While it’s only been a little over three months since my fashion fast ended, it feels like an eternity since I last posted on this blog. Several of you have asked how I have been doing so I wanted to give an update on what life has been like for me- post fast.
I’m going to come clean. It’s been hard. It took me some time to find my footing and I’m still trying to make my way through life post- fast. I guess I’ve been nervous about sharing my struggles. I feel like a bit of a fraud. While I gained a great amount of insight, pearls of wisdom and deep awareness during my 6 month fashion fast, some of that went out the window in the last few months.
Here's how it started: My fashion fast ended on January 22, 2010. I felt strong and focused. I felt confidant with the self awareness and confidence that I had gained during my self imposed fashion moratorium. In fact, I really wasn’t interested in getting back out there to shop. Though, as a symbolic act, and to mark my new found fashion freedom, I made a small purchase the week my fast ended. I bought a simple, black top, just to see what it would feel like. To my utter surprise I felt nothing. No highs, no lows, no anxiety. Nothing. I had aimlessly walked through the store, monitoring my emotions and feelings, preparing for I don’t know what, and as I took in all of the clothes and accessories, I wasn’t interested in a damn thing. I was proud of myself. After 6 months of not shopping, purging my closet several times, stripping myself down (figuratively speaking) to my fashion bare bones, I didn’t care, need or want anything. Phew! The fast worked! I’m a new woman! I don’t need to shop, I don’t need clothes, life is good…or so I thought.
It’s worth noting that around the time my fast ended I was in the middle of a huge life transition. I moved to a different state, in with my boyfriend, his three daughters and changed my work structure. Let me expand, on January 1st, I moved from New Jersey to Boston, in with my boyfriend of a year and a half and his three daughters (ages 9, 11 and 14). I received a job promotion, which involved a whole new area of focus, more travel and transition to working from home 3 days a week versus going into an office. While my two cats, my boyfriend, his three daughters and I have blended our families pretty well, it was and has been an adjustment for all (namely for me and my oldest cat who has taken to hissing at her new roommates, oh dear!).
Even though I knew that these changes could catapult me into some bad shopping behavior, I wanted to treat myself. It had been too long. I accrued some spare change during my fast and wanted to buy some fresh pieces to give my tired wardrobe the punch it had needed. So I carved out some “me” time one evening and went to my favorite store- Bloomingdale's. I walked through the women’s department surveying the scene for about 30 minutes… taking my time, touching the clothes, feeling the fabrics, observing the trends and just taking it all in. I was happy to be back in the world of shopping. Not in an addictive, “I need this” kind of way, but in an, “ain’t it great to be a woman” kind of way. I didn’t check price tags. I didn’t go to the sale racks. I wanted to look at what I liked and not have it be dictated by what was on sale. In the past, I would often settle for things that were on sale that I didn’t’ wholeheartedly like or need, because simply put, it was on sale. This time it was different.
I gathered up several dresses and tops and made three trips to the dressing room- trying on, modeling, putting back, and getting more items, repeat, repeat. I thoughtfully chose a lovely, classic navy blue Marc Jacobs feminine dress and a gray, long sleeved, billowy Diane Von Furstenberg blouse. I did it! I took my new found fashion wisdom and insight that I had gained during my fast and purchased two well thought out, well deserved, well made, classic items.
I liked how my new purchases brought life back to my closet. I liked the feeling I got (and the compliments…oh yes, ego was at play here!) when I wore these pieces. I wish I could say that the subsequent shopping experiences were equally as deliberate and modulated. Not so much. I wanted more. I needed more.
My fashion wheels started to turn and I was off! From my old favorite shoe web site- Piperlime.com to J.Crew, Club Monaco, LuLu Lemon, Anthropologie, Christian Louboutin, back to Bloomingdale's and back again, I was on a roll. While none of these purchases were frivolous, too much time was spent thinking about them. I knew what was going on for me. I was back to my old familiar place of shopping taking over my mind and body.
