Note: Though published today, this post was written
before we went away to Hawaii.
My clothes are mad at me.
Not all of them, but enough to make it uncomfortable for me to go into
my clothes closet. There’s a drumbeat of
insurrection. The mood has turned
ugly. It’s not quite Syria, but I feel
like the top guy there, my enemy, not “the people”, but an aggrieved wardrobe.
A little background…
Dr. M works, and I don’t.
We depart for Hawaii, early on a Saturday morning. That means, since her weekdays are busy, that
she packs for our trip on the weekend before.
(I bring the suitcases up from the basement. It is one of my household duties, along with
changing the light bulbs and paying the phone and cable bills. I am sure there are other responsibilities,
but they do not occur to me at the moment.)
When somebody else is packing, and your empty suitcase is
looking at you, even though your days are considerably freer than the packer’s,
you invariably pack too. Otherwise, you look
like a slacker. Which, by not working,
is suspiciously like what I already appear to be.
That’s when the trouble begins.
When I pack a week before my trip, an inevitable process
takes place. First, I decide what to
pack – what is going, and what is not. I
pack what is going – the stuff I preferentially like to wear and want to wear
on the trip.
Then, during the intervening period – the week between the
packing and the departing – I am relegated to wearing clothing that did not
make the cut, meaning I am attiring myself in apparel I would otherwise never
put on.
What this means is that, for an entire week, my wardrobe
consists of clothing I do not exactly hate, but if the trip lasts eight days as
our trip to Hawaii will, every morning during the time before we
leave, when I decide what to put on, I begin the process of, say, selecting a
t-shirt – which I change every day and have therefore packed eight for the trip
– with my ninth favorite option.
The result is that I have recently been seen walking around
in faded t-shirts, overstretched t-shirts, t-shirts that once fit but were
shrunk in the laundry, a “Canada” t-shirt with an over-sized moose on it, a
gift t-shirt from South Africa whose spear-carrying warriors, through wear and
tear, are now shredded and incomplete, a once-funny t-shirt bearing the
lettering “Designated Driver” and showing a mounted dog with the reins in his
mouth, controlling the horse as his master/rider dozes drunkenly in the saddle
behind him, and a joke t-shirt bought at a western poetry gala equating bean
eating with farting, the last two t-shirts overstaying their once-reflexive ability
to provoke laughter.
Since I packed a week early, I am stuck with looking stupid
for an entire week. (I used t-shirts as
an example, but I am talking “top to bottom”, underwear, which went through a
transition from jockeys to boxers – I am back wearing the jockeys – and
past-its-prime drawstring pants, whose drawstrings have somehow lost their
ability to hold up the pants.)
It is not like these outfits, in stock but never worn, are
fooled by this sudden call to sartorial duty.
These are no “bench players” thrust into the game, with hopes of proving
themselves and being elevated to the regular rotation. These castoffs unquestionably know the
score.
“He is only wearing us because he has to.”
Hey, don’t complain.
You weren’t discarded on the “give-way” pile.
“The “give-away” pile would be better. At least poor people would be wearing us. We’re incarcerated in the dresser. We’re like Hinckley. A temporary release, and it’s back in the
slammer. Okay, for him, it’s a nuthouse, but it’s the same idea. We are never getting out!”
It is “Dresser Drawer Purgatory” for the t-shirts. And they know it, down to their one hundred
percent cotton threads.
Once, they were wardrobe “favorites.” I had selected
them after all, except for the South African t-shirt which as I said was a gift
though I’d have definitely chosen it if I were there, and the “Moose” t-shirt, a from-the-get-go mistake, which I
picked from a tiny array in my hotel gift shop because I wanted a souvenir from
Toronto and it was either that or a Mountie doll.
But now, like a former girlfriend where things did not
conclude happily, it was not easy to look them in the face.
“We once meant something to each other, and now you’ve cast
me aside. Die! Die!
Die!”
It’s understandable.
I am going to Hawaii, with the t-shirts I like better.
And they’re
staying home, with moths.
I am sympathetic to their plight. But it is
the natural way of things, isn’t it?
“When you’re hot, you’re hot; and when you’re not you’re not”?
No. This is more
painful. I am not simply rejecting these t-shirt; I am exploiting them. I am wearing them before the trip, only because
I don’t want to get the t-shirts I am taking instead of them dirty.
Then – and they know it – it’s right back in the drawer!
There’s this story I’ve been meaning to write about a guy in
the South during the Civil War who proposes the idea of freeing the slaves one
day a week. The way I’m behaving, I feel
very much like that guy.
“You’re free! And
now you’re back.”
It is undeniable. I
am a slaveholder, with t-shirts!
Oh, the guilt! The unredeemable
shame!
I don’t know…
I guess I could
take the Moose t-shirt.
3 comments:
Dear Mr Pomerantz; You'd not be slacking if you packed closer to the departure date. I do not know Dr. M. or you that well, but judging from your posts I'd guess that the pressures you feel the most are self imposed.
yours in slackerdom,
-z
Now, you'll have a new t-shirt from Hawaii to mix into your rotation before your next trip.
Moral: Have 2 weeks' worth of good t-shirts.
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