Chicago. I remember walking these
streets in saddle shoes and the all-girls Trinity High School pleated skirt and
blazer with cream-colored Wigwam crew socks. My saddle shoes were never quite
perfectly cool: too sturdy to get slouchy without falling apart in the short
two years I wore them.
The best shoes—as defined by the coolest chick of all cool
chicks, Reggie Belmundo—were so worn that the cracks in the white leather were
clearly limned in black and gray, much the way tarnish in the pattern lines
adds to the value of antique sterling. And, the leather in truly cool shoes had
lost nearly all integrity. Softened by almost four years of five-day-a-week
wear, the shoes molded to the uber-cool Trinitarian’s feet like moccasins.
I had transferred in for junior and senior years, so my
shoes were able to acquire only a sophomoric glaze, the bare beginning of the
degradation necessary for the wearer to achieve true hipster status.
Reggie…She had very black, very curly hair, hair that had a
life of its own, like a benign aspect of Medusa’s snakes. She sat across from
me in the honors English circle, one leg tucked under the other, lifting the
perfect oval of her knee so her foot dangled, pointing, flexing, and rotating
for fifty the minute discussion of, say, Don Quixote.
Reggie brought on my first experience of well-duh mind.
Well-duh mind, like monkey mind, is a state of being. Here is an example of
well-duh mind:
Senior year, the school play was Our Hearts Were Young
and Gay. Reggie and I were the final
call-backs for the role of the feisty, mischievous sister. It was perfectly
clear to me that any sane person, given a choice between me and Reggie Belmundo
would choose Reggie. When the cast list was posted and I was the Paris hotel
maid and Reggie was the lively Galbraith sister, friends commiserated and I
experienced my first manifestation of well-duh mind. I mean, really…Reggie
Belmundo in all her Italian hummingbird glory and me: cute, dimpled and sweet,
true…but, really.
I don't know where Reggie is now, or how her life has been, but I wish her the happiest of times. People of light and beauty deserve to be cherished. But then, we're all people of light and beauty. We all deserve to be cherished, especially by ourselves. And we all deserve fabulous shoes.

I loved this story.... Thank you.
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