The Island Shoe Girl's Blog

Where shoes meet sand…

Real Life vs. The Movie Date April 26, 2009

These heels may be be Oscar worthy, but they are not scripted shoes these are the real life stunners.  Photo by Jean Thorton

These heels may be be Oscar worthy, but they are not scripted shoes these are the real life stunners. Photo by Jean Thornton

It’s the first date scene we all know so well. The couple meets shyly, he is left speechless by her beauty, and she smiles sweetly and tucks her shiny hair behind her ear. One them says something stupid like, “let’s do this” and Cheap Trick’s “I Want You to Want Me” starts to play. It’s how every first date starts… at least it’s how they start in the movies. Sure, you can rotate any location for the meeting spot—a lobby, her front door, or a bar. That part is as changeable as what he is wearing—maybe a suit, a casual button-down shirt, or the best his favorite team’s hat which at the end of the date she will be adorably wearing as they share an awkward but sweet first kiss.

In the movies first dates look easy. Set the mood with some cute one-liners that no person in history has ever been cool enough or witty enough to think of on a first date. Then show some quickly cut scenes of the two laughing so hard that they fall into each other’s arms. Show him buying her a flower from the conveniently-placed street vendor, or—better yet—winning her a teddy bear from the carnival that magically appears on a first date. Or to be even cuter, she wins the teddy bear because she is secretly awesome at all sports!

The date ends with them strolling slowly beside a dimly-lit waterfront or cobblestone street where they pass an elderly couple that, for some reason, is out at 2am strolling hand in hand. He leaves her at her door with a gentle kiss. Of course they both want more, but being that this is completely fictional they resist the temptation as she starts up the stairs to her fabulous and completely unaffordable brownstone. He starts to leave as she slips in the door. But wait! She calls his name and rushes back down the stairs. Of course not for one more passionate kiss, but to return the article of his clothing she ended up wearing, the previously mentioned suit jacket or baseball hat, which he forgot because he was so enthralled with her. All together now, “awe!” and all together once more, “bull shit!”

The only thing more ridiculous is the end of that movie where the couple that seemed so perfect for each other on that first date yet later separated in the easy-to-see- through plot by the cruel twist of fate most often called a “misunderstanding” or the big kicker “an error of timing.” Worry not, they will get back together; they ALWAYS get back together! It is usually in some ridiculous display involving a gut-wrenching love proclamation in front of a large crowd of strangers and that guy in every movie that yells, “kiss her already” from a construction site. It’s the movies and therefore nothing like any real life experience.

In real life it is more likely that you just watched that horrific movie on an equally horrific first date during which you were trying to figure how quickly you can make this date end with out seeming to be outright rude or obviously afraid of your date. Instead of witty banter or moments of falling over laughing, you have deduced that your date was apparently raised in some alternate universe where everyone says the absolute wrong thing. Rather than sparks flying as you brush his hand, yours has been glued to the door handle just in case you need to bail out of the car to escape him. In place of gazing across a candle-lit dinner, you have spent fifteen minutes wondering if you could fit through the bathroom window (why are they always so small).

The morning after the bad date I am generally on the phone with a friend who is trying to talk me down from my post date ledge. On one particular occasion I actually had to put ice on my jaw after my date practically broke it with his kissing skills. As I mumble through the pain the details of my latest from bad to worse date, I have to ask her what happened to the dates from the movies. Instead of sharing how amazing he was and the instant sparks when we our eyes met, I am more concerned about having to join the witness protection program or hiding out in Amish country to avoid a second date with Attila the Tongue.

Not to put all the blame on men—I am sure there are many scary women out there who are just as frightening as some of my past dates. I have heard many guy friends share their nightmare stories of ladies who confess on a first date that they think he is “the one” or the girls who cry during appetizers and then wonder why he does not ask them out again. I am in full agreement that the best approach is to just act like you died immediately after the date and never speak with the freakish person again. I say, why have the uncomfortable, random-excuse phone call if you have already had the uncomfortable date? Call a spade a spade and let the cards stay on the table.

For the record, I do have to admit that I had “the movie date” once. It was perfection from start to finish. He was standing waiting for me in the rain with an umbrella and had truly arranged a very top rate evening. We said witty one-liners, laughed so hard we fell over on each other, and watched that crazy old couple out past their bedtime dance slowly to the band. Believe it or not there was even the moonlit walk by the water. Minus the mysterious carnival that pops up in every movie, everything else was screenplay magic.

