desperate in dc
desperate in dc

Archive for the ‘Fashion’ Category

Walk of Shame

November 1st, 2009 : No Comments »

Dear C,

First it was T-shirts. Then it was miniskirts. Now, it seems, I have been forced to relinquish the last bastion of cool: tight jeans. More specifically: jeans so constricting, you need to renounce yoga and take up escape art just to wear them, since you will only have 3 minutes between wriggling them on and wrestling them off before you expire from lack of breath.

In between, I was so proud to be able to worm my body into a size 27 pair of J Brand, pencil leg, low rise super dark denims that I immediately decided to take them for a walk, and not just to see if they would loosen up upon wearing, as the salesgirl at Barney’s Co-op had promised.  As I strolled, or rather mozied on down the street (it was hard to bend my legs), I certainly got the reaction I was hoping for. People certainly gave me the old elevator look: up and down. Just not in a good way. More like a subversive, ‘what was she thinking?’ kind of gaze. And that was the women. The men just averted their eyes.

Then I realized my basic rookie mistake: I had neglected to ask the twins their opinion before I set foot outside the door! Had I done so, of course, their howls of protest would have immediately alerted me to the full horror of the fashion faux pas I was about to make. Of course, the fact that I’m now off to return the J Brands and scout the shelves in Gap should in no way suggest I am ready to relinquish the Cause. But I suspect, dear C, that you already knew that. Merely, I now recognize there has to be  a middle way between the latest fashions and social humiliation. Oh yes, and I need to tell the twins that while I appreciate their honest opinion, do they need to make me cry?

P.

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Posted in A La Mode, DC, Fashion, Oldest Swingers in Town


RE: Walk of Shame

November 1st, 2009 : No Comments »

Darling P,

I so thoroughly enjoy your predicament.  Although I never want to be  a friend to my children, I always secretly believed they adored the fact that I was slightly cooler than all those “other” women wearing, as I overheard one daughter tell it, pants near their belly buttons.    Who knew it was possible, perhaps truly fated, that I would embarass with the exact opposite problem: a near constant and inappropriate baring of the midriff?  The consequences, I fear, may now haunt me for the entirety of my elder daughter’s teenage years.

You see, P, I recently indulged in a little belly dancing birthday party with dear friends and found myself sashaying all over the house practicing the moves.  Elder daughter,  although visibly patronizing and slightly horrified by my repeated attempts to show her the walking single hip shimmy, only really lost her cool when her father suggested I needed some other moves to accompany same (picture hip thrusting in another direction).  Daughter had the look on her face of a girl who may be unable to form any kind of intimate relationship with anyone for at least another ten years.  So, in fact, I was thrilled that the trauma of her parental encounter (who does like to think about THAT?) may dissuade her from offering her wares to ANYONE any time soon.

BUT, and I hope you’re keeping up, b/c this tale is rather lengthy and a little convoluted–there’s more.  Daughter disappeared into her room to try on her Indian princess Halloween costume.  Now, you cannot possibly know that the original costume I ordered, on the Tuesday b/f Halloween, btw, was out of stock.  It was made for “tweens” and appeared very modest and appropriate for girls our daughters’ age.  The only possible replacement was a ladies size 3.  I was a desperate woman b/c my girl failed to choose costumes until the 11th hour.

Back to the night b/f Halloween night: daughter emerged from her room screaming the dress was “too big” and “needed immediate attention.”  As I was by now rocking younger daughter to sleep in the midst of a mild illness, I told her to go see our wonderful babysitter/seamstress (my saving grace).  After a few minutes, the lovely woman appeared, concern creasing her brow and asking whether it was “ok” to modify the costume as daughter requested.  I was, frankly, a little annoyed by the interruption and told her to do whatever she wanted.  Big mistake.

Halloween morning daughter bounded out of her room looking like, according to her father, a slutty Indian princess.  I asked whether she could sit down or bend over without revealing, well, things that are often revealed when things are too short or too tight.  Her response was, “Can you?”  She was, naturally, escalated to a “2 out of 3″ on our “grounded from an upcoming event” scale.  I told her, pretty calmly, that she had to wear something under the costume to avoid being indiscrete.  I do think we have all experienced this kind of thing and know it takes a little experience to know when something is appropriate (or not). You probably already know that I haven’t fully mastered the lesson but are kind enough, unlike my daughter, not to remind me incessantly.

I guess my point, dearest P, is that the twins will soon enough likely be just like my elder daughter: they will dress just like their mum and have much less moral authority in these matters.  And certainly, we should all be grateful for that, right?

