I was going to
my first formal occasion in many years. Wonder
Sweetie, my dashing and handsome husband, was to attend a formal military
function, and I was going to be on his arm to drink in every minute of it.
I love military
functions. I love the pomp and the
ceremony and the tradition. I love the
mess dress with its white shirt, and wide cummerbund. I love to see racks of ribbons on a
tight-at-the-waist, straight-at-the-shoulder mess dress jacket. I love to see the wives in long, beautiful
gowns, with sparkling eyes and ruby red lips.
I love flags and honor guards and tables with TWO table cloths on
them. I love the excitement of the hunt
in finding my name printed in clear script on place cards. I love it all.
The invitation
read “mess dress”, which meant, for the spouses, that we are to be in formal
attire. Some choose to eschew protocol
and wear day clothes or work clothes, but not me. I love to dress up, and I believe it shows
honor to respect these occasions with dressing the very best I can.
And besides, it
was no problem. I had a dress already.
Years ago I had found a dress on sale at Sears and it had been kept in
eager anticipation in the back of my closet for just such an occasion. So a few days before the ceremony, I tried
it on…
I will spare
you the gruesome details, but I will give you one word that sums up how I
looked in that dress: unfortunate.
I did not WANT
to look “unfortunate”, I wanted to look RAVISHING. So I set out immediately to buy the most
perfect dress that Fairbanks,
Alaska had to offer…..and found
it! The Dress.
That dress was
a testament…a testament of an earnest woman who had gradually awaken over the
past year from the sweet dream of youth to the cold light of day that reveals
wrinkle, brown patch, or sag. Gone were
the days where a careless ponytail was “cute” instead of “frumpy”, where no
makeup meant “natural beauty” instead of “tired and worn”. Frilly underwear had been replaced by
“foundational undergarments” that were literally engineered, with struts and
guywires and spandex to hide 20 years of insults and indiscretions to what was
once a girlish figure.
This dress was
the counter of all of that. Its color
was intoxicating and deep and mysterious, like a sapphire worn by a beautiful
international spy. It clung adoringly to
my waist which, by the way, is my only body part to defy gravity. While it used to be around my belly button,
it is now nearly hidden under my armpit.
Hmm…Odd location notwithstanding, I still have a bit of a waist and I
like to show it off occasionally.
The dress then
flowed away right above the hip in a solemn promise to keep the evidence of my
passion for fried foods away from the prying eyes of the public. The skirt was A-line without being too
“prom-y”, and hit at the perfect spot on my foot for a night of worry-free
walking.
Now, the dress
did not stop there! No, dear reader,
this dress was so much more! If I liked
the dress for what it did for my waist and hips, I loved it for what it did for
my shoulders.
See, I am a
strong woman. “That is good!”, you might
say. No, you do not understand. I have broad, muscular shoulders. The shoulders of a Green Bay Packers
lineman. The only thing that balances
out my shoulders is the fact that I also wear a size 11 shoe, so thankfully I
am still in proportion.
But the
unfortunate reality of being a woman who still has a shot of a promising NFL
career, is that it is very difficult to find a dress that does not scream
“SPRING TRAINING HERE I COME!”. I once,
in my foolish youth, wore a dark strapless dress with black opera length
gloves. The result was that in my
pictures, all that was clearly visible was my stark white shoulders. It looked rather like someone had tried to
stuff fully risen bread dough in a black tube sock.
But this
dress…ah this dress….
The straps were
made of a delicate chiffon and crossed over my shoulders perfectly, cutting
their bulk into visually manageable pieces.
Not only that, but somehow this dress managed not to draw attention to
yet another unfortunate trouble area, the spot on my shoulder blade, right
behind the arm. You ladies know which
part it is. It is that part on your back
that squishes above the bra strap and bulges with brazen indiscretion when thin
cotton shirts are worn. It is that devil
area that no one warned you about, nor has anyone developed a cure for. On me it looks like someone whacked open a
can of Hungry Jack biscuits and glued one on each side of my back. Dreadful.
