Dear Clothing Retailers,
Please stop. Please
stop pretending that we can wear your beautiful fall clothes here in the Deep South.
Look, I want it to be fall as much as you do. That’s why I dutifully put out my pumpkins
and festive fall wreath even though it’s 92 degrees and 158% humidity. It’s why I still get excited for seasonal
coffee drinks, even though there’s no other indication that seasons have
changed. However, I simply cannot endure
your oversized cable knit ponchos, wool coats, corduroy pants, and rugged
sweaters. Or the suggestion, as provided
by your mannequins, that I wear layer upon layer upon layer of clothing.
Do you know what happens when we wear that oversized sweater
poncho here in the South in October? We
become one-person sweat lodges, like the ones that people died in from overheating. That
lovely plaid wool jacket? There may be
one day this year I could actually wear it, and that day probably won’t come
until January. Also, those beautiful
scarves you have draped around the necks of every mannequin? It would become a
sweat rag that I could use to wipe my face after about ten minutes outside.
Listen, I love our Southern version of fake fall. I schlep the kids to the pumpkin patch and
sweat buckets with all the other parents.
I buy the candy corn and giant inflatable pumpkins for our yard and I make
delicious pumpkin bread. In short, I
pretend that the seasons are actually changing, even though we all know that we’ve
just moved from Summer Phase I to Summer Phase II, which lasts until November.
There’s where you come in: I think you should dump the
ponchos and coats, and instead roll out a Summer Phase II clothing line. You could even use all those rich fall colors—deep
burgundy, mustard yellow, and navy—but just skip the pants and make shorts and
t-shirts. You’d sell a lot of them, because
as much as we embrace fake fall here in the South, we just can’t pretend that
it’s cool enough to wear your real fall clothes.
So happy fall, y’all.
Just not in those ponchos, corduroys, and scarves. Shorts.
Think shorts.
Signed,
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