One
or two times a week, I take an Epsom salt bath. I don’t get
massages or facials for manicures or pedicures, so this is the one
body indulgence that I partake in, usually in
tandem with
a trashy
book.
I am a big believer in the restorative power of Epsom salts and
trashy books.
But of course, just plain Epsom salts are not enough. I am an Epsom
salt connoisseur, and I have very refined taste. My latest favorite,
which I will go ahead and buzz-market here, is Dr. Teal’s Pink
Himalayan Mineral Soak. It has a lovely, soft, orangy scent and I
associate it with the blessed silence of Being in the Tub, which is
my sacred time during
which no one can reach me and demand things of me. Even Mr. Typist
seems to recognize bath time as sacrosanct,
and will only approach to respectfully
knock on the door and ask if there is anything I am need of. But
somehow, recently
my local drugstore ran out of
Dr. Teal’s Pink Himalayan
Mineral Soak, so
instead I decided to try the good doctor’s Activated
Charcoal & Black Lava Salt Soak instead. It wasn’t nearly as
good and it left sooty, muddy streaks in the tub,
but I took it philosophically-- after all, a bath is a bath.
However,
shortly after getting out of the tub, I started to feel burny and itchy,
and when I looked down at my arms, I noticed that there was a hot,
red rash forming in the crook of both of my elbows. After a panicked
mirror check, I saw the same rash forming on my stomach, too. Mr.
Typist then confirmed that it was also
present
around the back of my knees. I kept telling myself to remain calm and
that it was
probably temporary, but I had a restless night of waking up and
panicking that I was going to be covered head-to-toe in some sort of
terrible, disfiguring skin disorder that would take years to get rid
of and that would cause me
to be shunned by society,
dismissed from my job, and thrust
into homeless—because I
am a very
rational person that way. It
turned out to be nothing. The redness disappeared on it’s own and
was just a minor,
temporary reaction. However, I will never trust “Activated
Charcoal,” whatever that is, again.
I
was minding my own
business the other day reading a book on the couch, when Mr. Typist
walked into the living room and snorted derisively me. At first I
thought it was because I was reading a novel, an activity which
he disapproves of, but instead he was sneering
at the holes in my socks. “My own wife,”
he said scornfully, “is a hobo! Why there is a hobo in my living
room? Woman, stop wearing your socks out!” Well,
it’s not that simple. I can’t
stop wearing my socks out, because I have Terrible Feet. Terrible,
Frankenstein's monster, troll, Hobbit feet. Huge, unwieldy, misshapen feet with bones that stick out on the medial side that I
think are known as “bunions.” I
don’t want anyone looking at my feet, hence the “no-pedicure”
rule. My trainer casually asked me about my shoes a few sessions ago,
and while I answered calmly, inside I was fighting a body-dysmorphic
battle to the death. Why did he have to mention
my feet?
Did he know all along how terrible they are and this was his way of
mocking me? I calmed down eventually, but I still hate my feet. And
now I have to go buy new socks so Mr. Typist will stop calling me a
hobo. I feel guilty
about hating my feet, because they do a lot for me and they are
strong and sturdy, if not elegant. I should be more grateful.
Luckily,
I can sublimate my foot dysmorphia
by bingeing
on a fantastically god-awful new Netflix show called “Spinning
Out.” It’s really bad, in the best way possible. It
has all of the pot-boiler ice-skating drama characters: The
psychotic, ex-skater champion mom who is now trying to live through
her daughters, the cruel, ambitious Russian coach, the smirking,
good-looking rich guy, the spoiled rising star, the bitter
older sister whose
ambitions have been thwarted. It’s high-pitched and over-the-top
and it takes itself very seriously.
And there is lots of
ice-skating. I love
it. I plan to sit in the living room in my holey socks, clutching
my bindle and watching “Spinning
Out” until Mr. Typist leaves the house and returns with a bag full
of brand-new socks for me.
In the meantime, here’s
a romantic
ice-skate:
--Kristen McHenry
4 comments:
Superb writing, Kristen, and great song selection, too!
I clothe myself at a cost of about a hundred bucks per year, but there's one sartorial luxury I indulge in: Darn Tough socks, at 20+ bucks a go. They're just such wonderful things: every time I put a pair on, I exult in their gloriousness, and feel deliciously spendthrift. (They last forever, so they're a slightly less ridiculous buy than they first appear to be, assuming that you don't somehow lose them in the first decade or two.)
Thank you, Master Poet! :)
Thanks for the tip, Dale! I will check that out. I need strong socks!
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