But this dress denied that part its evil power.
This dress was
nearly perfect. It hid the bad and flattered the good. How could such beauty,
generosity, and garment-loyalty be had for a mere $134 dollars? It was a miracle. I was going to wear that dress and I was
going to be smashing. I could not wait….
But then….
The first
rumbling of distant thunder that would become a disaster typhoon happened the
night before The Big Event. Wonder Sweetie casually mentioned that there
was no hot water, and that I would have to call the repairman in the morning to
fix the heater. I sighed and resigned
myself to a wipey bath that evening.
The next day
was THE day—the day of the Big Event. I
called our VERY kind repairman who mentioned that he was full that day, but
that he would get over as soon as possible, though it would be after 2pm. No problem, thought I, that gives me MANY
hours to prepare myself, as we were to leave the house at 5:30. Wonder Sweetie and I kept a telephone vigil
for the repairman. He would call every
couple of hours… “Is he there yet?” he would ask. “Nope, not yet, but that is ok” I would reply
gamely. I could afford to be game at
that point…I had The Perfect Dress.
(One time he
asked “Can’t you just go without washing your hair?”. Honestly, if he had asked me to go in my
flannel pajamas, I could not have been more aghast at the thought. After 48 hours of no shampoo, I was not even
going out in my YARD, never mind a formal with The Perfect Dress. I mean, didn’t I owe it to that wonderful
dress to do my part? The Dress’s
obligations stopped at the neck…it was up to me to do the rest and I was not
going to let it down.)
A blithe 2 pm
slipped to concerned 3 pm which melted into a VERY stressy 4 pm. At a little after 4 pm the repairman showed,
riding in to my rescue in his shining white truck. I mentioned casually that I had a formal to
go to and needed the hot water.
At this point,
please indulge a bit of digression…..All day I was lamenting my lack of hot
water to wash my hair to every living being who would listen. In the lower 48 states, that would have met
with gasps and offers of sympathy….perhaps even telethons in my honor to raise
money for plumbing supplies and beautiful hats to cover my unclean locks.
However, I live
in Alaska. Not only did not even one person offer to put
together a telethon for me, but I received no sympathy at all. Period.
In fact, instead I was given reproving looks and tales of how they had
to heat their own river water to pour into a tin washtub in their kitchen when
they were three. I was reminded of the
fact that I did, indeed, own a functional stove and well and could MAKE my own
hot water. If I was looking for
sympathy, I was barking up the wrong spigot.
Now, dear
reader, I know that I can heat my own water.
I know how to wash my hair with
nothing but two bottles of Evian, and have actually done so. That was not the point. I did not want to prepare for the Big Event
with the Perfect Dress by simultaneously trying to untangle my hair from the
drain plug of the bathtub, while blinking shampoo out of my burning eyes and
trying to rinse two feet of hair with eight ounces of water. No, that would not do at all. I was rolling the dice on a hot water
gamble—I was going to wash my hair with my head held high (not bent over the
edge of the tub) or not go at all!
The repair man
looked things over. A few turns of the wrench and my hot water was returned….
kinda. After many hours of sitting idle,
my tank was filled with lukewarm water.
He suggested I wait for another 20 minutes for the water to heat
up. That left me less than an hour to
fully prepare for the Big Event. Seeing
my desperation, he relented “Well, go ahead and give it a try, the pipe is
hot. Worse thing that will happen is
that the water will be cold.”. That was
all I needed to hear! I raced up the
stairs and into the shower.
Success! Squeaky clean hair! Well, squeaky clean WET hair, to be more
precise, which generally takes all night to air dry. Wonder Sweetie, the darling that he is,
offered to run to the store to get me a blow dryer. However, a desperate search revealed an
ancient, but still functional dryer, and away I blew.
