Tuesday, September 4, 2007

New Jeans

Well, I can now officially get my nearly-new (I just got them at Christmas) favorite jeans on or off without having to undo them. And while this does sound eminently practical and perhaps even somewhat entertaining, it does make me think that, perhaps, the time has come to get new favorite jeans.

I like shopping. I don't usually have a hard time finding clothes that fit, but jeans seem to be the exception to the rule. And that's bad news, because I wear them a lot. I've lost a few inches around my middle and this is my second transition in the last two years. It's good, but it's also a bit of a pain, having to replace clothes that are fine except for the fact that there's a bit too much of them. And jeans are a special case.

Jeans are really more like friends than clothes. You make an investment in getting to know each other. You start off a little unsure... things are not really comfortable but you hope they'll get better. Sure, after a little while you may realize that it's just not going to work between you. The tears may be of regret or sadness or anger, but tears are tears when you're crying them. You may take some time off and decide to try again after you've both cooled down. But you know, deep down, that it's not going to work. There is no return from the "to try later" pile, no matter what you say as you part.

It's over.

But when you find those jeans that are destined to become your favorites, you can sense that something special is happening. And I've had it happen with different brands, with button-fly and zips, indigo, aged, or classic blue. You never know when it's going to strike, but when it does, it's like all of the stars in the what-not-to-wear sky (the original, British snarky one, not the cheery American one) are aligned. You put them on, and they're just right. They work with any shoes. You can toss on a jacket or a tee shirt and they pull it off with aplomb. It's like being able to communicate without having to learn the language first: it's more basic than speech.

They just fit.

And I don't want to do that again. I like my favorite jeans. They're not getting worn out, and their color is good, and we still get along so well. I'm unsure as to whether I should invest heavily in ice cream and try to save the relationship or bite the bullet and go shopping.

I'm telling you, I have a difficult life. I think I need to sleep on this.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

Dude. Way too much stress. Are good tailors in Geneva prohibitively expensive?

Because when it comes to that investment in the friendship, jeans are worth working things out with.

Darryl said...

They are expensive, but it's more than that. Jeans have always seemed to me to be the one item of clothing that it is almost sacrilege to alter. Why? Very good question, and I have no idea. I would be fine with having other pants taken in, would have no problem getting a shirt or suit made, but jeans are supposed to work off the shelf.

Yeah, that definitely made more sense before I wrote it down.

Anonymous said...

I feel your pain Darryl. I too must get a new pair as my current faves are crumbling and I can just see where wholes are going to be forming any day now.
Plus, gotta look sharp (roxette reference hehe) for the gig (=

Darryl said...

I'll look great for the gig... for the first 15 seconds. From that point to the end, between the lights and the drumming, I'll probably be covered in sweat. Oh well... if I wanted something different, I could have chosen the violin.

Anonymous said...

Life is too short to not enjoy a delicious tub of ice cream while wearing your favorite jeans and having dozens of people passing you sniggering to their friends "look at the guy with ice cream dripping down his shirt" "Yes, but LOOK at those jeans! Hot Damn!"

Darryl said...

Now that's what I'm talking about... ice cream it is!

Anonymous said...

Yeah. Ice cream and the tailor. What a combination.

Darryl said...

See, now that's where the internet breaks down. I get the feeling you're mocking out something, but I have no idea if it's ice cream, tailors, Nicole, or me...

Anonymous said...

How 'bout the song "Ice cream" played by Sarah McLachlan live, accompanied by an acoustic Taylor guitar while wearing a fabulous pair of jeans? Top that!

Anonymous said...

Caro wins.

I do my best not to outright mock... But somehow the image of you sitting slumped on the yellow couch, in baggy jeans, with macadamia ice cream slathered down your face and shirt was...well...

Words fail me.

(loud nasal New York accent)
Go to the tailah, sweethaht!

Then get another pair of jeans when you happen across them in a serendipitous, stars-aligned meeting. Love works much better when not under pressure.

Darryl said...

First off, I NEVER slump when I'm eating ice cream. It's probably the only time. But it's just because this couch is just sooooo comfy.

The rest is pretty feasible, though.

*shrug*

And that reminds me... I had a guy play in a rather short-lived band I tried to put together (5 vocalists, 2 guitarists, 2 keyboard players who never showed up... what a nightmare) who had a Taylor guitar.

The first time he plugged in, I asked him to play so I could get a level and do an eq. He played and I just about fell over. It was... just gorgeous. I wanted to cry.

"How... what is... how...." I couldn't get the words out.

"It's a Taylor," he said, showing me the headstock. I just about kissed him. But, in the end, even that wasn't enough to make me willing to deal with 5 lead vocalists...

Anonymous said...

Sigh. Yes, Taylors do that. Mine could do a pretty good job too if you'd only give me a chance to show you what it's capable of while plugged into a real acoustic guitar amp. *big pleading bambi eyes* It would make all of my Natalie Imbruglia/Joni Mitchell dreams come true. Maybe with a DI box/amp simulator? Hmm. I feel like experimenting...

Anonymous said...

Taylor guitars and images of ice cream slather...

the word is "Bliss..."

As for 5 lead vocalists: the opposite of bliss.

We have 5 vocals for our band, but 4 of us trade off lead based on the key and the range and what harmony we can stack in there. Sue just sings backup. We're pretty self-policing. Which, frankly, is its own kinda bliss.