Working Girl 16

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Working Girl 16

By Susan Brown

Angel

Once again my thanks go to Kristina LS for knocking this into shape

‘What’s up?’

‘Oh God, oh God, oh God!’

‘O hell, don’t go all religious on me. Tell me what’s wrong?’

I shakily handed the letter over to Sheila. I wasn’t panicking, I’m sure I wasn’t, not really, I mean panicking…no, no, I was OK.

‘Ah, this could be interesting.’

‘Interesting, is that all you can say. I turn up there, dressed all girly like, strip my clothes off, the doctor sees my meat and two veg and all you can say is that it’s interesting.’

‘Don’t panic.’

I…am…not…panicking.’

‘Look honey’, said Sheila sitting on the bed in her best, Florence Nightingale mode, ‘you are getting this all out of proportion. Just go in, sit down, explain that you are in transition and that you are physically male but prefer the female gender role.’

‘You’ve been reading stuff on the internet again, haven’t you?’

‘Don’t say it like I have been looking at porn. When your little problem arose, I thought that it would be a good idea to have a look at the stuff about it on the net. I know all about gender dysphoria and everything now. Well, enough anyway.

‘What is that? Have I got it and will it hurt?’

‘Don’t go all, hypochondriac on me. It’s just a term used for people with your proclivities.’

‘Pro what? Oh forget it; you’re trying to confuse me with those big words again. Look, it’s all very well you saying that it will be all sweetness and light when I go to see the doctor, but it’s me who has to go through this, not you.’

‘I’m sure that it will be OK. You are just letting your imagination run away with you.’

I was not convinced, but I couldn’t do anything about it.

2

Next morning I woke up with vague wisps of a dream; doctors holding BIG syringes, straightjackets and leering nurse Ratchett types… with a shake I cleared my head, slightly. Coming to the realisation that two things were happening today.

First I did have to see a doctor and… I didn’t want to think of the consequences of that, then I was going to work in an office…as a girl!

You can imagine, gentle and patient reader, I was just a trifle reluctant to get out of bed.

Eventually I got up. Sheila was at work, so I didn’t have her moral support.

I stumbled to the bathroom, looked at the mirror and saw my sleep ravaged face staring back at me. With a small grimace and ignoring the building tension, I sat down for my early morning wee.

After sighing umpteen times a small tinkle developed, I wiped myself down there, stood up, took my nightie off and had a shower.

Very carefully shaved my legs under the shower and washed my hair, not forgetting to use the conditioner, of course.

As I dried myself off, I wondered what I should wear. I wanted to look like a girl going to the office. I had a few nice things that I could wear now. Sheila had dragged me around the shopping centre after the shock of opening the letter.

My mind went back to that previous afternoon and I shuddered.

She had made me buy several skirts and blouses, some dresses, bras and knickers.

I got fed up with changing rooms. I was embarrassed at seeing all that naked flesh (other than mine) and not knowing where to point my eyes, while I tried on more and more clothes.

It was the one thing that I still found boring, buying clothes. Perhaps it’s a girl thing that I haven't quite mastered yet. Or maybe you're born to it.

After what seemed like hours we had gone up to the coffee shop and after getting our drinks and some nice big knickerbocker glories, We took the drinks and ice creams, looking really tasty in the tall glasses, over to a table and we sat and watched the world go by.

It was nice to get off my aching feet; heels must have been designed by men; women wouldn’t be that stupid!

We got hit on by a couple of Neanderthals as we sat and sipped our cappuccinos and scooped the ice cream out of the glasses with long spoons.

‘Hi girls,’ said one blockhead, ‘It’s your lucky day.’

‘And why would that be?’ said Sheila, disdain dripping from her voice.

‘We are here to cheer your little lives up’, said Neanderthal 2.

‘I can see you boys are a bit on the shy and retiring side and I don’t want to hurt your feelings or anything but please, piss off.’

I just sat there, eyes wide in admiration listening to a real pro at work.

‘Come on love, you know that we're the best thing you're going to see in this dismal dump today. What say we go grab a flic or something eh,’ said n1.

‘I like the sound of that, especially the ‘something,’ said N2.

‘What part of piss and off don’t you understand? Anyway girls like us are not in any way, shape or form interested in men, no sorry, little boys like you. Now run off to your mummy before I call security.’

I was getting lower and lower in my seat, and my head was now in line with the table. Sheila was a bit anti men at the moment what with the problems she had recently experienced with her ex, she could be a bit unpredictable and I just wanted to stay out of the firing line. I think that I would prefer to play ‘ring around a rosy’ with gelignite than be anywhere near Sheila when she was in a strop.