The end result? Not a fabulous reunion on a crowded street or him carrying me out of a factory in his Navy dress whites, but a full dose of the reality that those dates do not work out in real life—only in the movies. In real life the ones that are most likely to get a squeal are the dates that happen over a couple of beers and burgers that are casual and, most importantly, do not reveal the crazy version of yourself… leave that in the closet with your high school letter jacket.

 

It’s Okay to Shoe April 19, 2009

Sure you could wear out your faded Flip-Flops, but why not strut these fabulous Steve Maddens!?! It's Okay to Shoe!

Sure you could wear out your faded Flip-Flops, but why not strut these fabulous Steve Maddens!?! It's Okay to Shoe! Photo by Jean Thornton

For generations and generations, women have had to keep their love of shoes at the bottom of a closet. All around the world women have been shamed into believing that a love of shoes is something to hide, like a tattoo from a college spring break that bares the name of a long lost frat boy who held your beer bong. Women were forced to believe that other things should come before shoes—boring things like savings accounts and utility bills. They were led to believe that stilettos did not belong in board room or the grocery store, taught that in the fast pace of today’s world they could not keep up in a four-inch stacked heel.

But a change has begun to sweep across the nation, a revolution has begun to take shape, and that shape is a fabulous open-toe pump. It is time for the women of the world to reunite and stand strong together in our great strappy satin sandals. Shoe girls of the world: shed your shame and your boring brown loafers, free your shoes from the bottom of your closet and lift them up with the proper shelving system both you and they deserve. It’s okay to shoe, it’s your God given right.

Be not afraid to declare yourself in love with shoes in all their glory and fabulousness. Shout from the rooftops that you have more shoes than you could possibly need… and still want more! After all, if you were supposed to only have 10 pairs of shoes there wouldn’t be so many in the shoe store. Do not fight the urge to wear shoes that are completely inappropriate for the weather: strut those open toes through the snow and slip on those knee-high boots despite the heat wave. Make your new Chanel platforms your screen saver and update your Facebook status to “in love with those new Marc Jacob Patent Leather Star Pumps”! Worry not what others think because you are not the first; I go before you as your guide into shoe-ing.

You see, I, too, was once afraid to admit how many shoes I had. I, too, once thought that shoes went on the bottom of a closet and was naïve enough to believe it was okay for a shoe closet and clothing closet to mix. After years of denying my feet the pleasure of being adorned with golden buckles and studs, I discovered my inner shoe girl and let her out. It was like all of the sudden I discovered that, no matter how bad the world might seem, having pretty shoes makes all of your worries go away. Like little guardian angels for your feet, shoes take away all your problems.

Look at it like this: you know that guy who loves a sports team or any sports team from a certain city. Examine how he spends his time—watching anything about that team, listening to sports experts talk about that team, researching that team online, and calling his friends to talk about the team. He wears the team’s jerseys, t-shirts, hats and perhaps even jewelry. He reads countless articles about his team and the coaching styles; most likely he has a fantasy version of his team that he spends more time planning for than he does picking his 401k investments. He celebrates when his team wins and pouts when his team loses. He is obsessed; he is dedicated—he is called a fan.

A woman who worships shoes to the same extent is patronized for her dedication to the new winter line of Manolo Blahniks. Why does her shoe closet rank higher than his fan room on the scale of crazy? Yet, you would never see a shoe girl standing outside a Jimmy Choo sample sale wearing a brightly colored Afro wig holding a sign that says “Choo Rules!” And if a shoe girl lingers for twenty minutes in front a store window with the latest Prada T-Straps, suddenly she has a problem.

The only way to fight back is to stand up in those fabulous hand-stitched leather insoles and say that you refuse to take it anymore. Refuse to let those Stuart Weitzman’s shine only at a wedding; take those bad boys to work and show your boss what you’re really worth. Strut those Michael Kors down the grocery aisle if you can’t strut them down the runway. Be the shoe girl that deep down inside you have always been. Slip on those bejeweled heels and say, “I am a shoe girl!”

