Frivolous and Impracticle
Be Frivolous and Impractical
I am meeting some girl friends for lunch at a little cafe later
this afternoon and I am dressed as if I were stepping onto the
runway of a New York City fashion show. I am wearing a simple
red sweater with a black skirt, but the shoes I have on...they
are an old flame. A love from my past.
These are not just shoes. These are the hottest looking pair of
red Salvatore Ferragamo works of art. Stiletto heels and a
little red and black polka dot bow on the back.
They could stop traffic on a busy street corner during rush hour
standing all alone, and the best part about them is they make me
feel powerful! They are impractical, but when I wear them I am
fearless!
I love shoes. High-heeled or flat, wedge or stiletto, strappy
sandals or a great pair of boots, just about any shoe that is
impractical, could find a home in my closet.
I typically see a great pair of shoes, hunt down an outfit to go
with them and then decide where I can go to wear this new
ensemble. I know it sounds impractical, materialistic and
completely backwards, but I got this from my grandmother, Annie
Florio.
My grandmother was extremely practical and this is where her and
I were very different. I have never heard anyone use the word
practical in the same sentence with my name.
Of course growing up during the great depression, she was
extremely frugal and never bought anything unless it was truly
necessary. She washed and reused pieces of aluminum foil, even
piecing the small scraps together to reuse later. She made most
of her clothes and wore very practical shoes. I don't think she
ever owned anything flashy...except for the single pair of
glorious, red, Ferragamo shoes.
When I was only ten years old, I was playing hide and seek with
my cousins and I had found a great hiding spot in the very back
corner of my grandmother's bedroom closet. As I sat, I started
looking through the neatly stacked boxes that were behind me.
At the bottom of the stack, sat a red and gold box. The box was
so lovely that I knew it had to contain certain treasures. As I
carefully lifted the lid on this wonderful box, my heart began
to race and I suddenly felt hot. The contents were beyond
wonderful. Not even in magazines had my eyes ever seen such
beauty.
It was love at first sight. Almost in a trance, I gently lifted
these precious gems from their slumbering bed and ever so slowly
slipped them onto my size five feet.
I stood quickly and tried to rush to the full-length mirror
across the bedroom, but before I could catch a glimpse of their
magnificence on the ends of my skinny chicken legs, I tripped
and twisted my ankle.
I must have let out a yelp, signally my grandmother, because
suddenly I could hear her wooden clogs clacking down the tile
hallway. I scrambled to my feet and tried to get the treasure
back to its hiding place.
When the door opened I spun around and my face gave away my
transgression. I began to explain that I just happened to find
these shoes and told her they were the most beautiful things I
had ever seen.
She took the box into her hands like a lost lover and began
caressing the lid. She told me she had bought them when she was
in her thirties. My mother and aunt were just children and they
didn't have a lot of money, but when my grandmother spotted them
in a little shop somewhere in San Francisco, she was smitten.
She never went anywhere dressy enough to warrant wearing such
beautiful shoes and she didn't own anything that would match
their splendor. But she knew she had to have them, so she put a
little bit of money down on them that day and told the clerk to
hold them for her. She made the trip back into the city each
week to deposit more money until she could take them home with
her.
But I didn