vBulletin statistic

Lipstick

There’s a woman who lives down the road from me, a hearty soul who ran the family business, a septic-tank service, until Alzheimer’s put the brakes on some of her organizational skills. I’d see her on the road walking one dog or another (she has two), a stick in hand to keep at bay any aggressive canines straying from their property, getting a little too close for comfort.  She always carried biscuits in her pocket, treats for the friendlier dogs she’d come across. All mine had to do was sit and look pretty, her wagging tail as good as any smile. Over the years we’d strike up conversations, mostly about dogs, sometimes about the challenges of life. She lost a brother early on (a car accident), ministered to her husband when his kidneys were failing and he needed dialysis, at home.  She drove down to visit her father in Florida for a few weeks every year until he became too frail to live by himself. At which point she brought him (and his dog) up to her house in Westchester County.  She lives an hour north of New York City and has never been drawn to its pulse.

Her Alzheimer’s is far from advanced, and she always seems to recognize me, though I’ll have to remind her why Maggie isn’t with me, pulling me toward her house, a dog’s charm all the trick she needs to get her treat.  And she’ll remind me of how much pets bring to our lives. The tug of her dogs, small as they are, is too much, so these days she’ll take walks with a friend or her brother-in-law, who shares her home.

She always wears lipstick, and it always extends past her upper lip. There’s something about this that really touches me, the need to smear on that lipstick, no idea really that she’s missed the mark. She is not a glamorous woman, has never been. She could be wearing sweatpants and a sloppy sweater.  Her hair is neatly in place. Then there’s the final touch before she heads out the door, the lipstick.

Many years ago, as an editor of a newsletter focused on AIDS-related health and social issues, I attended a panel discussion on developments in research. One of the panelists was a ground-breaking researcher, a woman who had a certain style and glamour to her. Still, the last thing I would have expected, as the panel discussion was winding down, was to see her pull out a compact and freshen her lipstick.  Years later, I still remember being struck by the ease and nonchalance with which she did this. The more I thought about it, the more I admired her for the ever-so-subtle pronouncement. It’s only lipstick.

And yet. There are studies that call up the ‘lipstick factor’ as a reflection of economic times.  Maybe yes, maybe no. More to the point is what that purse-size stick or tube reflects in the woman who has made a deliberate choice today:  Red or pink or tangerine. Purple. South Beach Bronze or  Peppermint Candy . My (unglamorous) neighbor is doing her best, putting on a face that pleases her even as something inside is dissembling.  I would like to tell her she doesn’t need it, and in fact might look better without it. I would like to tell her that the person she sees in the mirror when she puts that lipstick on is not the person she is, or was. But she knows all that. And besides, who am I to talk? I always dab on some lipstick or lip gloss when I head out. I like the way it makes my lips feel. I wear it like an assumption.

Photo courtesy of Mercedes Yardley

Visit Deborah’s website here . . .

What happens in Vegas . . .

I cashed out at $29.75 last night. I called it a win. My husband said we broke even. No high stakes here. Just having a little fun with a one-armed bandit at Caesar’s Palace. Every few years my husband is lured to Las Vegas for a trade show. Every few years I tag along, although full disclosure demands I tell it like it really is: I’m the one more eager for the trip to Sin City. Every few years.

Tell most people I know that I like Vegas for two or three days, and they look at me like I’m crazy. Then comes the nod, well, they kind of get what I mean, Disneyland for grown-ups, right? Yes, there’s something about all those blinking flashing lights that beckon in an R2D2 kind of way. And yes, I can pretend, with all the faith I give over to magic and mystery, that the right touch of a button or pull of a lever will make my wheel of fortune spin till it spills over. And yes, the stimulation becomes physical, the fantasy transformed into innuendo, the hotel room now a den of pleasure.  But what I think fascinates me most here is the dreamscape of it all.  The old woman making her way through the casino with a walker, the man with a three-year-old sitting on his shoulders, the motorcycle dude chugging a beer, the woman in a sequined mini-dress and high heels are drawn to this Mecca  in the desert for mostly the same reasons.  And even if they never took a psychedelic drug, they recognize a good acid trip when they’re on one.