Will being a shoe girl always be easy? No, of course not! Will there be blisters? Yes. Will there be leg cramps? Yes. Will there be times when you can only take very careful small steps? Of course. But will there be moments when a whole room falls silent in recognition of your beautiful clicks as you enter in your latest shoe victory? Oh, yes and those will be the moments that you visualize anytime your eyes lock on a pair of YSL booties. When you slip those sensational shoes on, you will instantly see that moment accompanied by the flash of paparazzi capturing your public debut in these latest additions to your shoe art collection. As you catch your first breath, use it to say…

“It’s okay to shoe.”

 

Things You May Never Get to Say April 12, 2009

me-and-jimmy-buffettThere are things in life that we rehearse despite the reality that we will probably never get to say them. Like the speech you said to the mirror yet have never said to your over-demanding, over-paid, under-educated boss. Or the words you will deliver with a cool tone that says ‘I am so over you’ to the most recent ex on your first run-in. Perhaps it is the special ‘I told you so’ that you so desperately want to deliver to your high school geometry teacher who insisted that you would use those skills everyday… ah yeah, whatever! Even the Grammy, Oscar, and Noble Peace Prize acceptance speeches prepared for that in-case-of-emergency moment.

Needless to say every woman—and I would venture to say every man—has a mental rolodex of clever response that you are ready to deliver on a whim, never mind the reality of these situations coming to fruition. Yet, these prepared statements roll through our minds as we brush our teeth, walk the dog, or jog on a treadmill… I can only guess what you do on treadmill. The majority of these witty words and well-thought -out comebacks will never be uttered by our lips outside of the imaginary conversations with Oprah held while in the shower.

Still it is fun to sit amongst friends and play the ‘what if I ever met… fill in celebrity name here.’ During these games we are cool and chic with delightfully witty puns and insights into their work. “Well, Sarah Jessica Parker, can I call you SJP? As I was saying, I feel that Carrie was actually a metaphor for the women’s rights movement.” Yes, my suave friends and I are ready to burst onto the socialite scene and be the belles of Page Six.

From personal experience, however, I can say that even the most prepared-for meeting can quickly turn my image of a stylish shoe girl striking a stunning pose into a bumbling fool in dirty work shoes. Being an island girl who spent twenty-four years trapped in land-locked Ohio, it was the music of Jimmy Buffett that gave me the desperate vacation in my mind. Many a snowy day was spent trudging across the frozen University of Toledo campus, and while physically I was cold, mentally and on my disc man I was sailing through the Caribbean.

I planned my escape to Key West through Jimmy Buffett’s music and Ernest Hemingway’s stories; once I landed my heels on the island I never looked back. Unfortunately the cost of living in Key West and my expensive shoe habit means that, in order to live the shoe life of luxury, I needed a second, part-time job. As fate would have it, the job that provided me the best coordination with my full-time job was at Jimmy Buffett’s own Margritaville Café as a hostess. Instantly all my friends and family assumed that I would meet Jimmy during the first interview and all were quite disappointed when more and more months passed without a meeting—or even the chance for me to steal his personal cell phone number.

To be honest, it was disappointing that he did not visit his homebase more often, but I also understood his avoidance. Many of the fans and guests actually wanted to hunt Jimmy Buffett down and very possibly imprison him in their hotel rooms. They all had fantasies involving how Jimmy would become their best friends and their children’s Godfather. Still, I wanted to be able say, “yes, I have met him and he is a great guy,” to the eager guests desperate to believe that Buffett washed dishes in the back when our Haitian kitchen crew called in sick.

After two and half years, it happened. I met Jimmy Buffett when he, on a whim, decided to perform a show for the staff of his Key West operations. Having the knowledge that the guy who inspired many mental vacation days and bikini parties during snowy weekends in Ohio was about to be hanging out at a place I worked at was a little nerve inducing. Still I got caught up in the work of helping my managers get the special invited guests and employees into the Café for the show. It was while running back to the handicapped bathroom that I turned around and came face-to-face with the guy who until now had only been a tiny speck onstage while I was lost in the sea of “lawn seating” at concerts.