I also knew that shopping filled the time that all of a sudden I had been afforded. Now that I was working from home, I didn’t have my mornings and evenings filled with commuting. My boyfriend’s three wonderful daughters were with us half-time, so on the weekends and days we didn’t have them and my boyfriend was occupied at his busy job, I had time to fill. And living in a new city, without a posse of friends and family, shopping filled up time and space.
I’m happy to share that I am leveling off. I have taken a slight pause from shopping, but nowhere near a restricted fast. As I said in a previous blog posting- extremes aren’t good in any situation- whether it be overworking, overusing a blackberry, overwatching television, overdrinking, over hopping, it just ain’t good.
So, for me, I’m working toward striking a balance…the see-saw was up, the see-saw was down, but for now, it’s balancing somewhere close to the middle, although shaky at times, it’s hanging close to the middle.
One Day at a Time.
Miss F.
Friday, May 6, 2011
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Breaking the Fast
January 22nd came and went with minimal fanfare and pomp and circumstance. One dear friend did send a text congratulating me for making it to 6 months and keeping my word. Thank you Miss A! In fact, thank you all for supporting me and being there through my process, revelations and journey. Many of you completed the survey and 100% agreed that I should stop my Fashion Fast on said date. I enjoyed reading your comments and it helped give me the vote of confidence I needed to come out of my safe, hibernating zone and see how I would manage in the world of shoppers.
I feel good. I have learned so much about myself. In thinking back to when this all started (July 22nd to be exact), I was scared, nervous and couldn’t imagine a life without shopping and all things fashion. It had filled up so much of my physical and emotional space. The issues I wrote about, and struggled with, during the first couple of months of my fast seem like a distant memory. Don’t get me wrong, I still love fashion and appreciate the art of dressing and putting together a great outfit. I just don’t feel the extreme highs when thinking about shopping like I used to. My Fashion Fast was the long overdue break I needed after decades of being on shopping auto pilot.
I tested the waters the other day and went to Bloomingdales. I walked around the store and thought about what I would eventually buy with the money I had been saving for the past 6 months. I surprised myself as nothing really appealed to me. I realized I didn’t really need anything. And more importantly, I didn’t want anything! It felt and feels amazing!
I will continue to use this blog as a way to communicate my progress and check in with you all. It has served as a great support system for me and a way to hold myself accountable. Thanks for being there.
More (or less) to come!
One Day at a Time,
Miss F.
I feel good. I have learned so much about myself. In thinking back to when this all started (July 22nd to be exact), I was scared, nervous and couldn’t imagine a life without shopping and all things fashion. It had filled up so much of my physical and emotional space. The issues I wrote about, and struggled with, during the first couple of months of my fast seem like a distant memory. Don’t get me wrong, I still love fashion and appreciate the art of dressing and putting together a great outfit. I just don’t feel the extreme highs when thinking about shopping like I used to. My Fashion Fast was the long overdue break I needed after decades of being on shopping auto pilot.
I tested the waters the other day and went to Bloomingdales. I walked around the store and thought about what I would eventually buy with the money I had been saving for the past 6 months. I surprised myself as nothing really appealed to me. I realized I didn’t really need anything. And more importantly, I didn’t want anything! It felt and feels amazing!
I will continue to use this blog as a way to communicate my progress and check in with you all. It has served as a great support system for me and a way to hold myself accountable. Thanks for being there.
More (or less) to come!
One Day at a Time,
Miss F.
Friday, January 7, 2011
My Self-Contained Fashion Bubble
Happy New Year fellow followers! I have missed you all. It's been about a month since I last blogged and it's good to be back. The holidays were busy and I am now spending my time in Boston. I appreciate all the feedback, comments and emails you have sent over the last 5 plus months of my fashion fast. I am in the home stretch as it ends on January 22, 2011. I am proud to share that I have remained committed to the fast and have not purchased clothes, jewelry or shoes since this started!