Now, there is
one problem with blow drying my hair. My
hair is baby fine, straight as a board, and I have a ton of it. Blow drying serves only to make my hair
wholly unmanageable, like trying to comb an impertinent cloud. The odds of me being able to actually STYLE
my hair after blowdrying are like winning the lottery. However, I had no choice. I finished drying and commenced to styling my
hair.
You know, you
would think that someone who had had long hair for as many years as I have
would know something about styling it.
Nope. Styling hair is as foreign
to me as changing the oil in an army tank.
However, I am nothing if not ridiculously optimistic about things in
which I am completely inept. So I dove
into my hair (literally), and tried a style.
And another. And another. Each was slightly more hideous than the
last. Wonder Sweetie would pop his head
in the bathroom door to offer a bit of silent moral support.
Ok, to be
bluntly honest he was probably trying to gently remind me that we were running
exceedingly late, but if I had, for one minute, thought he was trying to put on
the pressure, I would have smacked him with the hairbrush the next time he
popped his head in the door. So we both
just wordlessly agreed that he was in a supportive role, not a timekeeper.
Then it
happened. He popped his head in just as
I finished another style disaster and he uttered words that nearly ended his life
at the tender young age of 38. He took
one look at my hair and said “It’s not bad”.
Please allow me
to convey the tone in which he said those three innocent words. He did not use the bright and smiling
“Hey! That’s not bad!”, as in “Not too
shabby! Come here you vixen you, and
bring your sexy hair with ya!”.
No no no…..This
was offered in that tone that one only offers when it really IS that bad. When someone is trying to stall for time in
order to think of something, ANYTHING that is not horrible about what they are
seeing.
It is the tone
that one uses when consoling a friend who tried a do-it-yourself hair color
treatment for the first time ever and managed to lighten just one spot on the
crown of the head so it looked like there was always a light pointing at her
scalp. Or that one uses to comfort
someone who has just forgotten her lines during a monologue and was standing on
stage, red faced and dressed in nothing but a pink curtain and fairy wings. (yeah those both happened to me)
Yes, it was
THAT tone. And let me tell ya, it did
NOT go over well. Down the hair
went. It was now T-plus-20-minutes, the
sitter is here, Wonder Sweetie is waiting and we are LATE.
“Forget
it. FORGET IT! Just go without me!” I pout at Wonder Sweetie
who, at this point, is realizing that he unwittingly started WWIII. He, of course, refuses to go without me and I
try one more time…..
SUCCESS!!! WHOOHOO!!
My hair FINALLY looks good enough to be seen with the Perfect
Dress! Feeling sheepish for blowing up when
my hair was only one more hairbrush from submitting to my will, I apologise to Wonder
Sweetie and start throwing on makeup like a mad woman. Now THIS I can do…I am a fair woman with a
paintbrush, and the worst of the day seems over.
You know when,
in hindsight, you see that what seemed to be a wholly inconsequential event
actually was the pivot point for the rest of your life? Well that event happened to be my choice of
deodorant at that moment. My own
deodorant had a distressing habit of going on clear, but turning white. Well of course it would not do to mar the
Perfect Dress with cheap deodorant, so I grabbed Wonder Sweetie’s Old Spice.
I love Old
Spice. It smells like a man should: crisp, clean, strong without relying on false
machismo, and pleasant without smelling ridiculously feminine.
And it stays
CLEAR. It would not insult the Perfect
Dress. I might smell like a man, but I
would look like a woman.
I put on the
Perfect Dress, and am so happy that I do not even bat an eye when I realize
that the shoes I had originally planned to wear did not match. I dove into the closet and found a pair of
black pumps. Not beautiful, but
functional and comfortable and, as I told my friend Cognac Woman, my feet will
be under the table for most of the night anyway. The patoot did mention that my shoes WOULD be
seen on the way in and out, but I blew that off—I walk fast and the Perfect
Dress was an A-line…it would mask poor shoe choice.
Finally I am
ready to go….and only 35 minutes past schedule.