I wish I could tell you I said something smart about a Key West bar we both had made our stomping ground or say that we had mutual friends to strengthen our bond. There were songs he had written that I had lived in drunken moments and words he had sung that had gotten me through breakups, personal loses and lonely nights. Yet I stammered, smiled like a goofball, and was barely able to look him in the eye. I actually asked permission to speak to him—like he was the Pope or something. Grace under pressure, no I was not. In my defense I was wearing my work-mandated shoes, polo and khaki skirt. Maybe if I were wearing my new Michael Kors studded heels I would have said something a little smarter…of course in fabulous stilettos like those, who needs words?

In the end, I can say to the hopeful guest looking for a Jimmy Buffett photo opportunity, “yes, I have met him and he is great guy,” and really mean it. My brief encounter left me smiling for days as I had truly lived a dream so many imagine while getting through another day at work. The happy tourists smile joyfully and swoon at the thought that my picture with their hero is taped to my refrigerator next to this week’s grocery list. They say how lucky I am and tell me what they would say if they ever meet Jimmy Buffett. It is well crafted and interesting. I just grin because I know from my own reality, well rehearsed and thoughtful lines just sail out the mental window.

But a lesson learned… I am totally writing down an Oscar acceptance speech—just in case. Hey, if a shoe girl from Ohio can end up meeting Jimmy Buffett in between checking bathrooms, that golden statuette may not be so far off.

 

Shoe Immigration April 9, 2009

Like many Americans today, I am concerned about housing issues. While you may think I am referring to my work with the homeless, my concerns are much more self-centered. I am talking about the housing of my shoes. I am at the capacity level for my shoe closet and face a serious overcrowding issue. Like Ellis Island, there is line of new shoes anxiously awaiting their new place in the land of promise.

If only my door had a classic engraving upon it “Give me your stilettos, your wedges, your young designers yearning to be worn, the poor soles left to clearance racks. Send these, the trends, the classics to me. I lift them up to this golden door.” It’s no Gettysburg Address but it still echoes the values I hold dearest when it comes to shoes and, in turn, the values I hold dearest in my life. We are guaranteed the basic rights in Declaration of Independence to pursue happiness along with life and liberty; should this not also include the freedom of footwear?

Before discrediting my idea by chalking it up to what happens to my mind when I do not get a chance to shop the after-season clearance racks, give me a chance to fully explain. Lady Liberty stands as a symbol of freedom and the first stop in our country’s “come-as-you-are” philosophy—or at least the one it was founded on. In these days when immigration once again becomes a hot topic issue, and we debate the best way to protect our borders without compromising our ideals, I cannot help but look to my own dilemma within my closet.

I will be the first to admit that I am a very luck lady to be able to house the number of shoes I have taken in. Truthfully, there must be a higher force up there looking out for me, because when I find shoes I love there always seems to be room in my budget to give them a proper home. I like to think of myself of as a “Mother Teresa of Shoes”, a person dedicated to showing the world that each pair serves a purpose and that when we embrace each shoe as a unique individual, those shoes will also help us shine… and look fabulous.

But I, too, find myself stretched to the limit when it comes finding space to accommodate my new friends who I am freeing from their boxes. Like Lady Liberty, I often find myself looking out on a line of new shoes happily awaiting their place in life while wondering how I can possibly take care of them all. I feel like that head nun in The Sound of Music and that I should be singing, “How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?” And with no wealthy naval captain in sight, I have to solve this problem on my own.

There is only so much scrunching together I can do to make more room on the shelves, and this year’s new chunky platforms are not helping any! (Although the new hand-painted black and white Channel platforms bring tears to my eyes.) Much like the island of Key West, I have a height restriction when it comes to building, and digging a basement of my own does not seem like a workable idea. I have started to place some of the more artistic works by the masters Manolo Blahnik and Michael Kors in a separate glass case, but even this is causing overcrowding of the original items in there, mainly my family photographs. While I think my Grandmother would be proud to share shelf space with these modern day masterpieces, at some point there is a breaking point.

I groan with the reality that much like Lady Liberty my task of carrying a torch to welcome and embrace new arrivals is heavy. Do I say only a selected few get in? If that’s the case, how do I know I am not shutting out next year’s showstopper or a future Jimmy Choo in the making? Do I limit the number of those who enter? Is that a reasonable request—I don’t think so!

And so I struggle to find the answer as I wiggle every last morsel of space I can to get those new BCBG pumps into my closet. With another shopping trip planned in only a few more weeks, I wonder what next month holds for me and my bounty of shoes. I know this is the Catch 22 of life—when you create a utopia where everyone or every shoe wants in, yet not all can be accommodated in the manor once hoped.

