The clothes we wear

Wednesday, March 15th, 2006 @ 9:30 am | Diary-writer

I woke up later than usual today and decided to give the gym a miss. Mum had gone out earlier for her morning walk, and seeing that the house was empty, I thought I'd dilly-dally a little.

It isn't always I get to do this, you know, just stand in front of the wardrobe, dreaming a little, and thinking of what to wear for the day. Today as I looked through the rows of clothes, it hit me that this was probably the 4th set of clothes that I'm wearing in my entire lifetime. Right at the top of the cupboards are plastic-bags of old baby clothings that Mum decided would be suitable for my kids when they grow older, and some other pretty stuff that I used to wear when just a girl, and just a teenager.

I'm still wearing some of the stuff I had when I was in my teens, mostly jeans really, and one or two evergreens that I can still fit into. But when just a kid, I had four sets of the turquoise pinafore, and at least five white blouses for the daily trip to school. That's not too long ago, only eight years back, the most.

Has it been so long, really? That time flies, that's pretty hard to swallow. No I'm not in denial really, but it's really hard to take all that in when I've never really left school. I still meet teachers every day, every week, (most of my colleagues are ex-teachers, and the freelancers are teachers); I still keep most of my books from high school, English namely, especially the ones where the layout designs are great, or the passages are reading-gems, except for a different purpose of course. You know what it's like being a kid in a Malaysian school, you'd have stacks of secondary school revision books from publishers like Sasbadi, Fajar Bakti, Longman… and how you'd keep getting all these books and mull over them like a bending armadillo and when you've just bought them how fervently you would swallow up the first few pages…. alas they're just new brooms, they sweep clean, but only for a while. Months later after the exams you'd sell/give them all away and never look back.

I'm different, I've never had the chance to give them away and never look back. Every single day I consider the irony of the fact that I consider these books more seriously than I used to when a child, and every time I remember how I'd curse 'the stupid author' for writing the loads of bullocks in those pages, I chuckle at the knowledge that I'm being paid to produce such bull shit. It's not that I didn't have a choice, I believe I used to have a choice but somewhere along the way I became a typical cynic and decided not to bother anymore. After all, it pays the bills.

Today I looked at my clothes, and the absence of the old school uniforms and the club polos, the presence of the nicer clothes, and I realized I needed other things, like power-suits (those I don't always wear, we don't require them here), and more slacks, maybe a nice kebaya or two, and some expensive pieces for the special occasions. You know, life is going to change a litle around here, and maybe, just maybe, I can get rid of those high-school books after all. Finally.

12 Responses to “The clothes we wear”

  1. cyber-red Says:

    I have a thing with keeping ‘em old clothes either.

    But lately I had to be cruel and sent them packing. They’re still in the boot of my car; need to bring them to people who might need them.

    And books. Blah I’m crapping along the way… good mornin I need caffeine.

  2. CarolineL Says:

    I’ve given all my text books to my old school. For buku pinjaman purpose.

    I’ve given away all my old clothings. Even when they’re still fitting, but I just don’t wear them anymore. Might as well, give them to the needy.

  3. vincent Says:

    It would be great when you get to rid yourself of those books.

  4. chengsim Says:

    my mum always make my sis and i recycled our old clothes at Giant to gained Giant shopping voucher! i never get rid of my books. i’ll pass it down to my younger siblings or cousins. save cost. books these days are expensive =)

  5. Celebrity Vivids Says:

    everyone needs a wardrobe revamp

  6. Melly Says:

    I give my books and clothes to the charity. They need it! so maybe you can do the same.

  7. Edrei Says:

    Sold off mine the first chance I got. I’ve got no sentimental memories connected to those books. Plus I needed the money to but the next level of books though. No love lost during my school life. Not ever.

  8. Dueessdd Says:

    Jesus, I can’t believe you’re still around. What a retarded blog! Fucking die already….

  9. Nabeh Says:

    But minishorts is older now, although just as shiny and her skin’s just as bouncy and elastic. And she’s even part Eric, especially in the mornings. Must be great being a gurl, can eat/drink less for breakfast. :shock:

  10. philters Says:

    the textbooks i used were hand me downs from cousins anyway and so when me and my brother were done with them, we simply passed them to the next cousin in line. the books becamme tattered and all, but had the answers to every questions, and then some…;)

  11. fonglah Says:

    Nowadays cannot even hand-me-down. My daughter’s books cannot even keep for her younger brother as the school book list changes every year. Is this an evil plan to get parents to keep buying new ones every year?

  12. wenJun Says:

    Donate them. Don’t threw them away. You never know who might need them. Old books, doesn’t means they have no value.

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