Temptation
“...Don't
be tempted by the shiny apple
Don't
you eat of a bitter fruit
Hunger
only for the taste of justice
Hunger
only for a world of truth
'cause
all that you have is your soul.”
Tracy
Chapman (All That You Have Is Your Soul)
When
I was a kid, my mother made all our clothes. In that day, girls had
to wear dresses to school and to church. Mother not only made them,
she cared for them. She mixed up a big bucket full of Niagara Starch,
and after the dress was washed clean, she dipped it in the starch and
hung it on a clothesline to dry. When it was dry, and stiff enough to
stand on its own, she sprinkled it with water, rolled it into a neat
bundle and stored it in the refrigerator until she was ready to iron.
One day a week was set aside for ironing because it took all day to
get though mine and Jerrie's dresses and crinolines. Anyone who
thinks the women of the 1950's didn't work should have known my
mother.
We
lived in a town composed of the very rich, the marginally poor, and
the very poor. One of the indicators of one's status, besides which
side of town you lived on, was the clothes you wore. Villager
sweaters, Weejun's loafers, and dresses from Burand's or Lazarus
department stores were hot. Anything else, and especially homemade
clothes, were passe. At fourteen, I longed for store-bought clothes that we could
not afford.
The
world will tell you that you're nobody if you don't possess the shiny
apple. Nothing has changed with regard to that. I watch the
commercials on television for the skin cream that will transform your
face, and the diet drug that will reconfigure your shape, and the
underwear that will turn you into a goddess. The message is
clear—we're not acceptable just as we are. We must sell our souls
to have straight, artificially colored hair, spotless, wrinkle free
skin, painted nails, and the same figure we had at twenty-five. It's
a house of cards. It's a false idol.
In
Chapman's words, 'all that you have is your soul'. What matters is
what you have on the inside. Regardless of all the money spent on
defiance, we're all going to age if we live long enough. Being
healthy, rather than hot, is the goal to strive for. Developing depth
of heart and openness of mind are worthy goals for one's later years.
It's not a matter of believing the right things, or looking the right
way, or living in the right neighborhood. It's a matter of living
free of whatever spin the world is throwing at you. It's a matter of
living deeply true to self, with compassion for oneself and for
others.
When
I look back now, I so appreciate the fact that my mother made my clothes. They
were beautiful and they fit me. I wore a lot of hand-me-downs then, too, and guess what, I still do! Give me a thrift store over the
shiny apple any day.
In
the spirit,
Jane
2 comments:
Amen sister.
Nicely put
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