KAREN WIGHT -- No Place Like Home
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There is “no place like home” for every family with a daughter
planning to attend a high school winter formal dance.
Dorothy from the “Wizard of Oz” obviously was not old enough to have
experienced a winter formal or she might have changed her tone.
But the path that leads to a Sadie Hawkins dance is certainly not
paved with golden bricks. And when there is a teenage girl in the house,
the road is fraught with peril for daughter and parents alike.
No wicked witch am I. I have plenty of fond memories of high school
dances. I too remember angst over the dress and the date; it’s a rite of
passage.
It’s preparation for more angst in college and even more angst as you
plan a wedding, and the ultimate conundrum when you have a daughter of
your own and experience the painful o7 deja vu.f7
Let’s start with the Sadie Hawkins theme. Now, I’m all for equal
torture of the sexes, and the boys should not have to shoulder the entire
who-dates-whom burden.
But when you put this subject in front of a group of high school
girls, it’s like sharks in a feeding frenzy. Saturday’s dance has been a
topic of conversation since September, when the first reported invitation
from girl to boy occurred.
I don’t know about you, but I never liked the same guy in February
that I had my eye on in September.
Now, you cannot just ask the guy to the dance anymore. It can’t be
done. It has to be a Big Deal. Posters have to be made, rooms have to be
decorated, cakes baked and elaborate schemes devised.
Maybe high school teachers should consider some kind of “credit” for
some of the masterminding and problem-solving that goes on during the
“asking” phase. Heaven knows that more time is spent on solving these
problems than the ones in the math book.
Now, I’m not a complete curmudgeon; girls learn a lot from this
ordeal: how to save money, how to manipulate your parents so you don’t
have to save money and how to deal with boys’ mothers. These are all
valuable skills.
Then there’s the dress issue. The dance is a formal and is held at one
of Southern California’s most “formal” locations -- Knott’s Berry Farm.
It’s terribly important to have a less-is-more dress, strappy shoes and
an up-do to go on the log jam ride.
Very few mothers escape this dress phase unscathed. Practicality has
nothing to do with reality. Get over it.
As the girls plan the evening, a certain winged monkey mentality seems
to take over. I suppose this is predictable, given the group dynamics and
level of emotion that goes into the event.
As a parent, it is very hard to sit back and let the situation play
out. Psychologically speaking, the process holds fascinating revelations
about your daughter’s personality.
Back to the boys. They truly seem oblivious to all the wishin’ and
hopin’ and thinkin’ and dreamin’ that goes on. Maybe it’s better that
way. Most of them would run screaming if they saw how much work goes on
behind the scenes.
They have their own worries to contend with, like which black tux to
rent.
Back to the parents. Which battles do you pick? Can you refrain from
projecting your own expectations onto your daughter? Head’s up moms, this
is all about you too.
Last year, my daughter Annie’s date sent flowers to the house as a
pre-thank you. When I answered the door and took the bouquet inside, I
assumed they were for me from my husband.
I pulled out the card and the name read “Annie,” not “Karen.” I was
replaced as princess. A lovely gesture that certainly put me back in my
place. I may be the queen, but the daughters are the ones sought after
now. Sigh.
So my darlings, don your ruby red slippers and have a great time.
You’ll be cold, your feet will hurt, your date won’t know how to dance,
but you’ll have fun. Really, you will.
This is the stuff that high school memories are made of. These are the
things you’ll share with your daughter some day.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column is published
Sundays.
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