Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Shoes Tell the Story

My shoes.

They are Manhattan shoes, Bronx shoes, Brooklyn shoes...New York City shoes. Flats that I slip on and cruise out the door with, easy to walk in, easy to walk on, easy on my feet, soft leather, no socks or stockings or tights or anything needed...just my shoes on nicely pedicured feet.

Suddenly, I'm back to wearing my cowboy boots more and more. Sturdy, comfortable, well worn, scuffed heels, needing new soles, tan leather boots. I'm not in the all the time wearing them state yet, but, it's headed that way.

The boots I wore to L.A. last year, walking around West Hollywood, the ones on my feet when I sat parked in Norma, on a 90 minute call, leaning back on the seat, my legs in said boots dangling out of the window... it's tough getting comfortable in a small car when you are talking on the phone.

I did get more than a few looks.

Manhattan shoes don't cut it here. I walk the terrier out to do her duty, and I'm stepping over piles of hay, around piles of shi..manure, walking on rocks and gravel and it's just not working. In my cowboy boots, I stride easily over all of these obstacles, knowing when my walk is done, I can scrape them on the boot scraper outside my door, and if worse comes to worse, I can swish the soles off in a puddle of water until they are clean again.

They fit my feet perfectly....I sit and pull them on with a satisfying 'plunk' when my heel goes past the shank at the back. I wiggle my toes in their cotton socks, stand up, stomp my foot to settle my jeans (that once dropped nicely around my cute flats) and I'm off.

There is something to be said for cowboy boots... you walk with a freedom not found in heels or flats. The pitch gives you comfort after long hours on your feet. You feel a looseness in your walk, a strength in your glide, and your hips automatically swing.

I wear my boots in the winter in New York. They were put away in April, when we thought it might/maybe/perhaps become spring.

They are back out, happy to be of use again, and I'd forgotten the nice sound they make when you walk. You know you are going somewhere when you have on cowboy boots. The click of the heels on concrete or flooring tells you so.

The flats remain for nice places to go, but, the boots are slowly moving back in place for everyday where.

I guess I really am settling in for the month... next thing you know, I'll be wanting to eat Funeral Potatoes and green Jello salad, and, yes, I'm saying "Oh, my heck!" all the time.

It doesn't take long to switch shoes, attitudes or a way of life.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I love me my cowboy boots too. Unfortunately they kill me in NYC. Oh well!

golfwidow said...

What in the world are funeral potatoes?

Anonymous said...

Green Jello Salad... you're with Lutherans??

The boots sound divine. I now, for the first time since I was reading "Little House On the Prairie," want me some cowboy boots. i wonder if the quality ones can be made Vegan...

Deborah said...

Yes, please post the Funeral Potatoe recipe. Is it a difficult recipe?
Miss Sof

quin browne said...

let it be know, utah has the greatest consumption of jello in the world.

funeral potatoes are served at, well, funerals.

below is the recipe.

* 6-8 medium pre-cooked potatoes (or a 2-lb pkg of frozen hash browns)
* 1/4 cup diced onion
* 1 can (10 ¾ oz.) cream of chicken soup (or cream of celery)
* 1/2 soup can milk
* 1 cup sour cream
* salt and pepper to taste
* 3/4 cup crumbs*
* 3** tablespoons butter, melted
* 1 cup sharp cheddar cheese, grated

PREPARATION:
# Heat oven to 350 deg.
# Thaw frozen potatoes or cook fresh potatoes and cut into cubes (skin on or peeled to taste).
# Place potatoes in a greased 2-3 quart casserole dish or a 9x13 cake pan.
# Saute onion in 1T of the butter and spread over potatoes.
# Combine soup, milk, sour cream and salt and pepper to taste. For a creamier dish, add 2-3 tablespoons additional milk. Mix well. Spread sauce over potato/onion mixture.
# Melt butter and combine with crumbs. Sprinkle crumbs over mixture.
# Sprinkle cheese over mixture.
# Bake uncovered at 325 deg F for 40 minutes or until hot and bubbly throughout.
# This recipe serves approximately 8, and is often served with ham and green beans.


yum