The Women's ClubA Story by Carol CashesI can't be the only one...***DISCLAIMER: I DO NOT AND HAVE NOT EVER ADVOCATED PYSICAL
VIOLENCE. THE PIECE IS SATIRE, SARCASIC
AND SELF-DEPRECATING. JUST HAD A “DAY”
ONE TIME AND POUNDED THIS OUT.***
The Real Women’s Club
Before you put your soft,
emolient-enriched hand up to politely stifle that yawn, let me make myself
clear: I am not talking about a group of
expensive and delicately scented perfumed, expensive salon cut, standing
nail-appointment, expensively (even tailored!) clothed, name-brand nyloned
women with a common interest. I’m
talking about a club"a big stick"a baseball bat-shaped object used to clobber
certain perfumed, manicured name-brand nyloned women.
You know the ones I
mean. While you’re trying to match up
underwear by light or dark color, they have lingerie sets. When you have to try to remember if you washed your hands at the last bathroom
break, they manage to maintain fresh Merle Norman make-up all day. When the hair style you spent forty five
minutes on is gone by 9:30 am, even when protected by the Aqua Net Helmet, their hair will immediately fall into salon
perfection when they step in from the howling blizzard outside. These women will openly mock you by moaning
about the seven ounces they gained over the holidays, describe their horror
upon discovery of a pore the size of germ - right on their cheek, for God’s
sake!- and they will enchant you for hours relating their hilarious escapades
while trying to find just the right outfit for the Hobo’s Ball. They always spot the safety pin holding your
clothes together and offer to let you borrow their little travel sewing kit
they keep in their Louis Vuitton tote.
They write checks using fountain pens with teal blue or purple ink in
distinct cursive scripts and calligraphy.
The soles of their shoes are clean.
They were born with perfect pitch, even when they laugh and tears make
their eyes luminous, never racoonish -which I would trade any day for the black
tracks that run down my face making even hard-core Goths cringe. I sometimes wonder if they even have snot when they cry - all I’ve ever observed
are delicate sniffs and never any
kind of liquid seeping from their straight, small, perfectly symmetrical noses.
My theory is maybe it’s an
aberrant mutant gene or something of that nature. I
mean, my friends all admit to having
at least one pair of cotton “mawmaw” panties with the elastic half separated in
the back we claim to keep for those “heavy” days, and yes, with full knowledge that
the fastest way to be in an automobile accident where you are rendered
unconscious and unable to hide, I mean defend, yourself is to have a safety pin
holding some part of your clothing together and mawmaw drawers on. It’s the universal signal for every drunk
driver or legally blind adolescent driving on a permit within a five mile
radius to zero in on you. And I have no
problem tellin’ it that I have used a colored marker to hide the chips my nails
are sporting from the polish I hastily applied before bed. I’ve used a binder clip to hold unruly and
obstinate hair. I’ve taped and stapled
rips that were invisible to the naked eye when dressing, but have neon arrows
pointin’ straight at ‘em when I arrive at my workplace. I’ve clutched files and papers previously
headed for the garbage like CIA secrets to avoid shaking hands with my
calloused and chipped nail polished hands.
I knew a woman that still used iodine and baby oil (it was a ‘70’s
thing) to tan her legs if hose was not dress code. I’ve laughed so hard that I
had to walk around to avoid sitting for a few minutes or risk leaving a wet
spot. I’ve worn my bra inside out because the underwire was warped and it
actually looked better than before. That’s
right, you can forget that part of your “empowerment” seminar where you
realized life was about takin’ risks -some of us could tell ya a few things.
I swear these women could
cross the Rockies barefoot, and arrive on the other side with soles as soft as
a baby’s butt. They were born with the
exact number of hairs on their eyebrows to form perfect arches over their lilac
and emerald green eyes. They always remove their rings before
applying hand lotion, which they are able to do a minimum of ten times
daily. I, on the other hand, and in the
real world, have to scrounge in the back
of the bathroom closet for some lotion to put on my fingers so as not to snag
my bargain brand panty hose. They have
never applied fingernail polish anywhere but on their nails. My
peers and I have too many days that we pray we don’t have to remove our shoes
and expose the network of run repairs hastily applied and peeled from our feet
at the end of the day. I should add that clear polish is not necessarily the
only color you will find on these ingeniously shellacked and reinforced
sandal-footed toes. But those are high
times: we’ve all pulled up to sixteen
inches of hose under our foot to eliminate that annoying busted-out toe
feeling. Of course, you can always twist
the runned section to a hidden area, but with the new control top lycra-spandex
panties (with cotton crotch) you may end up feeling like you’re walking
sideways all day. It’s a matter of
preference...
These days, twenty-something
singles go clubbing and support groups for women are flourishing on the
interconnected webs. Well, my friends
and I have decided we’re up for it -we’re all still young enough to swing, but
all far enough into menopausal madness to have a viable defense, especially if
it’s a true jury of our peers: cracked
cuticles, cowlicks, lipstick-ed teeth, smeared mascara, a safety pin (or
staples) somewhere on their clothing, fingernail polish on at least one
busted-out toe of pantyhose worn so many times they could pass for chenille,
and of course, the pre-requisite pair of stretched-elastic mawmaw drawers. Don’t judge us because we know it’s about survival
of the fittest…or the fattest…no, no, let’s stick with “the fittest” - we’ve
earned it.
© 2017 Carol CashesAuthor's Note
Reviews
|
StatsAuthorCarol CashesBiloxi, MSAboutI'm very cynical, jaded, just this side of bitter and the only reason I haven't crossed that line is a good man loves me. I am extremely empathetic, but seldom sympathetic. I can be a ferociously lo.. more..Writing
Related WritingPeople who liked this story also liked..
|