Packing up and getting out of town for a few days refocuses my
brain. I become hyper-aware of the people
around me. I notice the pattern and fit
of their clothing. I observe their
behavior and wonder how it compares to their behavior back home. In warmer climates I notice how their skin
stretches and folds over the waist of their bathing suit. In winter I watch as they cling to their
phones and coffees as if those were baby blankets bringing comfort. I record all these things in my sketchbook
and draw the ones that really interest me as I sit on the balcony listening to
the waves.
This most recent vacation provided so much drawing imagery. It felt like a continuation of our vacation
from last June where I first got the idea to begin my #buttdrawingmonday series
on Instagram. I suppose that we can
easily get used to the idea of what a bathing suit is and that bathing suit
fashion can change with trends. I would
assume that many of us have a built in fashion filter that fits our own
personal modesty level. But when you go
to a beach in summer and really start to look around, you have to wonder if
everyone has that filter. Or if they
just ignore it when it comes to beach attire.
Some obviously turn their filter off on purpose. The senior-weeker with the Bud Light cowboy
hat and bright red Speedo bottom is a good example. He walked up with a group of boys and admired
one of our sand creations. As he stood
there and as he walked away, all around us people discretely pulled out their
phones and took photos of him and giggled.
Some females also seemed to be wearing as little fabric as possible,
regardless of their physique. Some had
hip bones visible with skin stretched over them and their extra small suits
sagging. Some seemed to also be wearing
an extra small suit though they had not been an extra small (or even large)
size in quite a few years. The suit did
its best to contain the skin that bulged over the top and burst out at every
seam. “Ten pounds of potatoes in a five
pound sack” as my dad used to say.
This was not an exercise in beautifying the grotesque. It actually had so much less to do with what
the person looked like and so much more to do with the fact that they were
proud of it. In a society so obsessed
with abs and butt lifts, these people seemed to be blatantly, pridefully trespassing. Ladies might lie down just a few feet from
you and your family and stretch out in a square foot of cloth that left
absolutely nothing to the imagination, seemingly proud to put their bits and
pieces on public display. Grown men
would peel their tshirts off to reveal a remarkable contrast between thin,
spindly legs and an explosive mass of belly making them resemble a
lollipop. Some very much wanting to be
seen, others oblivious that they are visible.
These people have mirrors.
They have trusted family members.
They know they look good in very little clothing. Or they know their bodies test the thread
strength in the seams of their clothing.
The cool thing is that no matter which end of that spectrum they may be
on, there is no shame. They shed their
walking around clothes and spend the day on the beach in the equivalent of
skimpy underwear not giving a thought to what others may think. There’s something beautiful and powerful in
that.
My 10 year old son was recently flailing his arms around and
making odd noises for no apparent reason in a public place. I turned to him and said “Dude, stop. You’re in public.” Without a pause he replied “But I don’t care
what people think.”
He’s doing his best to teach me stuff.
I’m learning.
No comments:
Post a Comment