Friday, May 28, 2010

Dieting in The Land of Milk & Honey


Pity, party of one? Pity, party of one...

Nobody likes someone who's feeling sorry for herself.

Now I know that many people experience true hardships, real experiences of self-denial that are for their own good. And we all feel for them--for the guy trying to quit smoking, the couple pinching pennies toward that first new house, the diabetic forgoing the dessert cart. We might even listen to a little of their struggle with a sympathetic ear.

To an extent.

But let's face it--no one wants to hear that guy whine about wanting cigarettes. No one wants those sugar-starved eyes staring down your Oreo. None of us like hearing someone else complain that they can't* afford something. We tip our hats to the stoic decisions, but we recoil from the demand for pity.

Simply put: the Pity Party is a party of one.

And it was Shannon Kelly's party last weekend in Vegas. For awhile, anyway.

Seriously, I'm embarrassed. But this is a sort of tell-all blog about giving up something FAR less serious than cigarettes or killer sugar, so I 'fess up by saying that I was throwing myself a major pity party while shopping with the ladies during our Girls' Weekend in Fabulous Las Vegas.

I'm not proud of it. But here it is. I was already a bit bummed out with the clothes I'd brought-- a couple of dresses I was sure I'd worn a million times. I was stuck with them, and I was feeling sorry for myself.

Seriously, if Hell hath no wrath like a woman scorned, then it definitely hath no bitchy mood like a woman not feeling pretty. Without something new to wear, I was feeling very dull and wanted only to park by the pool and read Harry Potter. And even then I was hating the swimsuit I brought.

But I found myself at the mall with Sarah and Kelly, immersed in a sea of glittering, gorgeous shoes. All of my own accord, of course. After all, hadn't I suggested that mall in the first place? Hadn't I led us to that huge shoe selection?

Hadn't I, in a buzzed and giggling fit on the airplane, made a list of all of the things the 3 of us had expected to find in Vegas, many of which were clothing items?


And I really did want the girls to find the fabulous shoes and clothes enumerated in our Vegas Wish List. I wanted them to know the thrill that is Shopping in Vegas. So of course we were at the mall. And I was bummed out.

I waaaaaanted. We were surrounded by gorgeous summer stuff, and it was calling to me. A funky white dress at French Connection. Light, breezy colors at Ann Taylor. And sandals, oh the sandals. My toes looked disappointed as we dove into the sweet sea of strappy strappiness and began to find stuff for the girls to try on.


What was I doing? Why had I entered into this stupid agreement with myself and then taken a plunge into the best shopping city I've ever known? In the place where every pleasure can be yours, I was forgoing one of my greatest. And I was pissed off about it. I pouted and quit trying things on altogether.

Eventually our dinner reservations demanded that we abandon the shopping. My gloomy self-pity was chased away by a giggling hour of primping in the Venetian Suite. Kelly was dancing on one of the beds while Sarah handed out champagne, and all of us were singing to Britney Spears and Lady Gaga.


And even though it was Sarah who was wearing the super-hot dress just purchased that day, the compliments were flowing as free as the bubbly. They didn't care that I was wearing a dress I bought over 5 years ago--they gasped when I strutted across the room in it. Vainly we snapped photo after photo of ourselves, posing and laughing and honestly commenting on how stunning everyone looked.


So perhaps it was the champagne, perhaps it was the air guitar solo I did with the hairdryer while perched on the railing in the room, but suddenly I felt awesome. Gorgeous. Big-Haired and Confident.


We marched our beauty to dinner, where we had the backstage view of the Bellagio fountains and an amazing array of num-nums to choose from. The breeze was lovely, the company fun, and the conversation pretty hilarious.


And when we went shopping again the next day, things were different. Embarrassed at my Debbie Downer-ness of the prior day, I attacked the stores with everything I had. No dressing room was safe, no pricey pair of pants was going to elude me!

We made the required trip to Anthropologie, and of course we went to Banana Republic. There I put together a lovely outfit for a safari and pretended to be gracefully scouting giraffes while in the dressing room.

When would I need silk high-waisted shorts that tie and have pleats & cuffs? In Africa, obviously, while holding binoculars in Muffy and Spencer's Land Rover. Along with this perfect little (organic) cotton white tank. Because Muffy cares about the environment.


At Ann Taylor I insisted Sarah try on their white pants, despite the hefty price tag, and I tried some, too. Just to see how they looked. There's something luxurious about trying on the really nice stuff and not just going for the sale rack. Like flying first class or drinking Perrier. I went a little over the top, trying them on with heels and a silly formless shirt, which I decided would look better blowing in the wind at the beach. Kelly helped me create that effect:


And finally, the French Connection once again, this time to get Kelly's dream dress. FCUK had come through for us the day before with Sarah's stunning little number, and now it had been determined that the green one was going to be The One for Kelly.

Totally enjoying prancing around in front of mirrors, I grabbed a blue one and somehow managed to paint it on.

Dude, it looked pretty awesome. Kelly was looking like a rockstar down the way in green, and I was kinda glued to the mirror in the blue. The girls were super cool, too, telling me it looked great, even telling me I really ought to just go ahead and get it.


But the cool thing was, it was satisfying enough to just feel good in it. Honestly, it was a big ego boost to see it on and like how I looked.

I felt just as awesome later that night in my own dress. Yeah, it would have been great to flaunt all over the casinos in that blue one, but it was great, well, flaunting all over the casinos in the one I had. And I got to enjoy the company of 2 other ladies who were really enjoying themselves and what they were wearing.

In fact, my stupid pity party aside, we enjoyed everything we did that weekend. Laying by the pool, eating fancy meals, gambling, and--yes--even shopping, we really just lived it up. It was delightful and exhausting, and by the end of it, I wondered how I ever really stressed about what I had brought in my suitcase.


I know this whole dumb experiment has made me appreciate the clothes I already have, but I think that lesson is a little bigger now. Not to get too after-school-special here, but I have to say that I'm thankful for what I have beyond my closet. Like friends who are confident in themselves and who build me up, too. Like being comfortable in my own skin and really enjoying that reflection in the mirror.

So I am renewed in my promise to myself to not purchase anything til 2011. I endeavor not to ever entertain Pity Party Shannon again.

And honestly, I hope for the opportunity to shop with the girls again sometime soon.



*Kelly, this non-homeless asterisk is for you ;)

For the record, I don't like saying that I "can't" afford something. Why don't we say that we "don't" afford something?

If I choose to put ALL my money in a mortgage and car payment and only leave myself enough money leftover to live on saltines and tap water, then I am choosing not to spend money on fancy restaurants. No one's forcing me.

If I quit my job for something with saner hours and a salary cut, I'll have less money for non-shopping trips to Vegas. I'll be choosing not to afford them.

We budget our money toward what we consider a priority. We spend on some things and, consequently, choose not to spend on others. So maybe we should just say that something isn't in our budget rather than, "Oh, I can't afford that."

I'm trying to remember this when I say, "Nope, I'm not buying that," rather than, "Ohhh, I can't buy that!" Because I really don't want end up alone at that Pity Party again.

2 comments:

Kelly Tarleton said...

I am loving this comical and introspective view of our trip and am honored to be featured in your video :) You hid the struggle quite well and I apologize AGAIN for being so man-headed about the shopping. Can't wait to travel with you girls again!

Sarah Meals said...

no joke, i had no idea. and i feel kind of like an asshole.