine with those of us who don’t.