To Shop is to Cope
I'm in a Commerce outlet mall, feverishly darting from store to store. A
swirl of images plays across my frontal lobe.
There are caramel-colored leather boots and pale pink thongs from Italy
and a mint green skirt with a tiny bow on the front. There's an
unassuming corduroy blazer that's poetry with jeans. There's a pair of
ridiculously expensive pants that seems to reshape you, as money tends
to.
I've been shopping a lot lately, ever since it became our civic duty to
reinvigorate the economy. God bless America.
Dashing through the mall is an almost psychedelic escapade; I'm a retail
Hunter S. Thompson on a rambling, crazy search for the American dream,
armed not with drugs, but with cash.
I guess acquisition is my drug ‹ but not in a bad way, not in a
spend-your-way-into-bankruptcy-end-up-in-a-12-step-program-way ‹ no, in
a useful way, much more Valium than crack.
Shopping was, and always will be, a primal experience for me, at once
soothing and thrilling, a journey back to my earliest experiences of
pure joy.
My mother and I didn't play catch in the yard or bake cookies or play
Boggle ‹ we shopped. That was the only time we jointly focused on
something other than fear and loathing of each other.
I'll never forget bonding over shopping victories, those singular
moments a garment on the sale rack not only fits, but is 80% off the
already marked down price. Somehow, together, you've defeated Macy's.
You're Bonnie and Bonnie and no one can stop you!
All at once, you've transcended being barely middle class, a single mom
and daughter driving a Bug that has to be pushed to start. In the time
it takes for one big euphoric exchange of goods for cash, the world
bursts open. You can be the person that would have bought that garment
at retail. You're not Minnie Pearl. No one has to know.
You can't go far up the social latter when you're a scholarship kid at
private school, as I always was. You can't go on ski trips or to Paris
for winter break. Still, if you really know how to shop, you can look
the part. Style is the great equalizer. Even in India, the caste system
is noted by the color of a woman's sari. Here, it's the color of her
Prada.
My mother, bless her for this, wasn't one of those totally confused
parents that think wearing a "Braggin' Dragon" on your shirt is just the
same as an Izod alligator.
For me, there was saving and chores and scouring sales and "factory
seconds," but I usually had several back to school items that were what
my mom would call, "right."
I've been thinking a lot about class lately, how I just broke up with a
guy my therapist dubbed Cash & Cachet and am now dating one whose décor
features signed cleats under glass.
Cash & Cachet was, by most accounts, not the nicest guy. He once
requested I stop being funny in front of his friends because it was
embarrassing, like someone talking too loud in a quiet restaurant, he
explained. He might as well have said, "I'm barely pulling off bringing
you around by playing the exotic ethnic card, don't push it."
My friends didn't see what I saw; he was Ralph Lauren sheets and Agnes
B. leather pants and a Vera Wang wedding dress. He was belonging. He was
right.
Look, I know it's hard to be deep about clothes and shopping. If my
mother had taken me fly-fishing, this would be "A River Runs Through
It."
Wait, maybe it is a little like fishing. You wait to catch the big one,
all the while sipping Bud and swapping stories. On a good day, you leave
with a big catch, a picture of you standing next to a 15-pound Gucci
bag. Is it destructive, buying things you don't need to look like
someone you weren't born to be? I think not. If you'll recall high
school biology, you might remember mimicry, the advantageous resemblance
of one species to another. The viceroy mimics the monarch, which is
repugnant to birds; harmless nettles resemble stinging ones; crabs
evolve to look like floating seaweed. Mimicry is nature's way of either
blending or looking more dangerous than you are. Those who survive are
able to produce offspring with the same useful appearance.
It's my secret hunch that everyone feels like a mimic at times, even
blue blood debutantes with Tiffany bracelets, flying across the room
like monarchs.
That's why shopping is more meaningful to me than it really should be, I
guess. Every garment tells a story about the person I could be wearing
it, where she goes in that blazer, who she talks to in those jeans, what
she looks like to predators floating easily on the ocean, like seaweed.
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