This one was a little harder to write than my usual drivel, but I'm working on improving my ability to convey emotion rather than sarcasm. I hope it worked.
***
I went shopping for
clothes the other day, and although I didn’t buy anything, it was an enjoyable
experience nonetheless. You see, for the
past twenty-plus years, my wardrobe has come from the Big & Tall store.
For those who are
unfamiliar with that type of retail experience, a little background explanation
may be necessary. At first glance, being
overweight not only requires larger clothing—the one thing the normal-sized
world sees—but one of the other side
effects of the social stigma is disdain for doing some many things in public,
and shopping is one of those many things.
I suppose that’s why it’s thought to be easier for gentlemen of stature
to have their own place to shop, away from the prying and judgmental eyes of
strangers, rather than dedicating a portion of valuable floor space in ‘normal’
stores for larger-than-life customers.
While a lot of heavier
folks may be gregarious, outgoing, and the center of attention, there are many
times where drawing attention isn’t desired.
Having body issues is tough, and nothing draws attention to the body
more than the clothes we choose to wear.
So clothes shopping for the heavy set has a few more degrees of
difficulty than most people would ever consider.
The internet has
alleviated most of the anxiety that goes with shopping for clothes when one
does it out of need instead of for pleasure, but it only goes so far. Yes, it’s private, and nobody can see you
doing it, and there’s no judgmental sales clerk unconsciously looking at the
size on the tag and then looking up at you, and then back at the tag, but
buying clothes without being able to try them on first presents its own set of
obstacles.
Aside from the mental
and emotional hurdles one faces when shopping for plus-sized clothes, there is
an unfortunate financial component to consider, also. A pair of Dockers that would cost a skinny
guy $34.99 would cost me about $55.00, plus another $5.99 if I want them
hemmed, because when your inseam is only half the distance of your waist size, your
pants generally have to be custom-made.
Even then, you’re not actually getting a name-brand pair of pants, like the
afore-mentioned Dockers. It’s usually
some sort of Indonesian knock-off that fall apart after eight washes—or if you
sneeze, whichever comes first.
Shirts are a little
easier to find, but if you want one with buttons, there’s an upcharge for that,
too, kind of like getting power windows in an economy car. A few extra ounces
of material tend to run upwards of $15 by the time it becomes a finished
product, but then you’re faced with trying to find something to wear that’s not
hideously ugly.
That brings us to the
other problem with shopping at the Big & Tall. Besides being expensive and
generally of low quality, most of the selection available is just too god-awful
to consider wearing in public. Someone
once said that life is too short to wear ugly clothes, and I’m firmly convinced
that whoever said that was a skinny person.
It’s not enough that
the universe punishes you for being fat, but part of your sentence is being
forced to wear clothes that are already on the trailing edge of fashion, if not
downright ugly.
Ask yourself this: Have you ever seen an overweight person and
said “Man, they really dress nice—I love their wardrobe!” Not likely. It’s because when you’re fat, in
addition to all of the hundreds of other daily reminders that you’re different—and
not in a good way—you are condemned to less-than-ideal wardrobe choices. And
you’d think that expensive clothes should at least be stylish, but you’d be
wrong.
I supposed it may be
just a matter of perception. It seems to
me that most of the clothes to choose from would be just fine if I were an
extra in a hip-hop video, but since I have to go to the office every day in
order to pay for the wardrobe, it’s tough to separate the business casual wheat
from the urban casual chaff.
But all of that is
behind me now.
In the past year, in
addition to losing over 160 lbs, I’ve lost an entire hard-core porn’s worth of
X’s from my shirt size. And because of that, I can now get my clothes ‘off the
rack’.
It may seem like an
insignificant thing to those who’ve never given a second thought to the
clothes-buying experience, but for someone who’s been on the outside looking in
for the past two decades, it is, in the words of our esteemed Vice President, a
Big Effin’ Deal!
The realization came
one morning when I had to punch another hole in the belt that’s slowly making
its way around me twice. It was an
expensive piece of leather, and I’m determined to get as much use out of it as
possible, so every month or so I take out the cordless drill and create a
visible measure of success, every bit as significant as the hash marks on the
kitchen wall of a growing family. So while my pants may be baggy like all of the
cooler, younger fat kids, I realized that it’s probably getting to be time to
clean out the closet, donate to Goodwill, and think about improving my
wardrobe.
So one day last week I
took the afternoon off of work, telling my boss a little white lie about going
to the doctor, when all I really had planned was a bit of retail therapy. I
drove over to the mall, a little nervous, wondering if I’d really crossed that
magical Rubicon into the world of skinny people—at least ‘skinny’ as defined by
me—the only evidence I had was a belt that was too long, pants that were too
baggy, and shirts that now hung to my knees when I kept them untucked.
