CLICK HERE FOR THOUSANDS OF FREE BLOGGER TEMPLATES »

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Regrets, I've had a few

There are a few things in life I would do over if I could... I'm sure we all have them. Some of my do-overs would include: my wedding day ( not the groom, just the day and the dress) about two thirds of my high school days and ALL of my junior high days. The one do-over I would like to address today is a comparitively small one-- The Funeral Outfit. I cringe to even think of it, some sixteen years later.
My paternal grandmother died very suddenly at the age of 75 in the early 1990's. My little sister would know exactly what year, I seem to think was January 1990, which would put me smack dab in the middle of my aforementioned junior high days. But it does not forgive the outfit I wore to her funeral. My parents were the kind of people who never really had much of an opinion of our clothing, except when we spent too much money on them, as there were eight of us. But as to choosing our own outfits, I had been doing that pretty much since I could dress myself. This served me pretty well until junior high when I all of a sudden went to a school with the most preppy kids you can imagine... thus my creative outfitting days were over. But when I went to the funeral I didn't have my peers to influence me as to what I put on. I don't know who my influence was, but I somehow got ahold of a short black skirt with a slit in the front, a button down white blouse, and black high heels. It sounds harmless, but add BRIGHT red lipstick, ultra boofy hair, and trunky legs and I looked like an overweight preteen trying to look like a forty year old sexy career girl. I 'm sorry to say that about myself, but so it was. I SO long to go back to that morning and tell my thirteen year -old self to reconsider and put on that floral Laura Ashley cordouroy dress I had hanging in my closet, and show some respect for my grandmother. What was I thinking? And I knew the whole day I had made the wrong choice, it isn't something I was ignorant of until later. I saw my family's confused looks, I don't think my uncle has forgiven me to this day ( I attribute his indifference it to the outfit) The funny thing is, no one said anything about it, which made it even worse. It would have been bearable if they had teased me or something, but their silence made me feel so Ashamed.

To tell you the truth, I was sort of invisible in my family, so no one probably even noticed at all...(sniff, sniff)

Maybe I wore it to get their attention.

Gratitude for Tuesday:
1/ That I could get close enough to a hawk on my walk to hear his wings flapping ( they are so elusive)
2/That I could sleep the entire day away
3/that the snow finally stopped ( it's april, already!)
4/that I have friends where there were no friends before
5/I can't think of a fifth... I am sort of sad today

13 comments:

Sarah said...

Oh, Liz!!

I think that you are BEAUTIFUL!!! It doesn't matter if you looked like a 2-bit hooker at your grandmothers funeral... she loves you anyway. And at least you didn't look like I did when I was in Jr. High! There wasn't enough red lipstick or a short enough skirt to make me not look like whitchy-poo! Arrgh... glad those days are OVER and you should be too! #5 thing to be thankful for... You didn't look like an ugly duckling like Sarah in Jr. High.

Luvoo, S*

Lollygagger said...

Lily,

It was January 1990. I don't remember your outfit at all! Does that make you feel any better?

At LEAST you didn't wander around the viewing room at the Larkin Mortuary saying "smackaroo" to people. (Do you remember my smackaroo stage?)

Which uncle do you think hasn't forgiven you for your outfit?

lily said...

what the %&#*%(#??? Smackaroo??? I so vaguely remember that, but what the #$&*(#??? I love that!!! Smackaroo... I am totally going to say that from now on to strangers...I wish I dared. Uncle Steve was the one who hasn't forgiven me... but I don't think that its because of the outfit only. He just hates me, I swear.

Mle said...

lily you have always been so sweet and goodly, no one (not even uncly steve) could ever think you looked even remotely hookerish. you were just going for the Look of the Moment! every 11 yr messes that up- in the worst possible ways. it's expected!

ps, i think i have heard every one of your siblings mention feeling invisible (except joe, probably). i don't have anything to say to elaborate, not even sure why i'm pointing it out, except i'm curious about it and hope you'll write about it s'more. and maybe Sarah will comment or post about it on her own blog, hey Sare! do you think your kin felt overlooked (if that's even the right word) in that way in your same-size family?
just wunnering, em

Lollygagger said...

Uncle Steve doesn't like us because we all spent too much of dad's money. I don't think it has anything to do with dressing up as hookers.

mle, I think what lily means is that she feels invisible in our EXTENDED family. Which I do too. I've gotten used to just being ignored by my aunts and uncles. Do you still feel that way lily, since you got married? I figured that especially mom's side ignores me because they don't know what to say to someone who is 27 and single.

Mle said...

