“Nothing beats a great pair of…”

As I’ve said before, I do some of my best thinking in the early morning after answering the cat’s daily wake-up-and-feed-me call. As I lie there next to Mike, trying to lie still, listening to the traffic sounds from the nearby highway and concentrating on drifting off, the revelations just come.

Take this morning for example:

“Ooohhhh! They spelled those pantyhose L’eggs because of the plastic egg they came in!”

(Thirty years later, I get it. I’m not in the marketing biz for nothing.)

How many of you remember buying pantyhose crumpled up in big plastic Easter eggs?

Or maybe you preferred Hanes or a “department store brand” carefully folded smooth over cardboard.

Did you wear “Suntan,” “Beige,” or “Nude”? (If you wore “Suntan,” can you believe you did?)

Were you a “Sandalfoot” or a “Reinforced toe”?

Did you have various shades of black (Jet Black, Off-Black, Sheer Black, Nearly Black) for every occasion?

Do you remember when white hose were all the rage, usually with flowery dresses?

And colored tights with short skirts or skorts?

Remember the fun of pulling them on and seeing the run race from ankle to thigh? Or putting your toe right through the tip? Or not seeing the run or hole ’till after you were somewhere (on the bus or at work) and pulling out your trusty clear nail polish? (Or worse, people who would use any shade of nail polish they had? Crusty Rose-in-Bloom stripe up your leg, anyone?)

Remember how much better it was when they started adding Spandex to the nylon and the hose had some sticktoitiveness instead of going all droopy at the ankles?

“Whatever happened to pantyhose?” I wondered.

I remember wearing them weekly, though not every day. (We were allowed to wear pants where I worked, but many places required women to wear skirts and dresses. And closed-toed shoes.)

I remember wearing them so often I started buying them through the mail out of a catalog — 6 or 12 or more pairs at a time. (Turns out you can still do that here. And here too.) I remember a coworker friend telling me about the “pantyhose club” she joined — like a record club. You’d sign up for them to send you so many pairs a month.

Now, I wear them so infrequently I’m still working through my stash from 20 years ago. Seriously, I’ve thrown a lot away — usually when I try to pull them on and they either (a) don’t fit anymore or (b) the elastic in the waistband has disintegrated.

But I still have 27 pairs of tights and hose stashed in my drawer.

hosestash

Note a couple are still packaged — one in the little baggie from the mail order place. And yes, those are bright red tights — they work great at Halloween with a witch costume.

I even bought once, at that lovely, long-gone, fancy store, Price’s of Oakland, a quilted bag (by Oscar de la Renta) made just to keep pantyhose “safe.” (Actually I bought it with a gift certificate I had gotten from the folks at work. This was circa 1985.)

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openbag

(And yes, those are my toes under the plastic flap.)

The bigger question: Why, oh why, when I wear pantyhose about 3 times a year these days, do I still have all of these?

Do I really think I’m EVER going to wear them? My god, there’s a peach-colored pair in there. And a lavender. And green!

Damn that hoarding gene.

Now, of course, going bare-legged is the thing. (The awful, awful thing to those of us not blessed with “nice legs.”) I remember seeing in a book about the WWII years, how women (probably my mother, too) used what I suppose was the earliest version of sunless tanner because real nylon “stockings” couldn’t be had. They’d even paint the seam up the back of each leg.

Still, I bet there are women out there who dutifully pull on a pair of hose every day and think nothing of it.

Am I right? Let me hear from you…

In the meantime, I MIGHT be cleaning out a drawer this weekend.

Or not.

Women want men, careers, money, children, friends,
luxury, comfort, independence, freedom, respect,
love, and a three-dollar pantyhose that won’t run.
~ Phyllis Diller

New neighbors

Well, as I think about it, the house next door isn’t the only empty house in the neighborhood.

The locals can also choose from these beauties (at fabulous buyer’s market prices with great rates).

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Guess which one recently sold?

Yep, the fancy one that’s way too big and really just a showpiece and impossible to clean. (The new owners didn’t seem to mind that some squirrelly lookers had shaken things up a bit…glad they didn’t move in.)

fancy1

Why am I surprised?

fancy2

After all, it’s good to be king.

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He is the happiest, be he king or peasant,
who finds peace in his home.
~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

And on the 7th day, she rested less

Not to belabor the “oh poor me, I’m so sick” thread, but GEEZ — this latest cold/flu/virus thing has been just horrible.

Today, Day 7, I feel semi-human again (that means I only still have a clogged ear, a less-sore throat, and lingering laryngitis from coughing up bits of lung). I thought nothing could top last year’s episode, but this year’s double-whammy (5-day bout of misery, 7-day halfhearted recuperation, then 7-days-and-counting relapse) has been something other-worldly. Complete with conjunctivitis (pinkeye) of all things.

I so wanted to be dipped in an antibiotic bath (or at least get some in pill form), but haven’t had anything but OTC meds (save the eye drops prescribed  for the pinkeye, though that was probably viral in origin as well). Intellectually, I know antibiotics do nothing for viruses, but emotionally, I needed to think there was something to kill the invaders — my immune system sure wasn’t doing it. I tried a few of the “natural remedies”… gargling with saltwater, drinking apple cider vinegar and honey in water, steaming my head over a bowl of boiling water…to no avail. The only thing that actually felt good was drinking lemon juice and honey in hot water when even tea was more than I could stomach.

So what’s the deal? Have the viruses gotten that much stronger or have I gotten that much weaker? Before last year, I could count on one hand the times in my life I’d had anything even remotely like this. Now I’ll be worrying I’ll never have a “normal” cold again. Also, I thought the body built up immunity — that once you had a certain virus, your body could fight it off next time (I think I gleaned this from an episode of House — probably incorrectly. Or maybe it only works for chicken pox. Or maybe all these viruses I’ve gotten are different. Or maybe I have no idea what I’m talking about.) And all this despite taking a handful of supplements daily, eating pretty well, and exercising regularly.

Forget giant sunglasses and clunky plastic clogs. I think these young ladies have the right idea — imagine how much illness we could prevent if this were the next fashion fad. Maybe I should lead the trend.

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Sickness comes on horseback but goes away on foot.
~ A proverb

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