Jeans, dress or sari... wear your attitude
When
I was growing up, there was an infallible way to tell when a woman
had gotten married. She gave up on childish things like frocks and
dresses, put away her jeans and skirts, and adopted the salwar-kameez
or the sari as her uniform of choice. Okay, perhaps it wasn’t
always by choice.
Sometimes
it was dictated by conservative in-laws, on occasion it was the
husband who didn’t want her to dress ‘Western’ now that she was
married, and at times it was just unspoken societal pressure. That
was how married women were supposed to look: all wrapped up
decorously in a sari, or a salwar-kameez at a push. And most married
women complied, no matter what their private feelings on the
matter.
I am happy to report, however, that this is no longer the case.
I am happy to report, however, that this is no longer the case.
Marriage
no longer spells the end of edgy or even sexy dressing. Women, or at
least urban women of a certain class, can continue to wear what they
like even after they have that ring on that finger (or the
mangalsutra around the neck). Nobody looks on with shock/horror if a
married woman accessorises her chuda with tight jeans or a short
skirt. In fact, nobody so much as bats an eyelid.
Never
was this brought home to me more forcibly than when my newly wedded
niece was taken shopping by her mother-in-law. My niece gravitated
towards the churidar-kurtas, thinking this was an appropriate choice
given that mum-in-law was paying. But even as she was riffling
through them, she felt an urgent tug on her shoulder. It was her
mother-in-law, who had found an outfit she thought would look amazing
on her new daughter-in-law. It was a short, sleeveless, patterned
dress with a halter neck.
But it’s not just young, newly married women who are dressing differently these days, eschewing conservative choices for more modern ones. It is women of all ages, all social classes, all shapes and sizes, and from all over the country. It is no longer unusual to see a young mother in a short dress or even a grandmother in trousers. Jeans have become a great equaliser, being worn by women young and old, with every body type, from all income brackets, and from every region.
In my case, I have made quite the opposite journey. In my teenage years, I could not wait to get into the sari. Even the act of draping it in front of a full-length mirror made me feel ineffably grown-up. As a young professional in my first job, the sari’s natural grace and elegance helped me negotiate the new and tricky world of the workplace from within the security of its folds. It made me look like and act like a responsible adult even when deep down inside I didn’t really feel like one. The perfect camouflage, in fact, for faking it until I finally made it.
Now that I can class myself as a ‘woman of a certain age’, I still wear the sari. But now it is when I want to have fun and play dress-up, having tired of my everyday uniform of jeans and shirts. And sometimes I treat the sari like a secret weapon in the armoury of my wardrobe, to be deployed when I particularly want to impress. It is pulled out on special occasions, like formal dinners, weddings, or at important professional engagements when I want to feel the same security I felt as a young journalist starting out.
But it’s not just young, newly married women who are dressing differently these days, eschewing conservative choices for more modern ones. It is women of all ages, all social classes, all shapes and sizes, and from all over the country. It is no longer unusual to see a young mother in a short dress or even a grandmother in trousers. Jeans have become a great equaliser, being worn by women young and old, with every body type, from all income brackets, and from every region.
In my case, I have made quite the opposite journey. In my teenage years, I could not wait to get into the sari. Even the act of draping it in front of a full-length mirror made me feel ineffably grown-up. As a young professional in my first job, the sari’s natural grace and elegance helped me negotiate the new and tricky world of the workplace from within the security of its folds. It made me look like and act like a responsible adult even when deep down inside I didn’t really feel like one. The perfect camouflage, in fact, for faking it until I finally made it.
Now that I can class myself as a ‘woman of a certain age’, I still wear the sari. But now it is when I want to have fun and play dress-up, having tired of my everyday uniform of jeans and shirts. And sometimes I treat the sari like a secret weapon in the armoury of my wardrobe, to be deployed when I particularly want to impress. It is pulled out on special occasions, like formal dinners, weddings, or at important professional engagements when I want to feel the same security I felt as a young journalist starting out.
But
for the rest of the time, my wardrobe has actually gotten younger as
I have gotten older. These days I live in fuss-free, knee-length,
crush-proof dresses that I can pull out of my closet (or
increasingly, my suitcase) and step into without all that starching
and ironing that cotton saris, or even churidar-kurtas, require.
There
is none of the palaver of figuring out what goes with what, none of
that nightmare called colour coordination. It’s simplified dressing
at its best: pull on a dress, slip on a pair of flats, stick on the
sunglasses, a slash of eyeliner, a dab of lipstick, and you are good
to go.
Did I hear you mention the words ‘mutton dressed as lamb’? Ah yes, I thought so. But you know what, the best part of growing older and becoming comfortable in my skin (not to mention my dress) is that I no longer care what you think of me, my clothes, my sense of style, or for that matter, my bare arms. I will wear what I like, thank you very much. And in the famous words of Rhett Butler, I really don’t give a damn (what you think about it).
And I am rapidly coming around to the view that, no matter what your age, this is the key to personal style: it has to be a personal choice (not made on the basis of the diktats of some fashion magazine); and you have to own it, no matter what other people may think (or say) about it. Feel like wearing a sari? Do it. Want the comfort of a pair of lived-in jeans? Knock yourself out. You’d rather live in a dress? Go right ahead.
There is no one you need to please but yourself. Tell yourself that the next time you go shopping. It will make things so much simpler.
Did I hear you mention the words ‘mutton dressed as lamb’? Ah yes, I thought so. But you know what, the best part of growing older and becoming comfortable in my skin (not to mention my dress) is that I no longer care what you think of me, my clothes, my sense of style, or for that matter, my bare arms. I will wear what I like, thank you very much. And in the famous words of Rhett Butler, I really don’t give a damn (what you think about it).
And I am rapidly coming around to the view that, no matter what your age, this is the key to personal style: it has to be a personal choice (not made on the basis of the diktats of some fashion magazine); and you have to own it, no matter what other people may think (or say) about it. Feel like wearing a sari? Do it. Want the comfort of a pair of lived-in jeans? Knock yourself out. You’d rather live in a dress? Go right ahead.
There is no one you need to please but yourself. Tell yourself that the next time you go shopping. It will make things so much simpler.
Seema
Goswami,
HTBR 140817
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