Wear solids

“Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.” – Leonardo da Vinci

UccelloAfter the Parent/Teacher Organization meeting at my older daughter’s middle school a few weeks ago, I was instructed by my family to stop at Ingle’s Market for the following essentials: 1) dog food, 2) apple juice, 3) baby wipes, 4) Shonen Jump magazine, and 5) Edy’s Special Edition Peppermint ice cream. We’re living on the edge here in Asheville, living large, partying hearty. Long gone are the days of “pick up a six-pack, some chips, and a frozen pizza.” So, I made my way down (or up, perspective matters) to Ingle’s where I found myself cart-wandering with my middle-aged compatriots, each trying desperately to remember exactly why we were there, lost souls trying to find The Promised Land or, at the very least, the jasmine rice and some hot mustard.

As I stood in the cat and dog aisle, I had myself a little tiny revelation. 

Actually, I wasn’t alone; it was a joint revelation with a nice young man in hospital gear—those green suits that surgeons wear on all those medical TV shows. So I can only assume he was either a doctor or an escapee of some type. Regardless, we both happened into the Petapalooza aisle at the same time.

Halloween_candySuddenly, as I stood paralyzed by the enormity of dog food choices, I realized that doctor man, too, was stone still, head cocked to the side slightly, trying to pick one object out of this entire football field-sized grocery aisle—nothing but animal food as far as the eye could see. If I squinted, I could see the human dairy case at the end of the aisle, but it was a long way there.

There was food for regular puppies, premature puppies, puppies with a teeny weight problem, and puppies with anxiety disorders. There was food for senior dogs, seniors with tooth and gum issues, seniors with depression, overweight adult dogs, dogs allergic to wheat, low-carb, and your basic vegan version. I had never been struck silent by this aisle before, but as I looked at the abundant selection, I realized that many dogs on this planet eat better than humans. Far better.

Our eyes met, doctor man’s and mine, our confusion over the choices obvious at a glance. Meanwhile, “music” played in the background, a soundtrack to our dilemma. And as I listened, I realized it was a rousing Musak rendition of classic Rolling Stones, lilting strings plucking “You can’t always get what you want.” How appropriate as I debated dog food choices. “But if you try sometimes, you just might find you get what you need.” Keith Richards must be spinning in his…oh? He’s still alive? Ah, yes, the inspiration behind my dear Johnny’s portrayal of Captain Jack Sparrow in “Pirates of the Caribbean.” But back to the puppy chow—What do I want? What do I need? Which will I get?

SnowballersHow many different kinds of dog food do we really need in this universe of ours? Or shampoo? Or toothbrushes or razors or candy or sanitary napkins or biscuits in a can, another altar at which I had found myself floundering recently.  Buttered? Flaky, non-flaky, man-sized, big as your head? Buttermilk? Grands? Big & Flaky? Small & Dry? Homestyle? Are all these choices Useful? Helpful? Meaningful? Obscene? Forgive me, but I have to ask: Is it possible that we live in a world where snowball makers are necessary? What, kids can’t ball up their own snow anymore? We’ve solved world hunger and can now move on to bigger and better things, is that it?

A few years ago, I gave up clothing with patterns.

Black_suitSolids only, from then on. Oh, of course, there are a few hangers-on, scarves with prints, blouses with swirls of some pseudo Italian origin like the end papers of old books, but since that year, I haven’t bought clothing except in solid colors, the sartorial equivalence of narrowing my dog food choices to one brand.

I read that designer Donna Karan has five identical black suits that she wears everyday, a solution that appealed to me mightily. Simplify! I narrowed the scope of clothing to a few examples of each category: 2 dress pants, 2 suits, 2 skirts, a numerical system no doubt influenced by all those Noah tales in Vacation Bible School; perhaps I thought they’d multiply if left alone in the vast closet sea.