But they just did not get it. The warning signs were there. Sheila was smiling and looking reasonable. She was tapping her fingers gently on the table; all very bad signals. Thick sods!

It had gone strangely quiet. The only people unaware that there was a problem were the two boys. Most of the people at the other tables had gone quiet and were staring at us in unashamed nosiness.

‘Come on girls, you know it makes sense. Lets face it, we're the best chance today of you having a good time. What are you, frigid or somefin?’

There was a pregnant pause, and then it happened.

Sheila must have had some mystical training from a martial arts expert from Tibet or somewhere windswept and foreign. It happened so quickly.

Sheila picked up our knickerbocker glories and in a blink and it's over motion, chucked the contents with unerring accuracy over the two wasters.

One second the boys were standing there, wearing reasonably clean tee shirts and jeans, with self satisfied smirks on their faces and the next, they were covered in strawberry, vanilla and chocolate ice cream.

They were somewhat stunned and didn’t react for a few seconds. The mixture of melting ice cream on their hair and faces now cascading gently down onto their tee-shirts made me giggle nervously, probably mild hysteria on my part.

‘YOU BITCH!’

‘YOU COW.’

They started to grab at Sheila who was wielding her handbag like an offensive weapon when there was a cough…

‘Excuse me ladies, but is something wrong?’

I looked up from my semi prone, almost under the table position and saw two rather hefty security guards looming over us. They must breed them big in this shopping centre as they both looked over six foot six inches tall.

The two boys looked distinctly uncomfortable as they dripped ice cream onto the nice shiny floor.

Sheila was the first to speak.

‘These, erm… gentlemen were bothering us and making rather rude remarks. I felt threatened as I thought that they might attack us, so I threw the ice cream at them. Isn’t that right Toni?’

‘Eek.’

One of the security guards took my coherent answer as confirmation and in seconds the lads were being dragged away, shouting and cursing their innocence, for some not so gentle interrogation down in the dungeons or somewhere.

Sheila looked at me.

‘Get up off the floor Toni; it’s not ladylike. Shall I order another knickerbocker glory?’

I got myself up a little awkwardly, dusted myself down and sat opposite her again. I didn’t know girls could get that aggressive. She scared me sometimes. There was a sort of unearthly thing about her that was decidedly not of this world.

‘Um, yes please.’ I squeaked.

She got up and ambled over to the counter. People got out of the way like that film, you know, the one about Charlton Heston with a long beard, parting the sea or something.

Anyway a lady cleaner came over, chuckling to herself as she cleaned the mess off the floor.

‘Game one, that.’ She said with a nod Sheila's way. ‘Those boys are bad ones. They're always here, mucking about, frightening the girls. They got banned last year for pinching stuff. They never learn. Stupid gits.’

The woman finished doing her stuff and ambled off again, just as Sheila came back with the ice creams.

‘There we are, get your face into this.’

We ate in silence. The food area gradually went back to normal.

‘Um, Sheila.’

‘Yes, hon?’

‘Didn’t you worry about your continuing health when those boys started and you finished the argument like that?’

She laughed.

‘No, they were pussycats compared to some I have to deal with in A&E on a Saturday night.’

‘Oh.’

3

My mind snapped back to the present. My daydreaming meant that I had to get a rush on.

I grabbed a cream silky blouse and black skirt, matching jacket, some knickers a bra, tights and black low heel shoes and then put them all on the bed.

In a few moments, I was over at the dressing table applying my makeup. This was getting easier and easier to do and in less than ten minutes I had painted my face on.

Another ten minutes saw me dressed, hair brushed and out of the door. I had avoided breakfast as I thought that I probably wouldn’t be able to keep it down.

I caught the bus at the end of the road. I found a seat at the back that was free and I looked again at the letter from the doctors.

I knew where I was going, as the surgery was just off the high street, not far from the office where I was going to work.

My heart did flip flops, thinking of my ordeal ahead. If I was a drinker, now would be time for a stiff one.

All too soon, the bus stopped at the high street. I got off and walked slowly towards the doctors’ surgery. I looked at my watch. Five minutes to my appointment.

I soon found myself outside the surgery, took a deep breath, girded my loins, whatever the hell that meant and walked in.

The place was empty. I was expecting tons of sick people slumped on seats, coughing and spluttering and possibly twitching a little as well.

