Sunday, October 21, 2007

A perfect size ten

Poor Lucy.

Until vanity sizing came to ready-to-wear women's apparel, Lucy wore the perfect size ten. Oh, you could always be two sizes lower than your regular size in an expensive designer dress, tell yourself and everyone else you're a six ( how many of your friends have bought nothing but designer stuff?). Most of us were perfect size tens (nowadays they're perfect size sixes) which was a common term that came to be popular after Jimmy Stewart said it when he described his beloved, recently missing wife in one of his hero movies. Average women in height, such as I, looked for an exemplar. In the late fifties, early sixties the perfect size ten was Doris Day, or Kim Novak. That was a safe size for a wife and mother.

I know. I was surprised too.

Compared to what?
Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD): one's self perception that she is a fat person, regardless of her weight, usually either at a "good" weight or slightly over. I know I have it but didn't know I had it until it was way too late to change a lot of things. After Doris Day imprinted us with her size ten, those of us who matured in the sixties began seeing people like Gidget--not too big, not too small. Breasts were as large as they needed to be, naturally, and if you did have 'em, no one really knew. It was a time when women didn't put out the way they do now (I believe modern terminology for the act is "hooking up"). In those days, having gigantic mammaries didn't make or break a relationship...that I know of. Not every guy is a "breast man," after all.

Now, of course, everyone knows if you're endowed or not, and God help you if you aren't. No longer are men forced to look at women as people because that's all they could see.

Skinny bitches
BDD is an inherited disorder; you get it from your sisters and your mothers, television, magazines, bitch peers, ex-lovers and husbands, anyone who doesn't like you. Much of BDD comes from ourselves when we try to compare our bodies to oh, pick anyone who's too rich and too thin...there's even a name for them: skinny bitches.

When I was a kid, I was very athletic and probably in pretty good shape. But there was never a time when I considered myself skinny. When I was at my smallest, a size four in my late 30s, I wanted to eat my typewriter. It was truly wonderful when I gave myself permission to gain a little weight, although I was running sixteen miles a week then to support my eating habit.

My biggest dream when I was a college kid, in fact, was to be able to shop regularly at The House of Nine. I was always a ten, not a nine. Dang. Today the House of Nine provides the training racks for Elizabeth Pluses (14 and up). The sizes my beautiful grown daughters wear (zero, two, four) can be found in their own personal Tiny Persons section. Of course, their idea of a Tiny Persons Plus customer would be someone like Pamela Anderson, for whom the manufacturer would build a huge top and a tiny bottom.

How cute.

Nevermind them
Does this vanity resizing mean instead of my current rotating dress sizes of 12-14, I would've been a 20 back in the day? Or when my mother was a perfect size ten, she was actually a six? She was always very thin. Or did the manufacturers get together at their last convention to take a look at the average woman and figure there'd be a new "baseline" for the perfect size ten, like a perfect size four? Like those girls they took to their rooms were average?

Well. That just sucks.

Thanks for the read.

Monday, September 24, 2007

The babysitter upstairs


Occasionally, Ricky would "allow" Lucy to take a job, or buy something; we all knew who wore the pants in the Ricardo family. My orientation was the opposite; the women in my family pretty much did what we wanted. Too bad I didn't pay attention to the reality around me.

Mothers and grandmothers didn't compete
I recall a friend of Lucy's, an elderly woman who sometimes babysat and who lived upstairs. I remember her sweet and loving attitude toward Lucy. She knew Lucy was constantly playing to get Ricky's attention. How wonderful that she was able to give Lucy a wink, to let Lucy know she understood. In today's sitcoms, the grandmothers would be taking their breasteses out the door on their way to meet a new man. No, dear. Babysit? Are you crazy? With my schedule?

I think it's important that today's aging baby boomer women understand that most of the "attention" rightfully goes to younger people. That's the natural order of things. I don't believe our children want us to be "like" them. I believe they want us to show them alternatives. Besides, it's a matter of moving forward as a species. I haven't always felt this way, unfortunately since I messed up with my own kids early. Now I'm seeing things differently.