I give the baby sitter a few last comments and grab my purse, ready to
go. Then I hear Wonder Sweetie say “Oh
no, Steph your hair is falling down!”.
Oh the
agony! So near and yet so far!
I run to the
bathroom and find that, again, Wonder Sweetie has understated the extent of the
emergency. My hair did not merely “fall
down”…a good 7 inches of it literally EXPLODED out of the top of my
hairdo! Honestly, dear reader, I have
never seen the like. I had a tight
French twist on the bottom half of my head and a skimpy 7 inch ponytail waving
impertinently out the top. For a brief
minute I thought that, perhaps, I could just keep the ponytail there, but both Wonder
Sweetie and I agreed that that would not work.
But since my hair had submitted once, perhaps it could again. I raised my hands to redo my hair and see
that….
MY ARMPITS WERE
BLUE!
BLUE. As in…..well….BLUE!
Picture a
summer sky, the Danube, Frank Sinatra’s eyes….yeah THAT blue
I scream to Wonder
Sweetie “MY PITS ARE BLUE!” and we both stand a minute in horror and
disbelief. Apparently the Old Spice plus
“we are LATE” perspiration interacted with the dye of The Perfect Dress to
stain my underarms a distressing shade of “headache blue”. I looked like someone had taken a baseball
bat to my armpits.
Which crisis to
handle first? Exploding hair or diseased
looking underarms?
Now, let me
take one moment here, dear reader, for as you know, I am an optimist. There is a thought that rambles occasionally
through my head, even now, several days after the Blue Pit Incident. It is something that, truly, I never thought
anyone would say. It is this:
“Thank the Lord
my hair exploded, or I never would have known my pits were blue”.
That phrase is
destined to become my favorite tension breaker.
I mean, just think about it…mull it a little….even say it out
loud….there is no way to be mad, stress, depressed or angry if you say that out
loud “Thank the Lord her hair exploded
or she never would never have know that her pits were blue.”.
Yes of course
it is ridiculous to say out loud…think of how ridiculous it was to LIVE it!
One might
expect this to be the pinnacle (or depth) of the night….but the night was not
over. Never underestimate the ability
for everything that could go possibly wrong to do so….
With a quick
hair repair and freshly scrubbed underarms, we raced to the function. We got there during the social half hour,
which meant that our tardiness largely went unnoticed. The Perfect Dress and I have made up and it
promised not to stain any more of me odd colors, and I promise not to put on
anything else male. I look
ravishing….well, not frumpy anyway, and feel like a princess as I take Wonder
Sweetie’s handsome arm and we go find our table.
Our table is in
the farthest corner from the door (another seemingly trivial fact that will
come into play later). We make small
talk with a few people who are from Wonder Sweetie’s squadron as we wait to be
seated. I look around at everyone and
imagine that everyone is looking admiringly at me. They dim the lights and we find our place
cards and start to take our seats when…
PING! A bobby pin launches out of my hair
and lands on the table two place settings down.
It is at this point that I wonder exactly how much pressure my hair is
under to explode at one point, then to shoot projectiles at another. I worry briefly that I might be bald at the
end of the night as I snatch the bobby pin off of the table and show Wonder
Sweetie. He gives me a look that can
only be described as “Are you SERIOUS?”.
He offers that it might have come from a woman behind me, but I am
doubtful.
In any case, I
am GIDDY with excitement at this point.
I am a homeschool mom in Alaska.
I very rarely get out much. At
all. Period. In fact, there are times when I can go weeks without
getting out of the house. And I happen
to be quite the extrovert. So this night
was extra special for me. I quizzed Wonder
Sweetie about who might be there that I know (I am dreadful at remembering
either names OR faces. Most people are
usually good with one or the other....not me.).
HAHAHAHHAHAHHAHAHHAHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHA! I remember the day this happened and how impressed I was with your tenacity! You did a great job telling the story. I was rolling reading this!
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