Instead, I was in a tasteful waiting room, with deep comfy chairs dotted here and there, coffee table with glossy magazines in the centre and a small table in the corner with a small, old fashioned, brass bell on it.

I walked over to the table; the plush deep red carpet deadening the sound of my shoes as I went.

There was a note on the table in front of the bell. It said ‘Please ring for assistance’.

I very tentatively rang the bell, the small tinkle sounded deafening to me in the quiet room and I jumped slightly at the noise.

A door creaked open in the corner and a woman in a white coat came into the room.

‘Hello, are you Ms Summers?’

‘Um, yes.’

‘Gosh, you are punctual. Right, come this way, please.’

I followed her out into a corridor and into another room. It was clearly some sort of changing room.

‘Right, erm Toni is it? Yes, well could you please take all your clothes off and put one of the gowns on from over there.’

She vaguely pointed at some folded items of clothing on a table in the corner of the room.

‘I need to explain something.’ I said, in desperation.

‘No time now, the doctor is very busy and has other appointments. Please ring the bell when you're changed.’

‘But.’

‘Just ring, when you're ready.’

She left the room in a hurry, leaving me somewhat upset, to say the least.

I took all my clothes off and changed into the gown. It wasn’t very pretty.

I felt very exposed and draughty at the back and I was not a happy bunny.

I rang the bell and a few minutes later the woman came in.

‘Good, all fixed? Let’s get you into the doctor.’

‘But…’

‘If you have any questions, just ask the doctor.’

I gave up. She just was not going to listen to me. I followed her with a large amount of trepidation out of that room, down the carpeted corridor and into another room.

It was obviously an examination room with all the usual stuff, you know torture instruments, drugs, needles pills, severed limbs… well perhaps not that but I had watched House MD recently and it kind of put me off doctors of any kind and what with my very recent accident and the traumatic time spent in hospitals, I was slightly biased against the medical profession.

‘Just sit here. The doctor will be with you in a moment.’

With that she left the room, leaving me in a state bordering on mild hysteria.

As usual, while I was waiting, my mind went into overdrive.

What if the doctor was angry and disgusted with me for pretending to be a girl?

What if…

‘Hello, Toni.’

I looked around to see a pleasant looking female doctor. She seemed about thirty years old. She had a white doctor’s coat on, medium brown hair and a gentle smile.

‘Erm, hello doctor.’

She sat down at her desk, looked at a file of papers, put them down and then turned to me.

‘Ok Toni. You received a letter from us about the medical. It’s not going to hurt you or anything like that. It’s just that these stuffy life insurance people don’t trust anyone not to drop dead, making them pay out thousands, something they don't want to do unless they have to. Just looking at you, you look pretty OK to me, but I have to run a few tests just for forms sake.’

She shuffled a few papers on her desk and then continued.

‘First of all, I know it’s embarrassing, but could you slip off your gown and pop yourself on the couch over there as I need to give you a gynaecological exam. I’m sure that you have had many before so know it's a little uncomfortable but there is no need to worry. After that, I’ll take some blood and other things, sound your chest, prod and poke you in various places and that will be it. Toni, are you OK? You look pale.’

I looked at her. She had a kind face. Perhaps she won’t shout at me.

‘I’m not a girl.’ I whispered.

‘Pardon dear, I can’t hear you.’

I cleared my throat. I could feel a few tears go down my face, hitting the starchy white gown like little bombs.

‘I am not a girl.’

‘Sorry dear, it’s a failing of mine. You are, of course a young woman. A very pretty young wom…’

‘I am a boy.’

‘Pardon me?’

‘I am a boy.’ I said looking up through my tears at a face that looked concerned and puzzled at the same time.

She looked at her papers and then looked up at me again.

‘Are you transgendered?’

I nodded, not able to speak.

‘Well, silly. Why didn’t you tell me, letting me blunder on like that.’

‘I tried to tell your receptionist but she didn’t give me a chance.’

‘Yes, sorry about that. She’s agency. I’ve only had her a few days and she’s driving me mad. My normal girl is off with the flu.’

‘She said that you were in a hurry and had lots of appointments, so if you want me to go…’

‘One, I don’t have lots of appointments, I pick and choose my hours and the number of patients I see. Two, this isn’t the NHS, I am private and can charge extortionate fees to clients who can well afford it. Three, that woman will have to go. Anyway, enough about my problems, lets talk about yours. I want you to sit there and tell me all about yourself. Then and only then I will examine you. OK?’

I nodded.

