Friday, February 26, 2010

Giant Dwarf vs. The Mall

I hate shopping for clothes. And this is not just because, after I turned 40, my metabolism came to a screeching halt and I gained more weight than I did during my freshman year of college (and that was A LOT of pizza). No, I’ve disliked clothes shopping since I was a kid.


Let’s start with my stature. Not my community stature; my physical height. I am short. Not 5’3” or 5’4” short......and stop your bitching, those of you who are that tall.....5’4” was my ideal height. That’s how short I am. And, as noted in my previous post, I am well-endowed in certain areas. This makes me completely unsuitable for “off-the-rack” (please note that I first heard this term from a very heterosexual man while shopping for a wetsuit at a surf shop).


Shopping for clothing is an excruciating process for me. First, I have to decide if I am going to go alone or with a friend. If I go with a friend, I feel like I am torturing them and coercing them into a day of pain; I also feel I have limited time to adequately hate myself in the dressing room. If I go by myself, I have no one’s opinion to help me make decisions and I have no one’s shoulder to cry on while in the dressing room. It’s my own personal Catch-22.


Which makes clothes shopping an extremely rare occasion for me. Believe it or not, and despite the weight gain (thank you, Lycra), I've had two of the pairs of pants that I wear for work for over 8 years. Seriously. They’re two colors of the same classic design, unlined pants I bought at Old Navy ON SALE. When I need a new pair of work pants (I can’t wear the same two pairs every day, of course), I practically have a nervous breakdown at the thought of having to go to a store, try on several pairs of pants, and make a decision which will be permanent after I take the pants to the tailor (I’m short, remember?).


As a mental health professional, I suppose it would be appropriate to study my family of origin and explore my early experiences with shopping and consumerism. This is easy. My mother is one of the best shoppers in the world, but, unfortunately, has a completely different taste and fashion sense than I do. I can’t tell you how many hours my brothers and I spent in discount clothing stores with my mother and her friends and her friends’ kids (to this day, when I see Daniel or Shira or Iris or Penny, we all reminisce about playing games under the racks at House of Bargains). We lived the guilded-ghetto shopping life but not all of us received 'the gift."


Despite my brother’s devastating experience of having all of his Matchbox Cars (stored in the Dunkin’ Donuts Munchkin box) stolen while he was waiting for my mother at a department store, he has also become an excellent bargain hunter. (Though, he rarely does shop at department stores, and now I see the connection.) I once sat with a group of the Golden Child’s friends who were joking about what he could buy for a dollar: a pair of jeans, a jacket, underwear, shoes.......the list went on and on, until someone yelled out, and almost completely seriously, “and a house.”


The Golden Child is an expert at comparison shopping and finding deals. Now, not everything he purchases is top-quality, and there was the famous incident where he talked me into buying a stereo from a roadside flea market: the seller told me to come back the following week if the console didn’t work and he would give me my money back. Oh, I came back the following week alright. But the seller wasn’t there. I was furious, called my brother to yell at him, to which he calmly responded: “so I was wrong. I’ll give you the 30 bucks.” That was only a partial consolation, though, because now I was stuck with a piece of dead stero equipment. So, a few weeks later, I threw it in the trunk of my car, drove 500 miles and left the console on my brother’s doorstep.


Let it also be duly noted that my brother, a physician, wears jeans to work. And not fancy, dark designer jeans. No, I ‘ve seen him wear frayed, faded jeans, that he did indeed buy for a dollar, to work, along with one of his many cheeky t-shirts. Am I jealous? Fuck yeah. Not only can he wear jeans to work, he can find jeans, for a DOLLAR, that fit him perfectly.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Giant Dwarf vs. The Telephone

The phone rings.

I avoid it.

It continues to ring.

Like the kind of arts geek I am, I have programmed my landline to ring Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, so now I'm humming "Ode to Joy" as I look at the Caller ID.

(Caller ID is the best invention since sliced bread. I resisted it for years until I had a scare from a potential stalker, and then signed up immediately. I have not regretted that decision since.)

I LOVE the idea that I can screen who is calling me and pick and choose my conversations.

That being said, I still hate talking on the phone.

Unless I'm in the car.

I just can't connect with people over the phone. Now, if it's long distance and I hardly talk to the person ever, I can waive my phone-aphobia and have a conversation, if only to catch up. But, if you call me every night (and this means you, A), I cannot be a witty conversationalist. I'm just not capable of it.

When I tell a story, I need one of two things: A live, present audience or a computer screen. The latter includes texting, another technology I resisted until only a year and a half ago and then It. Changed. My. Life.

When I'm on the phone, especially at home, I've got other things to do. The dishes need washing, the bills need paying, the cat needs petting. The TV needs watching and the email needs reading. I don't have time to talk on the phone, and, if I do need to talk on the phone, I will be distracted.

At work, if I'm on hold for a long time or I'm having a long conversation, I play Solitaire. Really. It calms me down and I'm able to concentrate on the conversation and not be rude to the caller. For some reason, I don't have Solitaire at home. (I must remember this when I replace my computer; if there's no Solitaire in the bundle, that will be a deal-breaker.) So I suppose it makes sense that it's easier for me to talk on the phone while I'm driving; I'm doing two things at once (of course I wear a Bluetooth....I'm no scofflaw!) and I'm sufficiently distracted from the conversation to actively participate in it.

So, if you call me at home and I seem insensitive or rude or distracted, or all three, know that it's not you. It's me. And I'll just have to end this call and email or text you so we can set up a time to hang out.