Well that makes a lot of sense, Lala. Though i'm still curious about the other thing...

Did I ever tell you gals about going to Oston's grandma Janet's funeral, right before I moved out here? All the extendeds were in from rural Utah, and we kept meeting them and they kept asking us where did WE live? and in what TEMPLE were we married? and which ones of these were OUR children? And when we answered these questions thusly, "Oh, we're not married," they would look at us blankly as though we had said something altogether inconcievable, as though we were very foreign and speaking in incomprehensible accents on subjects only applicable in our Homeland. If we weren't married, then what could we be? An Old Maid and a Careerless Graduate? I wonder if it would have helped their understanding at the time if we had explained that we are heathen folk, ha ha.

Mle said...

That last comment was too long, sorry Lil. I should have done a trackback, which brings me to my question:
LIAZ, HOW WOULD YOU FEEL ABOUT ME LINKING TO YOUR BLOG FROM LUCY'S SPLEEN? I'd love to do a post about how my childhood friends are blogging and how happy that makes me, but you had expressed maybe not wanting too many people reading Rural Rosy (though your posts are so great! I can see that you are writing for more than just me, La, Sarah and Criz! You are telling stories, here. GOOD ones!) and we all know my blog can be a bit of a nastwich, so I want to be very sensitive to everybody's privacy and sensibilities. In sum, I'd love to link to you, and I don't think you would see much traffic from it (I'm only getting maybe 400 to 600 hits a week right now) but you would probably get just a few extra page views (mostly from my mom) directed from my site, nothing extreme, but I've been wanting to check if that's okay with you. Will you let me know how you feel about that? If you have any questions, please ask!

love you,
m

P.S. My readers are mostly A) my friends from home, B) mothers in their 30's, C) women around my age who with partners but no children, and D) a couple of really sweet, funny college guys. None of them are big commenters, and I have only ever had really positive interactions through my blog, with really nice people who I now consider friends. So.

Sarah said...

Lidder,

I am so sorry about the hooker comment; I thought I was making a funny and now realize that it wasn't all that funny. So, sorry.

When my nanny died, I was given the assignment to deliver her eulogy. What a nightmare that was. I think I got out all of 10 words, before I burst into tears and ended it. I was horrified afterward that I had made such an embarrassing speech at her funeral, which was supposed to be filled with moments of remembering her life. It was actually just me sobbing. Since then I have vowed to not speak in public like that without first- being really prepared and second- being VERY prayerful. I wasn't either for her funeral and have felt awful about it ever since.

lily said...

MLE...
I think that is so interesting that all my sibs have said that.. I actually meant my immediate family when I said that I felt invisible in my post. I know Lolly feels ignored by the mom's side, but I tend to feel invisible w/ the immediates. I am glad that I am not alone.. I don't think it's possible to not feel that way at some time or other...I am interested to see what Sarah says about it too.
To your other comment, I don't mind if you put me on a link...I don't think too many people would come to it either. I appreciate your encouragment.. I love love love keeping in touch w/ you and Lolly and Sar this way.
Kay see ya ( as Randy Z says)

Love,
Lily

lily said...

Sarah--

I thought it was extremely hilarious what you said about my outfit cuz it was true!!! You were making a very funny. I am sorry you have such regrets about your nanny's funeral... She was such an incredible lady, how could you not just sob???? It showed how much you loved her and that says more than any words ever could. Talking is overrated.

But I know what you mean about feeling more prepared....

Love,
Lily

lily said...

Lolly...
I think you are right about the uncle Steve theory... but WE didn't spend all of M & D's moolah... they gave it away. Plus you have not EVER mooched off Mom and Dad, miss full ride scholarship independentest of us all...

Sarah said...

In my family I was seen and not heard for the LONGEST time. Until finally one day people noticed that I actually had opinions of my own... and strong ones at that. I don't think that I ever felt invisible. I just felt like people didn't care what I had to say until I forced them to listen.

That and as I said before... I was the "ugly duckling" in my family. It took me quite a while to bust out of my shell. Once I did though, it was like, hello on WORLD...! Here I come!

Terri said...

Oh girls, girls...
I think the only thing we should really feel any shame and remorse over is the fact that "The Ostrich" was invented to Manhattan Transfer's "Birdland," and that we kept doing it in public where people could actually laugh and point at us doing it.
Lidder, don't feel bad about your outfitter... Like you said, you were in you formative years and that is where one learns what to wear, and what NOT to wear!!!
Oh how I miss being a kid with all of you girls. It is so hard being a grown-up. Those days with all you cuties, I really will cherish forever. I miss you all*

Tedder*~*~*