How Beautiful with Shoes or Without
In my past, I spent hours in the shoe store, not because it’s my absolute thing to do, but because when going on long walks, I wear bulky orthotics in my shoes, and have to make sure all will fit properly. It takes time and makes me jealous of ladies who can wear tiny ballet slippers that give one’s foot absolutely no support…or torturous heels that attempt to reshape the foot during the hours one wears them. I guess there were years when I squandered my chances to be like those ladies.
In the seventh grade, the cusp of life when girls want to shed bulky clothing, shy ways and morph into the first stage of womanhood, I was having foot problems. The lost-in-the-old-ways doc that my mother took me to, not only removed a growth on the bottom of my foot using a very painful process, he also ordered my mother to put me in oxfords. For the younger crowd, these are shoes like men might wear, or women who care nothing about fashion. They are leather with stiff soles and ties, and are usually black or brown. I must have still been under the influence of the painkillers my mother gave me after the doc shot the bottom of my foot with some form of acid, because I agreed to a pair of cherry red oxfords. And I subsequently wore these shoes to school, in the seventh grade!
That’s why Jack D. came up to me at our years later reunion, and told me that he’d had a crush on me in junior high, but he just could not get beyond those red shoes. Damn! Even he remembered them. I don’t know what shoes I was wearing that night, but I can assure you they weren’t oxfords. I moved from those red shoes to saddle shoes, and then quietly relied on my mother’s busy life to blot out the doctor’s warning that I had weak arches or something!! I can still remember the elegantly thin loafers I wore in high school with my white crew socks folded way down to reveal my ankles.
Ah yes, I had years of wonderful carefree shoes—woven flats in various colors, dyed poisdeseau for every prom dress or dance ensemble, also sandals that revealed lots of skin, and heels that were chunky or spindly depending on the style of the season.
But most of all, years and years of walking around barefoot. I always cleaned my house in my bare feet, even in winter. I don’t really know why—I guess I thought I moved faster.
But those years caught up with me. Chronic foot pain led to the discovery of a stretched tendon. Surgery was mentioned, but the orthotics I had to wear protected that tendon. And foot surgery is always an ify choice.
Now I often wear gym shoes. But I still cheat and wear little shoes for holidays and evenings out with friends…though trips to the shoe store will never be the same.
Bottom line, I can still throw on a pair of athletic shoes and walk for miles. No complaints. I just wonder if I would have stuck with more-supportive shoes my entire life—maybe if those oxfords hadn’t been RED! How beautiful a thought.











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