‘So tell me everything. I have a feeling that you have a few things to, ah, get off your chest. I noticed by the way that you are still wearing your bra. Breast forms?’

‘Yes. Well, um… it all started with a letter…’

I told her all my adventures, if you want to call them that. The misunderstandings; dressing for the first time; going out dressed as a girl; finding that I liked the way I looked and felt; realising that I liked myself better as a girl than a boy. Then I told her about the interview with my uncle and the shocking revelations. Then I explained about what happened when I had the accident and finally the incident in the shopping centre with those two idiots.

‘Well you have been through it, haven’t you? I take it you have not discussed your gender problems with a doctor yet?’

‘No, my friend, Sheila has told me that I must do that before I make any final decisions.’

‘Very wise. Why do you feel more like a girl than a boy? After all, you have been a boy most of your life. Just putting on pretty clothes and liking them doesn’t mean that you are a girl, you know.’

I struggled to put words to my feelings.

‘It’s just that I feel more complete as a girl. It’s like before, when I dressed and looked like a boy, I wasn’t very good at it. I was never good at boy’s games. I was shy and withdrawn. I didn’t like rough and tumble. I was bullied a bit at school, but no more than other kids. It wasn’t a bad school really, all boys, no girls. I thought I was OK when I was there but, looking back, I was a square peg in a round hole. Do you know what I mean?’

‘Yes I do. Do you feel more comfortable with being a girl then?’

‘Yes, it’s like I’ve spent most of my life being something that I’m not. I like the way I look now and how other people seem to like me. I’m not so shy and I have friends. I never had many friends before, as a boy. I feel as if my life has just started.’

The Doctor looked at her watch.

‘OK, we’ll talk more another time. Let’s do the exam.’

As promised, she prodded and poked me. She then got me up on the couch, did a thorough examination of me, including my little boys toys and yuk, rectum! Finally, she made me wee in a small bottle, took about an armful of blood and then told me to get dressed.

‘Come back here when you are dressed and we’ll finish things up for today. All right?’

I nodded and walked to the changing room, quickly got dressed and then went back into the exam room.

The doctor was writing on her pad as I came in and she motioned me to a chair.

‘Won’t be a tick.’

She finished writing and then turned to me.

‘OK Toni, that’s all your tests done. You look very lovely, by the way. You will have absolutely no problems passing. Now back to your medical, I don’t think that you have any problems regarding your health that need concern you. I will be sending your samples to the lab and we should get a result in a few days, but I’m not too concerned that anything is likely to drop off you in the near future. However, you need to address the conflicts that you have with your gender. I see quite a few people with problems of this nature, but I am not an expert. I can put you in touch with a doctor that specialises in this and she will help you with any permanent decisions you may wish to make. She is a lovely lady and I highly recommend her. Would you like me to give her a call?’

I thought for a moment and then just nodded.

‘OK.’

She picked up the phone, dialled a number and waited a few seconds.

Hi, Sally, It’s June. How are you? Kids? Great; look I have a young lady here who needs to talk to someone about her M to F gender situation. Could you see her? When are you free? Hah, tell me about it.’

Doctor June, looked at me and smiled while we waited.

‘Thanks Sal. Yes, I’ll see if that’s OK.’

She turned to me.

‘She can see you on Saturday morning at nine. Is that OK with you?’

‘Yes please.’

‘Sal, Saturday at nine is fine. See you at the squash club on Thursday, bye.’

She put the phone down.

‘Well, Toni, things are moving in a positive direction for you. Are you happy?’

‘More relieved really. Its nice to have people that are willing to help me.’

‘The trouble is, there are a lot of kids out there who can’t or won’t get the help for whatever reason. Too often they harm themselves and that’s a tragedy. Anyway, you have a job to go to and that stupid receptionist needs a few words spoken to her, so push off now and I’ll let you know when the exam results come in.’

She stood up and we shook hands and I left.

As I walked out of the building I felt happier than I had done for a long time. I was making decisions on my life now and not being pushed from pillar to post by events outside my control.

I walked the few blocks to the office building where I hoped I would be working for quite some time, took a deep breath and walked through the doors.

Copyright Susan Brown 2007

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Comments

Two fun chapters in a row

Great stuff Susan, the mall icecream scene was perfect. Mind you dumping it in their pants would have been more, um, functionally effective -- all that cold would have shrunk the problem and added nuts to the sundae -- sninker, gufaw, snort -- But your head, shoulders and chest was visually the best. Funny and believable. I wish I was half this good.