Each in solid colors (great for travel and for matching, an adult version of Garanimals!), all reminiscent of the solids of Uccello, those armoured men as systems of solids extrapolated in space in “The Battle of San Romano,” no Burberry plaids or Diane von Furstenberg swirls or Lily Pulitzer pink flowers in his Renaissance eye. It was really only a matter of time. Having written my Thesis on the solids in Uccello (as they appear in William Gaddis’s masterpiece, The Recognitions, of course, that fulcrum around which all my studies somehow revolved), I was bound to get back to them; I guess I just didn’t think it would be in terms of wardrobe, but you just never know. Wouldn’t that nice man who fell asleep in my Thesis Defense meeting be surprised?

A few years before the clothing simplification, I had realized that my life was too complicated. Flying too much, too many clothes to dry clean between trips, too many different little notebooks in which I kept notes and then couldn’t find them, so I worked on simplifying.

Black_n_red_2005I consolidated all those notebooks into one – a black and red one for each year, marked 2004, 2005, 2006. If I’ve thought it this year, it’s there in the 2005 one. Of course, that doesn’t help keep topics together across years, but don’t complicate things for me. I’m an early adopter of technology, so I have all the (now discarded) PDAs you can imagine—what can I say? I like fountain pen on paper too much, the feel of it one of the most satisfying things on earth to me. Well, besides peanut butter milkshakes, a good massage, a certain Gene Hackman film, watching my children sleep, and remembering life in Munich by listening to Jethro Tull’s “Minstrel in the Gallery.”

The only other thing I could think to de-complicate was how I drink my coffee.

Coffee_planeAt the time, I was a cream and sugar drinker, always intent on achieving the right shade, but how cumbersome to have the flight attendant stand there poking the little plastic tray of fake creamer and sugar at me while I struggled to hold the little cup of bad coffee across the lap of seatmates, so I decided the only thing I could do with any success to simplify my life was to start drinking my coffee black—yes! Black! I would say with alacrity! I drink my coffee Black! None of that mamby pamby sugary dairy crap for me – no, I’m a simple person with simple needs, I’ll have it Black! No super grande mocha coca frappa non-fat organic free trade soy latte cino, no.

[Of course, in the spirit of full disclosure, I am married to a man who refuses to go Starbucking by using those weeny size names they have – his is strictly a small, medium, or large world. And I did marry John because he always wore black jeans, black cowboy boots, and heavily starched white oxford shirts, so starched that the pockets were sealed shut. Well, there were a few other reasons, like the way he chops red pepper into tee-niny little pieces, but the simple B&W cowboy uniform was high on the list.]

Hey, life is made up of incremental change. Don’t belittle my coffee revolution. It was all I could handle at the time. I was proud to find something doable, a “low-hanging fruit” as all those management consultants say, something immediately changeable, achievable. I drink my coffee black to this very day.

Liberated by the simplicity of black coffee, in 2003 I gave up toxic people. So, four years in a row, revolutionary change: solid clothing, black coffee, toxic people, black ‘n red notebooks. I shudder to think what 2006 will bring.

~*~ 37 Days: Do it Now Challenge ~*~

The_writerDrink your coffee black. Wear solid clothing. Stick with one kind of dog food. Use one notebook. Give up toxic people. Make your own snowballs.

Clear off your big ‘ol desk.

Free yourself up for the amazing things that come only when there’s space in your head, heart, closet.

 

About Patti Digh

Patti Digh is an author, speaker, and educator who builds learning communities and gets to the heart of difficult topics. Her work over the last three decades has focused on diversity, inclusion, social justice, and living and working mindfully. She has developed diversity strategies and educational programming for major nonprofit and corporate organizations and has been a featured speaker at many national and international conferences.

15 comments to " Wear solids "
  • Reading this, I realized that most of my wardrobe consists almost entirely of solid colors. I’d like to give up toxic people…but unfortunately they keep popping up in my workplaces. :) However, the one notebook idea is one I’ve often used–it means a complete lack of organization once it’s IN the notebook…but there is a freedom to knowing that it’s all in one place. Good suggestions, all. :)

  • A few years ago I went to buy a package of Oreos. Maybe I was falling backwards on a sentimental journey to childhood, Oreo and Milk memories can be so alluring.

    I was stunned. So many “kinds” of Oreos had appeared since Mom sent me to buy some at the grocery store across the alley.