As an older woman, I have become aware that my own vanity keeps me from growing old gracefully inside. It's difficult to overcome the guilt some people feel when it comes to maintaining one's looks to the point of obsession. When I watch how people used to act and be, when I was a little girl, it's unfathomable that we've traveled, as a culture, so diametrically opposite of that brash and certain American spirit. It's hard to break those old ideas, especially when you're not prepared to deal in a new world.

As for Lucy, she was smarter than she looked. She loved when Ricky went nuts because of her antics. Lucy was, after all, the best feminist I ever knew. She always got what she wanted. So did Ricky.

Friday, August 31, 2007

Birth order is destiny

Lucy and Ethel used red herrings and tricks to get what they wanted. They were valuable tools for this baby of the family.

I don't know about the rest of you family stragglers, accidents, oopsies, last little deductions--whatever charming euphemisms your parents used for you--being the baby of the family, especially if one's parents are older, is about as much fun as a selecting a homeless person's funeral attire. In fact there's only one thing worse than being the baby of a family of four. That, of course, would be ending up the baby in a family of five. Two, four, five. It's all the same. The oldest(er)one(s) gets the emotional loot.

There are exceptions, however. My husband, the last born in his family, was able to saunter into life thinking absolutely everyone loved him--except for maybe his older siblings.

Black sheep
I've often wondered if the baby can also be the black sheep of the family. That seems kind of remote as most don't truly detach until they're well into their 30s. By then, black sheep activity has usually come and past. It's hard to get the black sheep reputation when you're old. It's almost as if your parents know you have the imagination to become a black sheep, what with all the benign indifference they've shown you, and if they let you become independent, you'll become a serial killer. Strange dichotomy: they want you leave but they keep you dependent.

I recall our talking once about my eventually leaving home. I think I was about 16.

A's Parent
Andrea, what do you want to be when you grow up?




Andrea
Medical doctor.

A's Parent
That's nice, Honey. Sure.
We'll talk about that in a couple of years.
Pass me that magazine, will ya?


All right, all right. It wasn't really like that. But you get the drift of my rudderless childhood. I suppose my parents felt I had enough examples around me of those who had become educated and went off to their lives and to work...to get married, which is what I think my folks wanted for me all along, i.e., to get married.

So, I got married
Remember when Lucy dressed up in the Carmen Miranda costume to fool Ricky and sneak on stage as a dancer so she could feel like she had a life too? That's kind of how I did things for a very long time after I got married. I was always trying to sneak onto some one's stage, scared to death the fruit would fall off my head and I'd be found out.

Giving myself a break
Then I finally realized, all the while I was simply unprepared for marriage, in particular and life, in general

When I watch myself in a Lucy get-up, I realize much of my conflict came as a result of the times in which we lived. My parents weren't the problem. After all, I certainly didn't have to be introduced to educational advantages. They were all around me in my own family. I knew deep down that if I decided to "be" something, my parents would've pressed the issue. They knew my personality enough to understand they couldn't drag me to anything I didn't want to go to. What my parents did to me really was normal for the times.

The pressure on young married woman to "become something" was insidiously powerful. Lucy, meanwhile, laughed in the feminists' ugly mugs by doing what she did best. Be herself. Maybe my own Lucy outfits help me be myself.

Time and experience relieved me from most of the old feelings of insecurity. Recalling respectable accomplishments(sailing in a 32-foot sailboat from Hawaii to Tahiti and back is one; raising my children as a single parent with no emotional help and very little financial aid is another) helps when I feel like an idiot who will never be anything in life, let alone the great writer.

I wish Mother and Daddy could be here to see what I'm turning into. I think they'd feel pretty okay about it. Certainly, they wouldn't be surprised. ..not surprised at all.

Now where did I put my Harpo Marx hat and horn?

Thanks for the read.