Not knowing what to
expect, I left my wallet in the car, unprepared to deal with either
disappointment or buyer’s remorse, regardless of which way the afternoon
went. Like the first Apollo astronauts
to circle the far side the moon, I was on a mission of discovery, not
colonization—I just wanted to see what would happen if I went there, I had no
intention of planting my flag and collecting a bunch of rocks.
I would be lying if I
said I wasn’t a little bit nervous in the first store I visited, and I’m sure I
was a little too quick with the ‘No!’ to the first salesclerk who asked if they
could help me. I figured that if I got
pinned down, I could always say I was shopping for a gift, that way if they
didn’t have anything that would fit me, I could move along and pretend that
their selection just wasn’t up to my standards.
At least that’s what I told myself.
I pretended to be
casually browsing, but in truth I was desperately searching for a certain size
that I estimated would fit the new me.
Nobody bothered me while I dug through the racks of shirts, hoping to
find something, anything, I could wear. Still a long way from the textbook
definition of ‘average’, I figured anything that would fit me would still be at
the far end of the size spectrum, but persistence paid off. I found a decent looking shirt in a size that
interested me, and in a fit of optimism, grabbed another one just like it, only
one size smaller.
I may have been even
more nervous walking to the fitting room than I was walking into the store a
few minutes before, and I had the passing thought that the sales staff must’ve
thought the only guy sweating on a 40-degree day had to have been a
shoplifter, but I wasn’t sure if it was that or the old me thinking that they
were just worried that the fat guy heading to the fitting room was going to
ruin the merchandise by trying to force ten pounds of sausage into a five pound
shirt.
I closed the fitting
room door, looked in the mirror, and tried to reassure myself that things were
different now and that even if these clothes didn’t fit, there was always next
month. I said a quick non-religious prayer that I wasn’t embarrassing myself,
and chose the bigger of the two shirts.
It fit.
It wasn’t tight, it
wasn’t binding, and I didn’t look ridiculous in it. In fact I looked pretty good in it. But just as my definition of ‘skinny’ is
somewhat skewed, so is my definition of ‘well-fitting’, so I tried on the
smaller shirt, just to see. It fit also,
but it wasn’t quite as comfortable as the first one, so I changed back, anxious
to see myself wearing normal clothes comfortably.
Like the pounds that
I’d lost in the past year, the burden of self-doubt and self-consciousness disappeared
and were replaced by the newly discovered weightlessness of self-confidence. It
was an amazing transformation, but one that nobody could see but me.
Armed with a new
attitude about life in general, and clothes shopping in particular, I bounced
between several stores that afternoon, hauling piles of clothes with me into
the dressing rooms with absolutely no intention of buying, finally
understanding what women feel like when they shop for shoes. I must have tried on a dozens of things in
several stores, sometimes striking out, but other times pleasantly surprised.
And while it may not be the most masculine thought I’ve ever had, while
carrying an armload of hangers to the fitting room, I couldn’t help but liken
myself to Julia Roberts on her Rodeo Drive shopping spree with Richard Gere,
but the opportunity to say “BIG mistake” to a salesperson never really
presented itself.
After a couple of hours
the novelty wore off, and I was disciplined enough to go back to the car, not
to fetch my wallet, but to drive away, knowing that the next time I get some
extra cash, I won’t have to spend it all on clothes because I have to, but
because I want to. Those jackals at
Casual Male and King Size Men have a pretty good racket going, and sadly, they
are a necessary evil, but I’ve moved on.
I don’t have to shop at the Big & Tall anymore. It may be a small step in the grand scheme of
things, but to me, it was a giant leap.
Mikey
8 comments:
Mikey:
Two things. Kudos on the weight loss, and welcome back to the blog
world. You've been missed.
PeanutsEnvy
Excellent post, Mikey. And even more so, congrats on your new direction in life. Enjoy your vacation - you've earned it.
That's awesome, Mikey! It's quite the triumph. Dealing with Big & Tall is a nightmare. Frank has a size 15 shoe too. So, there is no part of him that is easy to dress. I completely understand the frustation. I'm thrilled for you - this is quite a milestone. To think shopping might even become enjoyable.
that's awesome...congrats! it reminds me of a kevin smith article on how the world's only acceptable discrimination is for fat people...this came after he was kicked off the swa fight a while back. keep up the good work dude...and enjoy your old home again!
I think a before and after picture is in order.
ISE
Mikey,
Just found out you were blogging again fron Linda Lou's blog. Happy to hear your feeling better, we missed you.
Diana
That double wrap around belt tells an amazing story.
Congratulations on the weight loss it's an amazing feeling when your body changes somuch. The outlook on life changes too! You should post a reveal picture
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