Conform!

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When my youngest, Lawrence (or more usually Larry), began high school I was not surprised that he had problems. Not scholastically. Larry is a bright boy. No, the thing about Larry is that he is “odd”. I can’t describe it better than that since I haven’t been able to pin it down better myself. There is nothing tangible. He doesn’t look funny in any way. No big nose or limp or anything like that. He’s not a macho boy but in no way girly (even if some would characterize his love for ballet as girly, which anybody that had seen him on stage would know is a mistake). He’s just “odd”. He doesn’t go with the flow. In undefined ways he’s not like the other boys. I don’t think other boys realise that on a conscious level but the sure know that Larry is “other” and not “us”.

I hate to admit it but I spent the two weeks before the start of his freshman year trying to convince him to CONFORM. Yes, I’m ashamed of myself but I was convinced that I was doing it for his own good. Don’t stand out. Follow the flow. Don’t be odd. Conform. Be a sheep. A good white sheep that baaahs with the other sheep. I hated myself but I hated to see Larry unhappy even more.

Larry tried. He really did. Still, he soon was pegged as “odd”. And we all know what happens to “odd” boys in school, don’t we? I leaned on him to try even harder. He did. He was not very successful. I despaired.

Three weeks into the semester I took Larry to do some supplementary shopping. Among other things Larry needed some new clothes. He had recently hit a growth spurt. I was a bit surprised when he dragged me over to the girls’ side of the shop. There was a long rack of skirts. Pleated skirts. Lilac skirts. Very short lilac pleated skirts. I was appalled. Larry wanted a skirt? One of those skirts? I was conflicted. I certainly didn’t want to buy him a skirt at least not one of those. On the other hand I started to suspect that I finally had been allowed to look behind the curtain to see WHY Larry was so odd. To be honest I felt very uncomfortable but at least this was a breakthrough and we could work from this. It wouldn’t be easy but we could do it. However, for the time being it was better that he didn’t show this side of himself in school so I refused.

- But Mo-om, you said I have to CONFORM. All the other boys in school wear this skirt!

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Comments

But mo-om,

Wendy Jean's picture

Everyone is doing it.

Thank you for the improvement

Of course it should be mo-om and not just mom.

Peer pressure is a wonderful thing.

Okay this was just too funny

on too short a note! Geez talk about short stories! hehehe

It was just getting good too! I felt it. This story had just the right vibe Bru!

Sephrena

Not the shortest by far

However, this could just be a pilot for a series.
Of course that would be a very "Bruish" series designed to drive you crazy: An eight part, 2333 word, series.

Don't say I didn't warn you.

Lilac skirt?

Sounds like a political statement to me.

Hmm

I can't remember any political movement or caus associated with lilac. Given the number of such things I have no doubt there is something out there but not in this case. Lilac and black are the school colours. Besides I have a personal fondness for lilac which might, just might have had had some influence here.

Could be the Mom

Is prejudiced against the color Lilac? Never know! :)

Sephrena

Perhaps

but I suspect the length is more of a concern.

Length?

Isn't pantyhose a solution for any shortness?

Would boys wear pantyhose?

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

I don't know. You might ask Jeremy Chandler ("My Summer in Pantyhose").

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt
Ich bin eine Mann

Ahhh Keeping up with Latest Fashions

BarbieLee's picture

Always so much coin spent on trying to keep up with the crowd as the fashions change much less the seasons. Four seasons of fashion changes what is a mother to do when their child is growing up needing new clothes every year for the growth and changes in the body, then comes the fashion changes. Boys are so much easier, four seasons it's jeans and a shirt. As they grow up it's jeans and a shirt.
Wait a minute! Are boys wearing skirts now? No! It's not only against culture but a mom's pocket book. I'll not allow it.
Hugs Bru, try and not warp any more young impressionable minds while you're out and about. And seducing more military and government types for their deepest state secrets.
Barb
Sugar I sure could have used the Mandarin red dress you slithered into as arm candy for the Bulgarian General. My jealousy meter broke! I can't believe even as beautiful as you are you were allowed to go into the military meeting where they were discussing satellite and space warfare?

Oklahoma born and raised cowgirl

Which?

Daphne Xu's picture

I'm not sure which got me more: "But Mo-om" -- I'd made the unwarranted assumption that this was Po-op. Or that all boys wore that skirt at school.

-- Daphne Xu

The pitfalls of first person narration

As long as we don't use a more gender obsessed language like French or Lithuanian.

I was not using it deliberately THIS time.

Teal

joannebarbarella's picture

Is the colour-du-jour here in Australia. I'm sure Larry would blend right in.

How Do You Know?

joannebarbarella's picture

Sometimes your characters get away from you!

Not this time

I have the back-story too well plotted out in my mind for that. (This time)
For example: lilac and black are the school colours.

Conform

I was surprised that Mo-om was surprised about the schools apparel choices. I can hardly wait for the backstory.

Time is the longest distance to your destination.

Clever use of first-person narration

I, like most readers, assume it is the father speaking, probably. Love that your last line totally blows that assumption out of the water. Nicely done.

>>> Kay

I'm surprised

By now you should be careful regarding assumptions when you read a story of mine.

Consider this an Extra Bonus Twist!