Note to Little Miss Hot Pants
Transcription
Note to Little Miss Hot Pants
Note to Little Miss Hot Pants WRITER | Nikki Igbo ILLUSTRATOR | Catlin Scroggie ear Young Lady Who Appears to Be Suffering from Heat in Both a Literal and Figurative Sense, are barely covered by your shorts. I know why you felt comfortable enough wearing that get-up to school. I’m not mad at you. I want to put my arm around your shoulders and give you a friendly squeeze. The truth is that I see a bit of my younger self in you. While some of our fellow classmates may whisper behind upheld palms or shake their heads in disapproval, I know exactly where you’re coming from. I know why you chose today’s fashion ensemble despite the cool temperatures predicted in today‘s forecast. I know why your butt cheeks You were a late bloomer in high school, weren’t you? While other teenage girls had cleavage, hips, boyfriends and hickies you were a card-carrying member of the itty bitty you-know-what committee. Your face was pretty. Your hair was long and luxurious. But from the neck down, it wasn’t difficult to mistake you for a boy. You were a gangly collection of sharp angles and flat surfaces both coming and going. You hid your lack of 36 feminine wiles in unnecessary layers of baggy clothes. With each passing year of your adolescence, you willed your body to take a curvier shape. You imagined yourself in tight little black dresses, tight little turtleneck sweaters, tight little skinny jeans with zippers at the ankles. You, however, lacked the appropriate form to fit into any of those things. Still you hoped. You did your bust-increasing exercises in the bathroom mirror. You made sure to sleep on your back or your side at night. You did step aerobics to round out your backside. You even tried to trick your mom into ordering you Suzanne Somer’s Butt Master (LBX) while it was on sale with the ThighMaster Gold for a low, low price of $29.99. But you saw no results. You resigned yourself to being a bookworm nerd with no social life. A curious thing happened the summer just before your senior year of high school. As you drove from state to state in the backseat of your parents’ charcoal gray Hyundai Sonata touring college after college, you wore no bra. It was too hot. In June there was barely anything to lift anyway. In August, after visiting Oklahoma, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, Ohio, New York, Illinois and then crossing back to California, you changed. You emerged from the car a size zero with C cups. You became a babe. You started to feel more confident wearing your scoop neck t-shirts and your tailored striped slacks with the suspenders. You took your hardearned part time job money and you began to build your new wardrobe. You bought all the tight, little things you could find. So, here you are today in our college cafeteria. You have arrived at womanhood and no one else knows or understands what a trying journey it has been. You know that it is rather risqué to dress this way while attending your classes but you don’t care. You are a special force and your body is your ally. You don’t have to get permission from your parents to wear anything like your buxom friends did in high school. You are a young adult with carte blanche to be as naked in public as you’d like. Go ahead. Take advantage of it. Do it now while you still can. While you can still eat anything you want and not have to spend a sweaty second in anyone’s gym. Do it before that next big summer of change. Before that summer of eating a steady diet of Jack-in-a-Box big cheeseburgers with that hot guy with the long curly hair. You will spend hours upon hours with this guy in the apartment he shares with his cousin smoking pot, having sex, playing RPG games on Xbox and making trips to the drive-through. Your body will continue to get curvier in a good way before starting to get rounder in a very bad way. Your boobs will get heavier. Your backside will get rounder. You will like this. No, you will love this. But then cellulite will begin to march its way up the back of your thighs. You will start to develop muffin-top. You think a larger size in pants will solve the problem. You won’t mind being a size four. But then the muffin-top will keep expanding and you will find yourself with a belly. No longer washboard abs. You’ll have a full-fledged pooch. You’ll be slower and less aerodynamic. You will begin to make more modest decisions in your apparel. You’ll give up midriff tops. You’ll hate low-rise jeans. You will appreciate tailored blazers and dresses with high waistlines. You will begin to realize the importance of earrings, necklaces and bracelets. You’ll restyle, cut, experiment with and recut your hair. You’ll do just about anything to draw attention away from your expanding midsection. You will find yourself searching online for diet plans and exercise techniques. You’ll buy those stupid magazines at the supermarket checkout that promise to give you flat abs in 30 days. They won’t. You’ll practice portion control. Then you’ll find a recipe for pumpkin cheesecake and you will binge eat. You’ll feel guilty and return to your diet and P90x fitness regimen but eventually you will get used to the fact that you may end up being a size 10 just like your mom. My dear, one day you will be sitting in your college cafeteria as a graduate student pursuing an MFA in writing. You will see some undergrad prancing about the space wearing something completely inappropriate for the environment. You won’t judge her. You’ll smile. You’ll remember the folly of your youth and you’ll say a prayer for that girl. You’ll wish her well in her journey of self-discovery. You’ll hope that she appreciates her own mind and her beautiful body. You’ll defend her wardrobe choice against fellow classmates whispering behind upheld palms. Then you’ll write her a letter. Sincerely, Nikki 37