Surprisingly, I'm not really chomping at the bit like I thought I would be to get out there and shop. Some of it is due to a nice healthy amount of avoidance. I've been living in a bit of a self-contained bubble. I haven't opened a catalog, visited an internet shopping site or gone into a store for myself since the start of this fast. And it's been quite easy to not care or long for any particular clothes item (like I have in the past in a very obsessive way). I'm not so sure that this is a realistic gage on how I will do once this fast comes to an end.
I was recently watching one of my new favorite reality shows called, "Celebrity Rehab" with Dr. Drew. In the episode, they took 8 of the in-patient rehab participants on a field trip to the busiest tourist section of Hollywood. The cameras followed the participants around as they walked the streets, had lunch and were tempted by the lure of the drug dealers standing on many of the street corners. The rationale behind putting these folks in a high-risk environment was to prepare them for what the real world would be like once they were discharged from their in-patient treatment center. You see, their in-patient surroundings don't mimic real life. They have a lot of support and are living in somewhat of a self-contained bubble.
So you may be asking how the heck does this relate to my Fashion Fast as clearly this isn't as dire a situation. I agree. Yet, I have real concerns about how I will handle the adjustment back into the real world of shopping. What will it feel like to leaf through a J.Crew catalogue? Will it send my heart racing, which is fine. But will I then begin to earmark all of my favorite "picks" and fixate on what I want for hours and days to come? Up until now, I have really only operated in two speeds- intense shopping mode or avoidant non-shopping mode. I don't really know any other way. I do think from all this distance and time I will be more aware of my "stuff" once I start shopping and hopefully won't slide down the slippery slope into a full "I need, I need, I need" mode.
However, I don't know if it's a good thing to come off the fast at said date or stay on it for a bit longer and continue the self-imposed reflection and distance from the real world. I'm open to suggestions and any advice you can lend. I have created a brief 3 question survey to gather your feedback. Please click on this link to access it Miss F's Survey
Thanks for your guidance!
One Day at a Time,
Miss F.
Surprisingly, I'm not really chomping at the bit like I thought I would be to get out there and shop. Some of it is due to a nice healthy amount of avoidance. I've been living in a bit of a self-contained bubble. I haven't opened a catalog, visited an internet shopping site or gone into a store for myself since the start of this fast. And it's been quite easy to not care or long for any particular clothes item (like I have in the past in a very obsessive way). I'm not so sure that this is a realistic gage on how I will do once this fast comes to an end.
I was recently watching one of my new favorite reality shows called, "Celebrity Rehab" with Dr. Drew. In the episode, they took 8 of the in-patient rehab participants on a field trip to the busiest tourist section of Hollywood. The cameras followed the participants around as they walked the streets, had lunch and were tempted by the lure of the drug dealers standing on many of the street corners. The rationale behind putting these folks in a high-risk environment was to prepare them for what the real world would be like once they were discharged from their in-patient treatment center. You see, their in-patient surroundings don't mimic real life. They have a lot of support and are living in somewhat of a self-contained bubble.
So you may be asking how the heck does this relate to my Fashion Fast as clearly this isn't as dire a situation. I agree. Yet, I have real concerns about how I will handle the adjustment back into the real world of shopping. What will it feel like to leaf through a J.Crew catalogue? Will it send my heart racing, which is fine. But will I then begin to earmark all of my favorite "picks" and fixate on what I want for hours and days to come? Up until now, I have really only operated in two speeds- intense shopping mode or avoidant non-shopping mode. I don't really know any other way. I do think from all this distance and time I will be more aware of my "stuff" once I start shopping and hopefully won't slide down the slippery slope into a full "I need, I need, I need" mode.
However, I don't know if it's a good thing to come off the fast at said date or stay on it for a bit longer and continue the self-imposed reflection and distance from the real world. I'm open to suggestions and any advice you can lend. I have created a brief 3 question survey to gather your feedback. Please click on this link to access it Miss F's Survey
Thanks for your guidance!
One Day at a Time,
Miss F.
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