Women seemed to be afflicted with some strange need for the
ultimate accessory. There is a fervent and unspoken search for that one perfect
object of desire to hang off your arm, that adorable little clutch you feel
some strange compulsion to store your whole life in…
And one day this beautiful little purse catches your
eye. Maybe you were just walking down
the street, busy and harried and tired after a long day of work. Or maybe you
were even out looking for one, buzzing from one place to the next with one or
two of your girlfriends, keen eyes watchful for that holy grail of possessions that
will surely complete you. Whatever the
circumstance, caught your eye it did.
You’re pulled in by its glimmer like a fly to a lamp. Did it just wink
at you?
You. Must. Have. It. But surely such a thing of beauty, with
its dazzling color and sparkling studs and fasteners, is out of your
reach? Surely a plain-Jane girl such as you
couldn’t afford such a piece of arm candy? Surely not. You’ve learned from past
experience how the scenario will go. You reason with near certainty that you will
be rejected by its costly glamour, and will end up making a hurried exit,
slumping a little in shame.
And yet….
Barely daring to hope, you gingerly lift the price tag. Oh
my! It’s so cheap! You are so floored
that someone like you can actually attain such a glorious item, you buy it
without a second thought. Bursting with
newfound confidence and just a smidge of vanity, you skip out of the store with
a new prize in your claws.
At first you decide you’ll only use it occasionally. It would lose that thrilling sparkle that
comes with newness if you just committed to using it all the time, right? So you dress up nice and take it with you for
occasional nights out on the town, smiling to yourself at how complete, and
cute, and utterly together you look
with it hanging off your arm. And at the
end of each these glimmering evenings you take your valuables out of it (don’t
want to wear it out now do we?) and hang it neatly in your closet, looking
forward to the next time you head out to show off your new acquisition.
Eventually, you find yourself using it more and more until
you never seem to go anywhere without it hanging off your arm. And the more you
carry it, the more the little bits of your life start to creep into it. Oh of
course there’s the basic stuff you commit to any handbag, small, insignificant
things you had left there from the beginning – chapstick, Kleenex, receipts,
small change. But there are also the
important things. Wallet, chequebook,
keys, ID – you’ve trusted these precious bits of your identity to this shiny
stitched vessel. Little personal things
that you loved - things like that pair of earrings that were a gift from your
sister, or that snapshot a friend gave you of good times shared – these things
get gradually absorbed into your purse as well.
But you trust it with them. Well of course! You should be able to,
right? I mean, you picked it out after all.
People notice it. Some say “Hey, you got a new purse! Oh
it’s adorable, it’s so you!” and you smile and glow and feel
all warm and happy about the choice you made, the wonderful steal you snagged.
But one of your close friends says “Yeah, that’s pretty
cute. Be careful though – I bought one just like that a while ago. Piece of
shit completely fell apart on me.”
This irks you. And all of a sudden, just for a moment, you
turn into a nasty little person. Seemingly
without your control, a phrase will flash through your head. Perhaps it was just a simple “oh shut up”, or
maybe a “why’s she so bitter”, or possibly even a “jealous bitch”. You walk
away in a huff, marveling at the audacity,
the gall of that woman to make such a
comment about your lovely new purse, and ignoring that little tickle of unease
growing in your stomach that just turned into a gut-ache.
Because you have started to notice things. Admit it you will
not, but in your deepest core your are realizing your perfect little clutch has
flaws.
Bits of wear become evident.
The edges of the fabric and vinyl fray.
Those sparkling rhinestones you thought were crystal - they turned out
to be glass. Maybe even plastic. Some have even fallen off. Amazingly enough,
you reason that it surely must be you
at fault. Oh yes! You know what it is!
It must be because you use it too much!
You shouldn’t be so hard on it!
It’s too small? Oh well that’s just because you fill it too
full. You weigh it down so much with all
of your possessions and obsessions.
It doesn’t have
enough compartments, so everything ends up in a jumbled heap in the
bottom. You lose little bits of your
life in it, they almost drown in it. But
that’s just because your disorganized, isn’t it? Surely if you were less scatterbrained
and could reduce all your shameful baggage it wouldn’t be so.
Of course, since none of this is the poor purse’s fault now,
you don’t give up. With noble missions
of self-improvement, you press on, determined to make it work with the piece of
arm candy you’ve gotten so attached to.
Then it happens.
One day you are just going about your business when the unthinkable
occurs. As you are strolling down the
street with your clutch hanging familiarly on your arm, a huge hole rips out of
the side.
Suddenly your whole life is spilled all over the
sidewalk. Loose coins trickle down,
ringing like sad chimes as they hit the hard cement. Chequebook, wallet, loose cash, makeup,
jewelry – everything, everything spills out and crashes on the concrete.
For a moment you just freeze, realizing what just happened.
And then you are brought to your knees. You are crawling now, like a lower life
form, pathetically bowed to the ground as you try to gather all the scattered
pieces of your existence. You fish that
snapshot out of a puddle, totally ruined.
You find one earring, but alas, the other must have fallen into the
gutter.
People walk by and your face flushes red and hot as you feel
them staring at the mess around you.
Humbled and ashamed, you try to pick up the mess as quickly as you can
and get out of this awful situation. Thinking
of what a beautiful thing invisibility would be, you just want to go home.
Realizing after you’ve picked everything up that you can no
longer trust that purse of yours with it – it would all be lost again – you
begin the long walk back to your place.
Left trying to carry it all in your hands and pockets, you awkwardly
amble home as you try to keep it all together and not drop anything. It’s
hard. You realize now how much you
relied on it, how much you depended on that adorable, cheap, unreliable
accessory.
You finally make it home, awkwardly unlock the door, and
reach your bedroom. You lay everything in you arms, all your precious cargo, on
the bed. And the purse, that beautiful
purse you loved so much, you stretch open your fingers, and you let it fall to
the floor. You don’t even look down.
You turn to you valuables and put them away, set them on
dressers and tuck them in jewelry boxes, and then you sit down on you bed. Your eyes stray down to the floor, and you
look at your purse collapsed on the rug.
What used to be your prized clutch just looks tired and crumpled now. You wonder how you never noticed before how
worn out and cheap it looks now.
Seeing it lie there, you would like to imagine that it maybe
feels a little empty inside, misses your life inside it just a little.
But you know it’s not true.
The truth is, it would be more than happy to let someone else fill it up
and use it.
The truth is that, really,
that purse doesn’t give a damn whose arm it’s hanging off of.
After all, it’s just an accessory.