In a perfect world I would have a shoe room. In a perfect world I would have shoe trust fund too. For now, however, I live in the real world that is very imperfect and I have a shoe closet and a credit limit. All I can do is try my best to fit them all in and share what I have. Lady Liberty, you have my sympathy when it comes wanting to take in them all but not knowing how you possibly can. However Liberty, old girl, are you really wearing flip-flops? Honestly, you think that is the best way to welcome people?

 

Cold Turkey Mall Withdrawal April 5, 2009

When I lived in Ohio I had all the mall shopping I could desire. Only minutes from my apartment was a mall, a Target, numerous shoe stores and a Barnes and Noble with unending aisle of reading pleasure. Should I long for higher-end shopping, I just zipped up the interstate that delivered me to more malls and more shoe sections filled with delights just waiting for my credit card. One big problem was that the majority of the year, when I exited those malls I exited into the frigid Ohio weather.

Not only was I annoyed at always covering my outfits with bulky winter coats, I was also annoyed at the limitation it placed on my footwear (though for the most part, I ignored this and wore my sandals despite the chill). As much as I tried to embrace any day with a high at or above 55 degrees as warm, it just was not working. I am not sure if it was all the slip & falls on my way to class on icy days. Or maybe it was my constant debate as to whether I should drink the coffee or pour it down my pants to regain some feeling in my frozen limbs. Whatever it was, somewhere along the way I was pushed over the edge… or at least over the many bridges that lead to Key West.

My dream home on the Southernmost Island provides me with plenty of warm days and endless opportunities to show off my painted toes in my vast variety of shoes. But as always, there is a catch 22, and my Key West catch is not a Grouper (yuck, like I would catch a fish!) but the lack of shopping…mainly shoe shopping and malls. Plenty of palms trees and beach towels but not a single mall in sight.

I can tell I am starting to go through mall withdrawal when a JC Penny’s commercial starts to look good. Suddenly, everything reminds of Macy’s—from my Clinque lip-gloss to a starfish that looks suspiciously like that cute red star. My Macy’s card starts whispering through my wallet, “psst… Stephanie! What are you doing? Don’t you want to use me?”

I once believed that only Third World countries did not have a Gap… I have now amended that to Third World countries AND the Florida Keys. Seriously, I am all about uniqueness, but come on, would a rack of khaki Chinos kill us! Old Navy commercials actually start to make me laugh, which may also be a sign of a brain aneurysm. When I think about a J. Crew or heaven forbid an H&M, I get a funny flutter in my stomach and bite my lower lip.

Oh and a shoe section—a real live shoe section! One with tables of shoes nicely displayed in an artistic manner that celebrates their grace and beauty! And there are cushioned chairs with arms where happy sales clerks glide over, carrying arm loads of boxes covered with names like Betsy Johnson, Michael Kors, and Charles David. I am going to stop now before I scream out loud with the frustration of being an island shoe girl stranded (slight exaggeration, I know) on a desolate island (any place without a Steve Madden shoe store is desolate to me!).

Simply typing of this makes me long to gas up my car and start the four hour drive to the mainland and the nearest mall. Yet, during these troubling economic times and accepting the reality that money does not grow on trees or on Visa cards I have no choice but to park my butt on the sofa and detox. Quick somebody block my internet access before I start sneaking online sales from Bluefly!

By noon tomorrow I will be so strung out and craving the feel of shiny bags with cord handles that I am trying to justify a visit to the expensive boutiques down town. I will want to be weighed down with packages and stuff receipts in my purse, to have my trunk filled with new purchases and go through the joy of removing price tags as I hang up a new impractical dress that I will never wear at a Key West casual event (aka your best cut off shorts). With trembling hands I call my Dad to talk me down and bring me back to reality. I need someone who can literally go eleven months without a mall to get me through this.

After the pep talk I feel calm and am almost sure I can make it the next 12 hours with only mild shaking. They say the first 24 are the worst, right? Perhaps I could be more proactive; remove my email from my multiple shopping alerts, throw away the catalogs on the coffee table; maybe I could even start a mall widow’s support group.

