Requiem for shorts.
Jul. 17th, 2006 08:17 amMy shorts bit the dust this morning. I don't know what kind of cheap crap it is they sell at Banana Republic, that it only lasts sixteen years.
My godfathers bought me these shorts the summer I turned 12. That means that these shorts predate every single person on my friendslist in my life. They were originally a light sage green, just basic twill shorts with pockets. They went with a white T-shirt and a peach vesty thing. The T-shirt wore out in a couple of years, and I started refusing to wear the vesty thing after about a year. (I am not a vest girl.) But the shorts, oh, the shorts have seen me through moving back to Nebraska from Kansas, through junior high and high school and college and abortive attempts at grad school and adult life apart from institutional education. I didn't wear the shorts when I went to meet
scottjames in the park to hang out for awhile without the phone or adults, but I could have been. I wasn't wearing the shorts when
seagrit told us we were going to have a niece, but I could have been. I'm pretty sure I was wearing them when I went to "Contact" with
steve_dash_o and the rest of our summer research cohort in Ohio. They have been a staple of my summer life for more than half of the years I've been alive.
And now -- well, twill can only withstand so much. They had turned kind of an indeterminate, very pale grey-green. They were soft. They were comfortable. They were mine. But the seams were starting to go because the fabric was losing structural integrity, and I thought of resewing them, but the rest of the fabric was losing structural integrity, too.
Farewell, shorts. I will miss you. I'm not sure how I'll know it's summer without you.
My godfathers bought me these shorts the summer I turned 12. That means that these shorts predate every single person on my friendslist in my life. They were originally a light sage green, just basic twill shorts with pockets. They went with a white T-shirt and a peach vesty thing. The T-shirt wore out in a couple of years, and I started refusing to wear the vesty thing after about a year. (I am not a vest girl.) But the shorts, oh, the shorts have seen me through moving back to Nebraska from Kansas, through junior high and high school and college and abortive attempts at grad school and adult life apart from institutional education. I didn't wear the shorts when I went to meet
And now -- well, twill can only withstand so much. They had turned kind of an indeterminate, very pale grey-green. They were soft. They were comfortable. They were mine. But the seams were starting to go because the fabric was losing structural integrity, and I thought of resewing them, but the rest of the fabric was losing structural integrity, too.
Farewell, shorts. I will miss you. I'm not sure how I'll know it's summer without you.
no subject
Date: 2006-07-17 02:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-17 03:00 pm (UTC)They did wonder if I'd be a six-footer, not just because I was 5'6" and had grown six inches in six months (growing pains OWIE OW OW OW), but because my great-aunt Jeannie had done exactly the same thing, and she'd grown another six inches when she was 13. So there was precedent. But apparently I was done.
no subject
Date: 2006-07-17 03:26 pm (UTC)Alicia was a friend from childhood and I do recall that she, too, had started to develop early--very tall by the fourth grade and starting to get busty. I don't recall her liking the situation much at the time. We lost touch by the sixth grade so I don't know what ever became of her.
no subject
Date: 2006-07-17 03:36 pm (UTC)But yah, it was pretty much that fast. For awhile my mom couldn't keep me in bras -- she'd measure, and by the time she'd made it to the store, gotten home, and washed the silly thing, I'd have grown out of it.
It wasn't a lot of fun. I liked adults treating me as though I was more grown-up, mostly, but sometimes it was scary, and it made the other kids I knew extremely uncomfortable. And there were some moderate early bloomers in my class with me in Omaha, so I was on the far end of the bell curve, but there was at least a bell curve. In sixth grade down in Kansas, only two girls in my class wore bras at all. It was really pretty awkward. And I was pretty awkward -- having leg and hip and arm and breast where there was nothing before is hard to coordinate.
no subject
Date: 2006-07-17 11:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-18 06:16 pm (UTC)