Sleeveless knee-length dress of a fabric covered in navy blue circlesI'm not trying to denigrate my sense of style, but rather to point out that it is November and therefore the opening of scarf season. You know, when you walk in from outside and take off your coat, hat and gloves .... but leave the scarf on. Whether it goes with your clothes or not. Ideal for someone like me who frequently hangs in drafty church basements for rehearsals and meetings, or in 52-story office towers that take awhile to efficiently change the HVAC over from AC to heat in transition weather.
Grey, cropped cardigan sweater
Black Mary Jane pumps
Rust, brown & cream-colored scarf, natch.
I like the one I've got on, because its made of soft, oft-washed yarn and is skinny enough to wrap around several times and a) not have its tails catch in the wheels of my chair; or b) intrude up over my chin.
This scarf has origin of some interest -- an impromptu gift during a date some time ago with a match.com man I called The Editor, at Davio's on a frigid Sunday night. Recalled thusly last summer:
It's less about remembering The Editor with any great fondness than evaluating that incident of choices. When faced, I took spark instead of the gentility, and where did it get me? Another Man and I eventually crashed and burned and he left without a trace. But I still have the scarf of the man I ditched. It's a favorite possession."Perhaps the most polite gentleman alive. Recently relocated from New Jersey, edits reading curriculum textbooks. We made 2 dates in January---both Sunday nights at swanky Davio's for wine and pizza, both three-hour conversations on politics, family, our jobs. There was minimal spark, but it was agreeable talk. During the course of Date #2 the temperature outside dropped 30 degrees and I shivered as we prepared to leave. The Editor took off his lengthy multi-colored scarf and handed it over:
"My mother has made me a dozen of these. Use it. Keep it."
The Editor's bad luck was timing. Those of you in the single world know: dating success comes in waves and droughts. I was under a tsunami.
The same day as Date #1, I had met Another Man in the flesh....who could not have been more different... with whom there was noticeable romantic spark. We e-mailed every day between my dates with The Editor. The same day as Date #2, I had spent the afternoon flirting over lunch and coffee with Another Man. I really wanted to date Another Man.
So after several unsuccessful attempts to get him in person, I broke things off with The Editor via e-mail. He responded, again, with utmost politeness. He rebuffed my offer to return his scarf. "
I don't even really know why it feels symbolic. Or what it would symbolize. Why does it seem like it should?
4 comments:
@Karin. There are times when a scarf is just a scarf.
@Squigkato.
If I didn't strive to find the deeper meaning in the mundane, I'd have nothing to write about. Just saying.
@Karin. Yes, of course. Proust had his madeleines and tea to stimulate his creativity; you have your scarves. Whatever works.
So.....I have been meaning to comment on this post FOREVER. I have actually thought about this post a bit-it has some weight. It owns some shading and texturing that I usually find in The New Yorker. Which makes me think....(you know how I like to think)...perhaps spending a little less time running around from rehearsal to rehearsal, working towards a speedo running race, or winking on OKC....you should pull together your scarfing stories into a short creative non-fiction & submit the s*** out of it.
as i write this, i find a little irony in remembering many a time your friends words to me started with... "not to sound like your mother, but..."
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