    Sometimes I bring a grocery sack of all the kinds (eight, nine, ten – they seem to multiply at holidays) of Oreos to one of my “talks” and tell those listening that I went to buy them my favorite cookie but that I need a consultant to help me these days. This is not a task for a little boy of seven anymore.

    I want simple again. Thanks for showing me a few steps in that direction. And thank you for disclosing that I am not alone in my hunt for a simple Oreo and a glass of milk.

  • Reading this reminded me of Barry Schwartz’s The Paradox of Choice. I think he stated there was 19,000 ways to order your beverage from Starbucks. Perhaps on a lazy afternoon I will just go ask the the counter person to name all the choices and then just ask for it black…of course I can’t have it small but I can have it tall which is “all” the same by the end of the word.

  • Great song reference, I love the Stones and “You can always get what you want” was playing at a pivotal time in my life so it will be there forever. I also agree with the reference to Barry Schwartz’s Paradox of Choice. We do need to simplify things.

    I have taken steps in that direction. I only have two colors of sox, black and blue. They are in two piles in the draw on opposite sides of each other, so I can pick the one I need for the day without turning the light on to allow my wife a few more minutes of darkness.

  • Mike – your ode to Oreos made me laugh. What, you have a problem choosing between Oreo Big Stuff, Double Stuf, Double Stuf Peanut Butter Creme, Double Stuf Chocolate Creme, Colored Creme, Chocolate Creme, Fudge, White Fudge, Double Delight, Uh-Oh! Oreos, Golden Oreos, Mini Oreos, Reduced Fat Oreos (why bother?)! Thanks for your note – and the memories! The next Big Life Question–do you unscrew the Oreo before eating it?

  • David and Steve – thanks to both of you for the reference to “Paradox of Choice” – I haven’t read it, but after reading your comments, looked it up online and will add it to my list…here’s a nice excerpt from it that gets at the sheer enormity of the choices in one grocery store, including 75 different kinds of eyeliner and 230 varieties of cereal!: http://www.usatoday.com/life/books/excerpts/2004-01-16-paradox-choice_x.htm#

    As for hearing all the options at Starbucks and then ordering black…when I worked at Joe’s Dairy Bar (32 flavors!), we had many people ask us to name all the flavors – and they would, inevitably, order vanilla…

  • marilyn – thanks for your note – yes, toxic people pop up everywhere, don’t they? “Giving them up” for me meant making a conscious decision about how invested I would be in their toxicity…

  • Thank you for that.

  • I always unscrew the Oreo and I was in a technical era long ago kind enough to rewind, but that is another matter.

    And…aren’t there Halloween Oreos and Christmas Oreos of some unique denomination?

  • Joy K.

    Your black and red notebook system reminded me of Anne Lamott’s post-it note system in “Bird by Bird”. I think the main thing is getting your ideas down on paper, lest they fly away out of our minds forever.

    Clearing spaces in our lives by getting rid of the toxic people in it can surely create space for better things to come!! Oprah talks about sending them to the parking lot; they don’t need to be in your front row.

    Thanks again for another thought-provoking post. =)

  • The Beauty of Simplicity

    Article from Fast Company – Nov 2005 on innovation’s biggest paradox: We demand more and more from the stuff in our lives–more features, more function, more power–and yet we also increasingly demand that it be easy to use. And, in an Escher-like tw…

  • Sounds like a good direction. Too many choices is a stress in itself. Toothpaste flumox me. But then I remind myself, which I choose doesn’t matter a whit. Whether I order the perfect considered choice from the menu for my wants and needs and bliss or something at random, it’s all good.

  • Michael Wagner: Christmas oreos? I don’t think such things exist…are you sure this wasn’t a dream you had? I’m pretty sure that the only unique holiday oreos I’ve ever seen have been the orange pumpkin colored Halloween ones…

  • Carolyn Hanka

    A sign I saw at U.S.Egg in Scottsdale, AZ:
    Drink Coffee. Do stupid things faster with more energy!

  • […] I could think of that I could be successful at was to ditch the dessert factor in my coffee and go simple with my java. Sounds silly now, but it made sense to me at the […]

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