Sunday, June 29, 2008

Dress Wrestling

I thought the dress quite pretty. The price was attractive, too. No need to try it on—the day was hot and muggy, I was sweaty, the tag said L. I brought the lovely thing home.

Later that evening, after a rain cooled the out of doors and a lukewarm shower cooled me, I pulled the new dress over my head. It was a tiny bit of a struggle to maneuver both arms into the snugger-than-they-looked sleeves. There was no zipper to give the dress ease, nor slashes to loosen the sleeves but I persisted. The rest of the dress fell smoothly over what a kind woman once called my “sturdy” frame.

“A little long for this heat,” I murmured, looking at myself in the mirror but that was no problem, really. I could cut off a few inches at the bottom and put in a new hem. Sweat beaded my newly washed upper lip. I turned this way and that. The dress was a lovely shade of green shot through with earth tones. Cream-colored flowers bloomed across the bodice, a waterfall of subtle stripes cascaded to my ankles.

“Perfect,” I said to my reflection. I was to go to Florida at the end of the month for my daughter’s beach wedding and the moment I got off the plane, I was due to go to dinner with her soon-to-be in-laws.

Though the dress was made of sheer cotton, I was growing warm. Perhaps this wouldn’t be the perfect dress to wear on the airplane, after all. While I was trying on things, perhaps I should scour my closet for something a little less—well—snug.

I crossed my arms and grasped the material just below my arm pits in order to lift the dress over my head. Without a zipper I certainly couldn’t wiggle it down. The dress didn’t budge. I let go and tried pulling the sleeves down a little to loosen their grip on my upper arms, then grasped wads of the skirt again and tugged. There was a slight movement. I tugged a little harder. The bodice of the dress moved up to cover my face, and the skirt flipped over my head, but the arms held fast. I hurriedly uncrossed my arms and pulled the clinging fabric away from my nose and mouth, scraping the skin from my nose with a fingernail. But the moment I drew in a gasping breath, the dress strained in an alarming way. I was being clutched to death by those cream-colored flowers and lovely earthen stripes.

The dress and I struggled against each other for a few more minutes before I finally dislodged its death grip on my shoulders and arms. I hauled it over my head and flung it to the floor, gulping for air and wiping the sweat from my purple face and a smear of blood from my smarting nose. Then I went for the scissors.



My newly renovated new dress hangs serenely in my closet, waiting for its first airplane ride. The sleeves have neatly turned and hemmed slits in the under arm seams, there’s a zipper down the middle of the back, and the skirt falls charmingly to mid-calf. All that shows of our tussle is the bright red scratch on my nose.







9 comments:

Barbara said...

I love the dress and the story! You are so resourceful.

I had the same struggle with one of those white Italian blouses that was obviously made for someone with a very different shape than mine. There's that critical moment when everything is over your head and you can't go back. I understand completely. So sorry you were wounded along the way.

Brian Hayes said...

There are other little scratches that are as charming too. The stretch must have been as great.

Phyllis Hunt McGowan said...

How wonderful to be loved so much by a dress that it refuses to let you go. If only we could all be so cherished ;)
Good story. You are very resourceful.

Pauline said...

barbara - have zipper, will conquer!

brian - i imagine the trees have an easier time getting dressed...

the - that made me laugh. I could have done with a little less love ;)

Susan Lucente said...

Envying your skills as a seamstress... and your patience. I'd have gotten so bent out of shape trying to get the thing off, I'd have it torn at all the seams and tossed into the trash. By the looks of it, you showed that dress who's boss and whipped it into shape very nicely. :-)

Pauline said...

Wind - I don't know what those seams were stitched with but none of them would give an iota. It was pure desperation that got me out :)

Princess in Galoshes said...

Congratulations to your daughter! I love beach weddings, it should be just lovely.

Sorry to hear about the war wound, at least it's a good story!

meggie said...

I am glad you showed that dress how to behave itself! Enjoy the trip.

Flea said...

I'm laughing only because you wrote it so funny. I hope the scratch heal nicely.