My first Halloween
costume that I really remember was the Disco Dazzler. I had no idea whom she
was, but I found her later in a comic book. It stands out because I remember
looking at the row of plastic suits with masks at K-Mart (that used to be the
standard), and not finding anything else that wasn't male or bad. Some kids
like being monsters or witches, but it was very important to me to be a good
character, and ideally, something pretty and feminine.
I think I gave up
on the store bought costumes after another year, and then I remember doing a
rich lady costume, putting rhinestones onto a collar for my stuffed cat, and a
princess carrying around a frog in 4th grade.
There were some
hand-me-downs and things in there too, but I remember in junior high I started
moving more towards the weird and unique. One year I borrowed a family friend's
uniform, and went as a pilot, and one year I got this idea in my head of taping
a flashlight to a hard hat and being a coal miner - which no one else ever
thought of doing, because why would you?
The most amazing
thing to me is how few pictures we have of any Halloween costumes. I cannot go
back and build a visual record. The only picture I know of is from my senior
yearbook. It was a nightgown and wolf mask with some curlers in the hair,
representing the Big Bad Wolf disguised as Little Red Riding Hood's
grandmother. They captioned it "Gina Harris woke up on the wrong side of
the bed."
This is mostly
memorable because I had sort of encouraged some people to nominate me for Homecoming Court. This was stupid
of me. I was caught between that desire to be pretty and popular, and also with
this injustice that you can only be recognized that way if you are pretty and
popular, and having recently done a report on the founding of our high school
and seeing that it was set up to be pretty progressive. I'm not even sure how
seriously I took it, but I did end up on the ballot.
The nominations for
the ballot were announced at an assembly on Halloween. The girls who ended up
making the court were dressed in pretty dresses of the kind that one might wear
to a homecoming dance. I'm not sure if they were just really confident they
would be nominated, or they had student council connections, or what.
I had no idea I
would be called up, and even if I had, I didn't have any dresses like that.
They looked like princesses; I looked like a joke. That is my candid photo for
my senior year, and you don't even see my face.
As I was writing
about Halloween, I was thinking that it's kind of weird that I don't get into
dressing up. I had written it off as the hassle. I don't sew, and the things
you can buy aren't always satisfying. That's partly true, but also, there are
size concerns, and I realized my real issue is that I still don't really want
people looking at me. A costume asks people to look, and I am not down with
that.
I don't think the
yearbook photo was intended to be anything cruel. It could easily have been
because it was funny and creative, and I was. I worked at being funny and
creative because I couldn't be pretty. I tried really hard to divorce myself
from that side of things, except it's everywhere. There is this constant
undercurrent that if you aren't desirable nothing else matters. I'm not always
thinking about it, or even usually thinking about it, but it's always there.
Next year I am
going to need to have a costume. I don't know what that means even. I don't
know if I need to try and be pretty and like the way I look, or if I need to go
ahead and be monstrous because looks don't matter and I'm going to play by my
own rules.
I'm still working
on that reading list for helping troubled teens, which is certainly part of why
I am thinking about this, and influences how I think about it. I have found
that I can't even finish sentences. There are so many contradictions and
problems with it that it leads to a kind of inertia. Well that thought is not
going to work; this one? No. Wait, I...
It's not surprising
that I don't know what I need to do for a costume, but I know I need to do
something. I need to face it head-on. Maybe after a few more books I will be
able to sort it out.
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