So nice to see Working Girl back.

Hope to see Home Alone 2 someday.

John in Wauwatosa

John in Wauwatosa

Working Girl

A very lovely story, I am enjoying it immensly. Looking forward to your next installment.

Joni W

I always like

your writing. You have a similar sense of humour to mine (poor girl!), a good eye for detail and an enviable ability to translate them both to the written word. Yes, I also liked the mall scene but it would be unfair really to single out just one part of what is a great story.

Looking forward to more.

Susie

Working Girl and Home Alone

Thanks for all your kind comments.

I must admit that it's a bit of a blast writing this stuff!

John, I hope to start Book 2 of Home Alone fairly soon.

Hugs
Susan

Yeah! Sue

Good to hear about Home Alone.

I ignored it for a long time as I was busy with reading Whateley and other stuff -- which I still do -- but I read some of your shorter things and several Christmas stories you did and I had to give you a second chance. Home Alone is warm, funny, believable and so sad at times. And not even the faintest like those films that awful MaCauley Calkin kid stared in, thank you!

The scene with the child welfare workers -- or whatever you called them in the story -- was heartbreaking and the aftermath something Disney would hve aplauded. And it had a cat.

Working Girl is getting to a critcal junction here. Is he only a girl to get the job or is it deeper? And what of his bosses ner-do-well brother, the step-father who basically took away everything from the boy. If he didn't kill this mom he sure took advantage of it after the fact.

I haven't a clue where you are headed with this and am enjoying the ride.

John in Wauwatosa

John in Wauwatosa

Looks Like Toni

is finally getting a break. After a bizarre dream and incident at the ice cream shop, she finds a kindly doctor that refers her to a specialist. Too bad the receptionist was such a dork. I love this series.

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

History of heels

It was nice to get off my aching feet; heels must have been designed by men; women wouldn’t be that stupid!

I totally agree with that statement: men are too stupid to realize that, if they accede to women's requests to create something, that women will later blame men for creating it (and claim that men have forced it upon them).

Though not entirely certain, it seems to be the consensus among fashion historians that heels as we know them were first worn as a fashion statement by an extremely vertically challenged Catherine de Medici, who commissioned a cobbler to fashion something that would make her "stand out" when she married the Duke of Orleans, "shortly" before she became queen to his Henry II, king of France. In all fairness, though, the heels he created for her were not an entirely new idea, but instead a modification of the chopines (originally designed to protect the wearer from the mud of the streets) that were then already popular among women.

It wasn't long before heels became a fashion accessory for men, as well (this being quite different from the heels that were added to riding boots, a much earlier innovation designed to prevent them from slipping through stirrups). Louis XIV, the "Sun King" of France, by royal decree reserved red heels to the nobility (royalty?). He can be seen sporting his own pair (along with his ermine robes) in his famous portrait by Hyacinthe Rigaud. Being that heels thus became an emblem of the aristocracy, their popularity among men and woman declined following the French revolution, not to reappear (and then among women only) until the early 1900's. This Wikipedia article summarizes the history nicely.

As best as I can fathom, modern women choose heels for one or more of these three reasons: 1) they are fashion accessories that can both make and add variety to an outfit; 2) to feel taller; and 3), some women feel (sexually or otherwise) empowered wearing them, and are captivated by the extreme crushing force that exists under a metal-tipped stiletto (I have read a few women who have so stated online). In the USA, at least, it is well known among retailers, economists, and many women, too, that women make most of the buying decisions that drive our economy. Automobile manufacturers, who know this, redesigned automobile foot controls (at a significant additional expense) by suspending them from above rather than mounting them on the floorboards as in earlier model cars; this modification makes it much easier to drive in heels. (I can tell you that from personal experience, after having owned three VW Karmann Ghias, which have the controls mounted on the floor.) Similarly, modern automobiles have larger knobs and buttons, so that they may be more easily manipulated despite long fingernails. If enough women really hated heels, women would definitely vote with their pocketbooks, and either the heels would disappear quickly, or their manufacturers and retailers would.