C.

P.S.  And yes, of course, hubby has asked me to consider making the tarty Indian princess my costume after all the parties…Sigh…

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Posted in DC, Fashion, Motherz in the Hood


Breast Blossoms

June 12th, 2009 : No Comments »

P,

I've made an amazing discovery that initially brought much delight but has ended in, well, sheer horror.  Are you familiar with Breast Blossoms, the delightful little flower-shaped silicone stick-ons that keep a woman from revealing unsightly nipplage?  Probably unheard of in California, but women in the East do still try and keep their ta-tas from obviously revealing every time they feel a chill wind.  Uncovered the little petals at that fabulous lingerie store across the street and used them for the first time yesterday.

Quite naturally, I told a friend that I was keeping the twin sisters discretely unexposed without a bra and asked her to admire same.  She patted my hand and said that was nice for a woman still in her forties, but wasn't possible when one reached the 5th decade as all things on top moved closer to the middle.  Her revelation was so entirely shattering–as I looked down to notice I too could have used a little more support–that I haven't been able to fully focus since.

Have become entirely obsessed with the idea that my small stature, so to speak, hasn't protected me from the inevitable effects of gravity that occur on so many body parts with the passage of time.  Somehow I assumed all those buxom blonds would one day pay for that fabulous cleavage in a way I would never be forced to.  It's as if, dearest P, there may truly be no real justice in the universe. 

Please do convince me otherwise but first give me a moment to strap the little darlings back into their harness. Thankfully, youngest cherub will never know the horror of seeing her mother's sagging bustline, as the error was quickly rectified. She will simply think the blossoms are re-useable band-aids for her baby dolls.  Really a better and clearly much more elevated purpose, wouldn't you say, P?

C.

Posted in Fashion

Pursuit of Beauty?

May 26th, 2005 : No Comments »

P,

Although my parenting philosophy may be somewhat narcissistic, I have taken another approach altogether with my beauty routine.  Don’t know if I’ve mentioned T., my Russian hairdresser (will save A., the tortuous waxer for another day).  Although I desperately want her to believe I have a certain stylish cache, she spends most of the time telling me why my hair is a disaster and my aging self is troubling at best.  And I love it.

Just yesterday I mentioned that I wanted a new ‘do.  After her initial disapproving look, she mentioned that I could look "somewhat" younger if I cut my hair shorter.  She made certain to mention that husbands don’t like short hair and I was risking my marriage.  Of course, for the trendiest style, I was willing to do it.  I do love the short cut, but the honeymoon will inevitably end with my own first wash and style.  T is clearly unaware of hair issues that arise after the visit–when it can’t be tugged into submission by a bossy Euro minx.  It’s as if I don’t exist when I leave her shop.  And I love it.

The stunning piece de resistance–the pinnacle of tortuous treatment–occurred when I inquired about some shampoo for hubby.  T returned with a bottle of men’s shampoo–for gray hair.  Now, I ask you, dearest P, how did she know I was married to a man with more than a sprinkling of salt and pepper?  I would like to say she knows him, but she doesn’t.  P, she simply assumed, based on MY appearance, that hubby was a man of a certain age.  I’d like to think I simply look expensive and have the carriage of a woman who requires one of those much older men to support my habits.  However, as I found T’s shop in a pocket of Bethesda not known for its high end retail, she knows it’s just not true.  Her steady gaze said it all.  I took the shampoo.  Now hubby is forced to give up all vanity in order to cater to the relationship I have with T.  And I love it.

Faithfully,

C.   

Posted in Fashion

Re: Pursuit of Beauty

May 26th, 2005 : No Comments »

Dear C,

When it comes to the increasingly elusive pursuit of beauty, there is only one race I trust, and that’s the French. Only they seem to treat one with the requisite frostiness and condescension that suggests I need them far more than they need me.  First, there is the silent but distinctly censorious glance at my outfit as I walk through the door. (In five years attending the same salon, I have never once left without the unsettling feeling that I got it all wrong). Then the colorist appraises my roots,  with the kind of distaste othe people reserve for picking up rats by their tails. And finally, the stylist examines me from head to toe for what actually is an eternity, before proceeding to snip my hair in precisely two places and declaring ‘c’est fini!’ with the finality of Van Gogh completing his last picture before cutting off his ear.  Frankly, I’m not sure I can tell the difference as I glance in the mirror before  leaving the salong, but  I must be getting something for  my 250 bucks, right?

Faithfully,

P.

Posted in Fashion