It
happened as soon as I knew I was having a girl.
The
fantasies of ballet lessons, mommy-daughter mani-pedis, and of course the
clothes.
It
wasn't that I didn't enjoy buying clothes for my firstborn son, it was just
that the color palette was so limited! Sure boy clothes were cute,
but from hipster to prep, everything looked like the miniature version of what
a casually dressed grown man would wear, save maybe a conspiracy theorist
hoarder.
Maybe.
But the
mere thought of girls' clothes made me giddy. The colors! In addition to
the primaries, secondaries and neutrals were all the pinks, aquas, lavenders
and peaches. And the fabulous prints! Add to that the bows,
ruffles, tulle, ribbon, rickrack and eyelet that a grown woman had to indulge
in sparingly, if not abandon altogether. The military style jackets, moto
boots and cargo pants that added an edge to all the girly - telling the world,
"I may be feminine, playful, and polite, but I am a FORCE with which to be
reckoned, you hear?"
I could
not wait to dress my little angel up. With her in my belly, I would go to
Baby Gap to shop for Mr. R or buy a gift, and it was all I could do not to buy the
entire girls' section. Practically weeping over the adorableness of it all, I'd
finger the dresses and leggings longingly, overcome by visions of my modish
girlchild and I having high tea at the Drake Hotel. I satisfied my hunger by getting a few irresistible items. With these impulse purchases, in
addition to the beautiful hand-me downs I had scored from a few stylish friends and
their fashionistettes, my little girl was SET.
Things
went well for a while. My daughter wore what I wanted her to wear. It turned
out that she was mostly in pajamas and onesies, but every now and then I had to
put her in something fabulous so it wouldn’t be outgrown. A few times she
looked red-carpet ready even though she was only in her Jumperoo.
Around
her second birthday, she developed a few favorites. No biggie. Totally
manageable.
Then, a
few months ago, it all came to a screeching halt. What fresh new hell was
this?
It was
dressing my daughter.
That
adorable Tea Collection dress? The one that cost more than many things I've bought myself
recently? No. The crewcuts top? The one that I bought her instead of buying
myself something? Scorned like a vegan looking at a rack of ribs.
My attempts to pull the garments over her head produced bloodcurdling
screams and thrashing that could only be bested by an Upper East Side socialite
being strong-armed into a Walmart dress. I kept trying. The protests
continued. I begged. I pleaded. I bribed and bargained. I
used a withering sarcasm reserved for unhelpful customer service agents.
Finally
I gave up. It was over. I would pick her outfits no more.
We had
moved into the stage where my lovely daughter would create her own fashion
statements, choosing clothes that made her feel happy. Comfortable. Pretty.
Good about herself.
Unfortunately,
this trend made me feel disorganized and pissy. It often made me - us - late in
the mornings. And it also made me feel insecure. Incredibly so. I really
needed my daughter to provide me with some much, much needed fashion cred, so
that folks didn't think I shopped at Crap Sixth Avenue and Urban Misfitters.
Hope
sprung eternal, however -- just think toddler eating -- and every day I thought
"maybe now she'll accept my suggested outfits." Nope. Almost always
shot down. I had to get it through my thick head that, while some of it was
two-year old rebellion, my daughter was going to wear what she wanted to wear.
She was her own girl . She was
not a doll. And I was not auditioning for stylist on a preschool
version of Gossip Girl.
She was her own girl
As
annoying as it is, this Mommy-don't-pick-my-clothes thing is good. A
compliant child is definitely something I'd like to experience more often than
I currently get to, but God, how boring would that be? And if I did have a
little Miss Docile, I'd wonder where we went wrong, and how to inject her with
some bad-ass juice to avoid her being the doormat of friends, colleagues, and
eventually significant others.
So my
new M.O. is grit my teeth, and let Lady A pick out her clothes. I leave
her alone to get dressed and pray that what she comes out wearing won’t make me
want to grand jeté out the window. Now that I know her preferences (this era
will be known as Purple Reign) I can buy things I know she'll like. I
will launder her favorite things often. Soon I might dare to take her
shopping and let her choose some things for herself.
And
when she is a teenager and asks for a pricey pair of shoes?
I'll
gasp and say, "I have a pair of classic Uggs! They're yours from
when you were two and were worn twice. Enjoy!"