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BlogSchmog Mama Journal

Sweat Pants and Stilettos

Bad Mommy has always had trouble dressing appropriately, even before she was a mommy. There was the semester (or year, or two) of pajamas to class. There was the time her (then future) mother-in-law kindly offered to buy her shoes because she had traveled five hours to visit Kevin and neglected to bring any footwear.

Just last year, I pledged to wear pants with some sort of non-elastic waist at least two times a week.

I failed.

When I get around to wearing makeup, people notice and comment. I went to the funeral of a colleague’s wife, and my colleague didn’t recognize me. He attributed the lapse to the fact that I was wearing lipstick and a dress. If I do wear matching clothes and mascara to pick up Archie, the teachers notice and compliment me on how nice I look.

At Archie’s preschool though, there are some very well-dressed moms. They have a baseline of stunning, so the preschool teachers never compliment them- if they did, that’s all they’d have time to do. We’re talking about women who can balance on high heels while juggling three kids, a small, organized purse and a minivan- and still kneel to the ground and offer the standard preschool mama greeting– the bear hug of snot.

Sometimes I get distracted mid-sentence when they walk by- it’s not just that their pants and shirt match- they have sweaters, shirts, scarves, belts, purses, non-elastic pants and very sleek shoes. I’m awestruck. Sometimes, I try to pull it together, never with as much success as they do, and I’m floored by how much work it is. I wonder. . . why? What keeps them going every day?

Then, today (bear with me, it all comes together) I was watching one of my favorite Youtube videos. I was thinking, “oh, that woman- so young. I’m so past that age,” then I googled the lead singer and she’s olderthan me. It’s not that she’s younger and as a result, perkier. It’s that she’s just. . . . perkier.

It hit me. All those hot mamas are prepared for the off chance that they’ll run into Alan Rickman and some motorcycles and helicopters. They nurture the potential.

By Amy Makice

Amy Makice is a social worker actively working on two other family-centered projects, Creative Family Resources and Parenting for Humanity. Amy has a weekly online show on BlogTalkRadio.