I'm not (necessarily) addressing this comment specifically to you, Sue, nor even to your story. My request is made very much in general when I say, "therefore (based on the preceding), please spare us these 'must have been invented by a man' comments, and all the rest of the tired old propaganda about how heels (or bras, or anything else, for that matter) are instruments of oppression, designed by the Poisonous Patriarchy to hold down Womynkind." For all I know, Sue, considering the "tongue firmly planted in cheek" style in which you are writing this story, you may very well already be saying the same exact thing. "If the shoe fits, (is flattering, and has at least a three inch stiletto heel, then definitely) wear it." :)

Molly

"Sometimes, I just can't help myself!" -Babs Bunny

Molly

"Sometimes, I just can't help myself!" -Babs Bunny

Odd objection :)

erin's picture

According to the article you linked to and other sources, high heels were indeed invented by men -- for men. Women later adopted them then both men and women abandoned them and later, they were again adopted by women during a time of confused signals about the power relationship between men and women. So, yes, it is at least as much women's fault as men's that heels exist -- and entirely women's own fault if they wear them. I love them myself; in a nice pair of heels, I'm nearly six feet tall. :)

The sort of cheerful misandry expressed by Sue's character is just part of female bonding. In women's public restrooms, you frequently hear the complaint that, "This place was obviously designed by a man, there's no where to put your purse!" From the evidence, men do the same thing, complaining about fuzzy toilet seat covers, coasters, and doilies as being inventions of women.

It's just grousing and is pretty much a human right. :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Battle (of the sexes) fatigue

According to the article you linked to and other sources, high heels were indeed invented by men -- for men.

If you refer to their use as an innovation on riding boots to prevent the rider's feet from slipping through stirrups, then yes, historians seem to agree that that was the first use of heels on shoes.

Women later adopted them then both men and women abandoned them and later, they were again adopted by women during a time of confused signals about the power relationship between men and women.

And now men (as men, not as CDers/TVs) are adopting them again, along with skirts, and calling themselves fashion freestylers (I find the implication of this movement, that one need not be female [or even feminine] to be sensual or self-expressive through the language of clothing, to be extraordinarily powerful and liberating). I know of two web boards (here and here) where men in heels (along with TG folk) congregate.

So, yes, it is at least as much women's fault as men's that heels exist -- and entirely women's own fault if they wear them.

I know about faults; I live in So. California, right next to a big one. But that's not my fault. :) I really don't think in terms of blame and fault, but I do appreciate it when people take ownership of their own choices, and responsibility for their own lives. In a climate of politicized victimhood, there is a good deal of finger pointing (which I often think of as "pointing the bone"), which leads to a misandry (misogyny and misanthropy, too) that is far from cheerful.

I love them myself; in a nice pair of heels, I'm nearly six feet tall. :)

I love stiletto heels with a passion: the sharper, the better. :) And, being vertically challenged myself at only 5'3", I can use all the help I can get.

The sort of cheerful misandry expressed by Sue's character is just part of female bonding.
[snip]
From the evidence, men do the same thing
[snip]
It's just grousing and is pretty much a human right. :)

Oh yes, I know that, and I agree with your last observation. I well know that I am highly sensitized to all of this "battle of the sexes" stuff (in either direction), if only because I have too often found myself caught in the crossfire; those experiences are part of the gender identity confusion and dissatisfaction that currently plagues my life. In posting comments like my original odd objection, I too am exercising my human right to grouse because, sometimes, for the sake of my own sanity, I just have to say something about it when it crops up.

Molly

"Sometimes, I just can't help myself!" -Babs Bunny

Molly

"Sometimes, I just can't help myself!" -Babs Bunny

Clear!

erin's picture

>>If you refer to their use as an innovation on riding boots to prevent the rider's feet from slipping through stirrups, then yes, historians seem to agree that that was the first use of heels on shoes.

Well, yes, and no. Apparently, men were the first ones to wear high heels outside of on riding boots and by high heels I do mean higher than necessary for a boot. That's the information I keep running across, it's sort of equivocal in the Wiki article but it's there, too. :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Sacred Heels

Puddintane's picture

In his book, The White Goddess, Robert Graves explores an entirely different theory of the origins of high heels, apparently as what was an essentially prosthetic aid for Kings whose hips were ritually dislocated upon ascending the throne. Interesting book. Some of the scholarship is dicey, and indeed he eschews the notion, preferring poetic sensibility.

Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style

-

Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style

History of heels and blaming men

But it is so much fun to blame the men and for anything lol! I often say to my boy friend Tom that when anything goes wrong it's all his fault and he just takes it with stride knowing of course that I am only joking with him. He does love the attention after all lol!

Anyway, I find this story very entertaining and fun. :} Memories come flooding back to me reading these stories.

Hugs

Vivien

What a fun silly story.

What a neurotic mess! I totally sympathize and empathize with Toni. This is a very good read and I am thoroughly enjoying it.