There’s no getting around it — Las Vegas is overkill, the ultimate in artificiality.  And maybe that’s the point. It might as well have been Bugsy Siegel who coined the phrase, “if you build it, [they] will come.” Even if he never imagined a skyline that would one day morph into a giant stage set (look one way for the beckoning wink of a sphinx, another for the clarion call of knights around a table, another to mill about in the shadow of gods standing sentry in a sea of marble, no crazier than they ever  were), the man knew the value of a good dream. Not his problem if one person’s dream is another person’s nightmare.

This morning I took a break from keeping my husband company in his booth at the convention center. I sat at the “beach” at Mandalay Bay, watching children of all ages ride wave after wave (it’s all here – wave pool, lazy river, loud music). My father, were he alive, would shake his head, what’s the world coming to? if I told him about family fun in Vegas. He loved the art of the card shark, no counting on penny machines for his luck to turn around. In his day I highly doubt there were billboards for free dental implants, cheap divorce, Wet Republic  (some ad team’s idea of making an MGM Grand pool the place to cool off). But in this town sometimes known as the city of lost wages, some things have always been a constant. There’s a young woman walking past me, the bottom of her long white gown edged in a pattern of feathers stitched in red. No royal wedding here, just the very royal flush of a bride straight from the chapel.

Visit Deborah’s website here . . .

What not to wear … to the gym

I am not someone that cares too much about exercise clothing.  I’m not an elite athlete, so I don’t need anything to wick away moisture or stabilize my joints.  I’m a girl who uses the elliptical while playing Klondike on her iPod, so I’m more than sufficiently outfitted in the same pair of gym pants that I boughtfrom Target in the ‘90s and a t-shirt from my collection of inappropriately sloganed shirts from sorority functions.  The combination work just fine for me, and I imagine that no one notices what I’m wearing because I generally don’t notice what anyone else is wearing.

The exception to that rule is, of course, when someone is dressed wholly inappropriately for the gym.  It happens more often than you might think that someone has dressed in a manner that actually impedes their exercise efforts.

Here are a few real-life examples of problematic exercise wear I have seen at they gym:

Jeans.  I will never understand why people wear jeans to the gym.  I remember wearing jeans while running around during recess in elementary school, and it was so uncomfortable.  Denim is heavy and stiff, which is not a great combination for activewear.  I feel uncomfortable for people when I see them running on the treadmill in jeans, and I saw the frustration of the jeans-wearing girl in yoga when she couldn’t get into Warrior 2.

Skirts.  Skirts are fine to wear when playing tennis (they were, after all, the main reason I decided to play tennis in high school), but they have no place in the gym, especially in a yoga class.  Downward dog can get a little sketchy in a skirt, and inversions are definitely out.  A pair of girls wearing skirts abandoned my yoga class the other week after the first five minutes of Sun Salutations.

High-heeled sneakers.  Just because they look like sneakers doesn’t mean that they have the same effect as sneakers.   I really wish I was kidding about this one.

Bare feet.  Ick.  At the gym I used to frequent, there was this kooky woman with obscenely long hair who, every single day, would lift weights while wearing a pink velour sweatsuit and bare feet.  I know that there’s a movement pushing barefoot running, but I think we can all agree that you should keep your shoes on at the gym.  If you’re unconcerned about catching foot fungus (which you should be), at the very least worry about having a ten-pound dumbbell dropped on an unprotected toe.

My “we may lose, but we still booze” t-shirt and stained and faded gym pants may be an eyesore, but at least they are gym-appropriate attire.

Testing …1,2,3.

This is a test of the emergency awesome system…this is only  a test.

Smartly New York is still on the launch pad.

Come back on Aug 23rd.

We will be in full AWESOME MODE.

Promise

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