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BPAL Madness!
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White lace

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valentina

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There's a end-of-season sale extravaganza going on at the shopping mall not too far from where I live, so I had to stop by long enough to see if there were any really great shoes or boots on sale in my favorite shoe department. The answer was, of course not. The serious shoe and boot sales start in February. I am still delighted about those $150 Diesel boots that I got for under $20 a couple of years ago; I always attempt to equal the experience, but have yet to do so.

 

Anyway, I found a parking place and thought that the fastest way into the mall would be through the David's Bridal store. I've never been in a David's Bridal before, and I wasn't aware that this place didn't have an opening into the rest of the mall. As a result, I wandered through the store and its various viewing and fitting venues before leaving in horror through the door that I used to enter. I am absolutely convinced that drag queens should be hired by bridal shops to help prepare young females for the absolutely intricate selection and fitting process that seems to surround either wedding or prom attire. Drag queen can work it, and some of the females that I saw today needed a lot of encouragement to work it. Why not get tips from the masters?

 

I'm only half-kidding, but I know a lot of the ladies that I saw today would bristle at the notion of a gay cross-dresser helping them cross the street if both of their legs were broken, much less getting clothing and style tips from them.

 

Not to run down anyone's prom or wedding experiences, because if you wanted to work it up big-time, more power to you. I tend to be the kind of person who will get all done up because I'm having fun putting together quite the little get-up, or because part of my job is working it and creating my "you can look, but don't even think of coming near me" aura.

 

And maybe that's what disturbed me about today -- most of the females I saw trying on gowns or formals weren't wearing styles right for their bodies and they looked miserable and unhappy. It should be fun, they should be snappin' and happy, and instead they just looked sick. A nice drag queen doing a happy squee when a hesitant young lady emerged from the dressing room would do so much good!

 

And in the end, is everything being so ornate and perfect and more gorgeous than imagined on that one day going to make the rest of your life together better? Of course not. I can be so pragmatic sometimes, but for whatever reason, my dreams never did involve ornate weddings, much to the relief of my father.

:ack:

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I had the next best thing to a drag queen helping me with my dress: Southern seamstress. I think she might have done some pageant work. She was all about going out on a limb and doing whatever the heck it was I wanted to do.

 

(Which ended up being an Earth Mother sort of a thing with a lavender under layer and a white silk chiffon over layer... very "wedding muumuu".)

 

But yeah. I accompanied my best friend to a David's Bridal (during their $99 dress event, no less) and spent interminable hours trying to help her figure it all out. And it was torture. And she was unhappy. And she ultimately decided on some puff-pastry princess mess that didn't have anything to do with her originally Asian themed wedding plans. :lol:

 

My own father once pulled me aside during a colleague's daughter's wedding (the bridesmaids wore designer gowns and yes, there was an ice sculpture melting into the shrimp cocktail) and urgently whispered: "when it comes time for you, please elope!" :lol:

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My own father once pulled me aside during a colleague's daughter's wedding (the bridesmaids wore designer gowns and yes, there was an ice sculpture melting into the shrimp cocktail) and urgently whispered: "when it comes time for you, please elope!" :lol:

 

Hee! My dad used to tell me he'd happily hold the ladder for me when I crawled out the window to elope!

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So far as I'm concerned, there are very few things that can't be improved by drag queens. I learned to to glamor makeup on myself from a drag queen. Some of the best nights of my life were had in their company.

 

To severely paraphrase an old soda pop ad: Drag Queens add Fun!

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ROFLMAO because one of my bestest friends in college is a drag queen, and I remember how much fun he and I had shopping. Hell, he's still one of the first people I call when I wanna go out and spend serious money on clothes ;)

 

 

...He also is the one to point out that drag queen stores sell shoes in my size, and I will be forever grateful for that. Do you know how little fun it is to buy shoes when you are FORCED to go by catalog because nobody carries your size?

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