Or I could dress really bad while my friend “secretly” tapes me for my nomination to What Not to Wear, and score a $5,000.00 shopping spree in New York City. Get the video camera out; I’ll find those old sweat pants!

 

Catching Keys Disease April 1, 2009

The longer you live in Key West the more immune you become to certain things that would pique the interest of any normal person visiting the island. When I first came to Key West after living all of my life in Ohio, so much seemed strange to me. I was constantly calling or writing home with the details of the latest oddity that had occurred. Approaching my 3rd anniversary living on the rock, I cannot help but reflect on what I have seen and how little it seems to affect me these days.

When I was growing up in Ohio there were certain things that were normal parts of life that marked the seasons beyond just falling leaves and blooming tulips. Friday nights in early fall belonged to high school football. In the summer we worked at local businesses for minimum wage and spent our free days at the pool. Once a year Santa rode down Main Street at the end of the Holiday parade, and it was a long tradition to spend the afternoon at Fairborn’s annual Sweet Corn Festival eating Corn Fritters. Shorts could only be worn for three months and I had winter coats for varying levels of cold temperatures. They are the memories many Ohioans share.

In the last few years I have started sharing memories with my friends I have met in Key West, and I can say they are not the same as the Ohio ones. Yes, there is the memory of Santa riding down our main street at the end of the holiday parade…but Mrs. Clause is in drag and wearing rollerblades and a light-up bra. Did the elves back home hand out flyers for the local burlesque show?

Our holiday parade is tame compared to Fantasy Fest, known for its days of outrageous costumes, lack of clothing, and over-abundance of drunkenness. No longer does a lady or man wearing only body paint shock me or the yearly press release reminding us of what legally has to be covered with more than just paint to avoid jail. Neither do the aggressive and cruel protestors condemning me and everyone else of the island for our display of debauchery. No, I am more interested in which floats are tossing the best beads and exactly what I can do to get them.

Clearly, I have Keys Disease—a unique condition afflicting many in the Florida Keys that causes us to become unaware of any oddness occurring around us while at the same time making us a part of that madness. Those afflicted stop understanding the world beyond the island chain, let alone remember temperatures below 50 degrees. We have a hard time getting places on time so all meeting and event start times end with an “-ish.” Our fashion sense becomes limited to Key West casual, even this island shoe girl now pairs $300 Marc Jacobs’ heels with her well worn jean skirt and tank top.

Only when one of my visiting relatives notices that there is a lady at the next table only wearing shamrocks pasties do I realize how far I have slipped into the world of Key West reality. I am not shocked; actually if I could get a little closer look I am pretty sure I know the girl who made them. My family gets nervous when the loud drunk girl starts screaming at the bouncer across the road. To me it’s as common as they guy selling dirty jokes on the sidewalk or the bad karaoke version of Margartiaville coming from one of the many bars on Duval Street.

For me, these scenes are just everyday occurrences or another part of the daily grind for the locals who inhabit this island. There are events that excite my local friends and me. One of these events is the Conch Republic Days in April when we celebrate the brief secession of the Key West from the rest of the country marked by a parade, a full out battle via the water and the air followed by a prisoner of war release party at a local bar. While I consider this a better holiday than the fourth of July, I am not sure my friends back in Ohio understand completely that my dog and I have an official title in the Conch Republic Navy and therefore must be prepared to stand in defense of my island home.

My case of Keys Disease may have spread to my brain and it is clearly affecting my ability to separate the reality of the mainland and the reality of Key West. Yet, there are other effects of Key Disease. For example, snow is a strange & mysterious thing to me. After three years without it, I have to say I wouldn’t mind seeing snow for a day or so. I get a little jealous of snow days that surprise my northern family with days off from work. Up north a mall or Target may be part of the scenery; to me, it’s a reason to cut across three lanes of traffic in a mad dash to experience retail therapy.

Yes, my Keys Disease is very serious. There is not much hope for me to recover; the only real treatment is a bike ride over to the Afterdeck and a visit to my good friend and bartender. Surely at some point we will witness a scene that is a common occurrence to us but it will shock the tourist sitting two barstools over. I take comfort in the knowledge that my friends are just as “sick” as me, and they will not acknowledge whatever is happening, but instead offer to buy me a drink—which is what we call group therapy in the Keys.

 

 
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