Subtitle: What hues are you?
A quick story before coming to the point of this post:
At an early age it was apparent to me that girls who were overly concerned with their new dresses and other clothing, staying clean and being pretty had far less fun than those who were willing, as I was, to climb that tree, get in that creek, risk the mud and catch those frogs (turtles, crayfish, etc…). Likewise, while pursuing those activities I found that running shoes, jeans and t-shirts were far more practical and comfortable than tights (shudder!) and dresses. Perhaps I romanticized my own image of a tom-boy but I likewise began to refuse all apparel associated with my vision of weak, scared girly girls. Out were any shades of pink or other pastel colours. Shoes could only be boys’ (as the girls’ shoes were always white or pink) and legs were only to be covered with pants, never skirts. I even refused to join the girl guides in grade 5 when I discovered that blue dresses with hemlines near the knee were the rule and pants were not allowed. (Thankfully, for girls like I was, now the rule seems generally to be simply blue clothing selected from an assortment of approved casual apparel.)
Since those early years, I’ve found that dresses aren’t the torment they once were and I happily own and wear them on occasion although my favourite pants and jeans get worn far more often. My closet contains a few shirts that one might otherwise label a pastel colour but by and large, my wardrobe is still dominated by the cool side of the spectrum and by deep dark rich colours (e.g. navy, burghundy, deep purple, black, deep green etc..). With the exception of a fleece sweater that I’d describe as a dark cranberry and was once called pink by a dear friend (who became momentarily less dear as I protested the pink label with great enthusiasm and shock at her mistake), I own NOTHING pink.
And I admit it, I simply don’t care for pink. In my mind, it will forever be associated with Barbie, Mary Kay Cosmetics and an unwillingness to step off the pavement out of one’s high heels into hiking boots and a back country trail.
So last week, when out of the blue (so to speak) The Man asked me if I liked pink, I snorted my tea out through my nose and aghast, denied such a ridiculous notion. His face fell and I immediately realized that he’d bought me something pink for my birthday. I think I did a pretty poor job of trying to make him feel better without outright embracing the notion of a pink addition to my wardrobe. He didn’t say much and I felt sort of badly. (But PINK! ? Gah! It’s sort of like me asking him to wear pleated slacks. With a Hawaiian print shirt.)
However, because I love him, I decided that I would TRY (ever so hard) to wear whatever it was that he had bought. (At least once.)
So it was with some relief that I opened my birthday gift to discover that the fuschia/bubble gum pink gift was a Thermarest camping mattress and not a new blouse! It coordinates with my red down sleeping bag in a cheesy, Valentine’s day sort of way, which makes me think of chocolate (a good thing if chocolate can be had) and most important (obviously) it’s entirely functional: It will keep my backside insulated from the cold ground and is designed for winter camping, it doesn’t have a big blister in it as my other (deep green & black) mattress that I bought myself years ago does and it packs down smaller and lighter than my other mattress. It’s a GOOD thing! (as Martha Steward might say in her pastel coloured blouse).
Perhaps I may start associating this particular shade of pink, with the pleasures of camping and hiking. Just maybe!
6 comments:
That's hilarious!
And whoever would have thought air mattresses came in pink?
Yep. Who'd have thunk it?
Perhaps it's part of a new marketing scheme trying to convince those girly gals that they too, can venture out without losing their chic fashion sense.
"Shop with us! Even Barbie goes camping!"
That, and the mattress would show up well if using it to flag down a rescue helicopter.
Ah,... it's so good to find a kindred non-pink spirit. Must remember to show my mom this post.
I used to feel the same way but now in my old age I have reclaimed pink and decided we do not have to adhere to the Matell and Disney definitions of a perfectly nice colour. To long pink has suffered the indignities of the Barbie isle. Plus I am pretty sure no matter how much pink I wear I will never be mistaken for a girlly girl or a princess!
My daughter however will not wear pink - she is too tiny and cute to pull it off.
Good for you Lauri!
I agree that we shouldn't let Matell & Disney dictate the hues of our wardrobe.
Now as an adult, I have no problem with others wearing pink, no matter their age or sex, but still don't like it for me.
I had a friend who was also a non-pink kindred spirit who decided to wear a pink shirt out one night. She'd never been hit on as much as when she wore her pink shirt, which sort of disturbed us both as much as we also found it funny at the same time. Although I was single then, wearing it with the intent to pick up was still not something I ever wanted to try! (although perhaps because I wouldn't have had the faintest clue what to say or do..)
Hum,
Don't know if I have worn pink to 'go out'. Might have to try that out.
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