Anyone accepting this blog as their exclusive source of
wisdom – modesty impedes me from revealing the exact number – knows, without
question, that personal clothing have feelings.
I have written about the apparel who (they deplore being identified
as “that”) took understandable umbrage at being left behind when I went on
vacation. In the “Clothing Fraternity” that’s
a palpable insult.
This one is worse.
“Moving Day” is the “Day of Atonement” for t-shirts. Wait.
Before I explain that (as if explanation were necessary)…
We have a rule in our house:
You buy a new t-shirt, you get rid of an old one. (This rule is not exclusive to t-shirts. Shoes, underwear, sweat sox… so no knee-jerk
attacks about “t-shirt discrimination.”)
The reason for this directive is obvious.
Haberdasherial
glut reduction.
Okay, where was I? Oh
yeah.
“Moving Day” is the “Day of Atonement” for t-shirts.” On that day, it is determined which t-shirts
shall live (as essential elements of my wardrobe) and which t-shirts shall be ignominiously
tossed onto the “Giveaway Pile”, winding up who the heck knows where. (“My
cousin wipes windshields.”)
This is bigger
than “You are not going to Hawaii.”
This time, it’s serious.
I bought four new t-shirts on our recent visit to Indiana, a
necessity not a pampered indulgence,
as I wear t-shirts every day, and some of my “regulars” are fading and
shrinking. (Unless I’m getting bigger. No. They are definitely shrinking.)
Over the years – fifteen-plus, or so – I have accumulated
thirty-seven t-shirts. With the recent
arrivals, it is functionally necessary to “cull the herd”, the determining criteria
of “Who shall perish and who shall be saved” less practical than idiosyncratically
emotional.
Determining the fate of others: It is an onerous responsibility. (So I know exactly how God feels.) But it has to be done. Otherwise, we face crippling overcrowding in
the Pomerantz clothes closet.
(Point of Personal Privilege. I’d like to take a moment to pay tribute to
the person who – I don’t know when,
maybe back in the sixties – first saw t-shirts as promotional billboards. To me, that person deserves the Nobel Prize
for “Seeing White T-shirts And Having The Ingenuity and Insight To Dye Them
Various Colors And Put Writing On Them.”
And if they don’t have a Nobel
Prize for that, they ought to. Who cares about Physics anyway? I mean, it’s something. But does it
really compare to the iconic “I’m With Stupid”?)
And so we begin.
There they are, laid nervously out on the bed. Thirty-three of them will remain. Four of them will be history.
The question is…
“Which four?”
Two t-shirts are immediately off the eliminational
table: The t-shirt presented to me by
the Guild for my participation in the
last Writers’ Strike, and my commemorative t-shirt from the Camp Ogama reunion,
both still in mint condition, from having never been worn.
The rest, however, are under equal consideration:
There is the highly imaginative “Hand” t-shirt, now old and
fading. (Not dissimilar to its owner.) The thing is, it’s a classic. Citizens of Michigan – and a few others,
perhaps, but not many – know that the state is geographically shaped like a
hand. This t-shirt includes the drawing of
an open right hand facing straight forward, while the left hand’s “Peter
Pointer” finger indicates the corresponding spot where the t-shirt was originally
purchased, in this case, the fleshy part down from the baby finger representing
Harbor County Michigan, situated in the southwest corner of the state. I can’t throw that away. It is an unerring “Conversation
Starter.” I mean, look how long it took me
to describe it. And it was worth every
word. Wasn’t it?
There’s “The Great Ones” t-shirt – four renown Indian chiefs
– Red Cloud, Geronimo, Sitting Bull and one I don’t know, posed like the
American presidents on Mount Rushmore.
The shirt has an identifiable pinhole in it. But… I don’t know… haven’t we done enough to
the Indians already?
The “El Salvador” t-shirt was too small for me from the
get-go. But it was a gift from our
magnificent housekeeper Connie. How
would she feel, I wonder, if, in the course of her labors, she goes into the
sunroom and spots her generous present, languishing hopelessly on the “Giveaway
Pile”? As a “sensitivity tipoff”, during
my selection process, she happened to enter the bedroom and asked, with detectable
interest, “What are you doing?” She
seemed to intuit the diminutive “El Salvador” t-shirt being precariously on the
chopping block. Could I have the
audacity to prove this magnanimous woman correct? (What do you think?)
And on it went.
Through the daughterly acknowledgements – Anna’s multiple bestowments of
a Willie Nelson t-shirt, a Nashville Café
Loveless t-shirt advertising “Hot Biscuits and Country Ham”, a t-shirt
touting the 163rd Annual
Muskingum County Fair in South-East Ohio.
What about the redundancies:
Four t-shirts from our visit to Turkey.
Would it be fair to the “one-off’s” to hold on to them all?
There was a t-shirt purchased at the gift shop adjoining the
Gettysburg battlefield. Could I in good
conscience casually toss it away after they gave their lives that that nation
might live? I most certainly could not.
And a passionate ditto for the Ford’s
Theatre t-shirt.
Let me tell you, this was no easy assignment. But finally…
I make my choices. (Which
will remain private, sparing the inevitable humiliation.) And the job is completed.
Though not entirely.
I also bought some new underwear.
2 comments:
I'm glad I don't live on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. That could give you an inferiority complex. Or do they have separate T-shirts for that?
You have more willpower than I have when it comes to getting rid of T-shirts...or shirts of any kind for that matter. I still have shirts dating back to 1969 I can't bring myself to part with.
Post a Comment