Soft Surroundings: My Magical Wonderland

Shhh. Lean in closely. I need to tell you a secret.

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Mature Lady = Barbara Walters Filter

I’m two seconds from turning 39, and I’m already digging the mature lady stores.

My personal favorite? Soft Surroundings.

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“I’m kid-free, Gladiator-sandaled, and three sheets on this rosé.”

The crisp creases in tailored pants, embellished tunics, $90 nightgowns, washable jersey dresses with thick elastic waist leggings, statement necklaces—all of it. It is speaking to me in mature lady language I am just beginning to understand. It draws me in with promises of goblets full of white wine, dancing barefoot in a French pedicure underneath an outdoor crystal chandelier, Joan Lunden haircuts circa 1993, and pensive glances while sniffing floral bouquets: everything that not long ago would throw me into the tornadic spins of a rage spiral but now hypnotically draws me in.

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“Just feeling reflective about artisanal cheese and the volatile state of the global economy…”
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“Carol, you lush, call the Uber!”
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#LIFEGOALS

I’ve even written a poem about it (this turns into a really great song after two or five glasses of Cabernet):

Come along, to my magical wonderland
Full of cats, white wine, and smiles.
This ruched bedspread features 47 ruffles,
And yet it is not enough.

Peek with me through these tonal raw silk curtains
At my neighbor Deborah in her reverie;
We will all delight in the beauty of the morning
Wearing dry clean only rayon caftans,
Barefoot and free.

*There are 14 more stanzas.

If you’re not yet familiar with Soft Surroundings, don’t worry—you will be. This is how one becomes sucked into their vortex of linen leisure wear:

  1. You receive Soft Surroundings catalogs in the mail for three years, consistently tossing them in the trash without a glance.
  2. The catalog arrives in year four, and your subconscious tells you the woman on the cover in the crinkled broom skirt and belted gauze top smiling at no one in particular and drinking a glass of wine will no longer be ignored.
  3. You give in to this cover model, an extra seemingly pulled from some Diane Lane romp-through-Tuscany film, and cautiously flip through the pages.
  4. You make up terrible jokes about how ridiculous it all is, post them on Facebook, and then secretly visit the store to see what experiencing perimenopause with a closet full of viscose tunics and eyelash-fringed Euro shams would be like.
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“Just gonna meditate here until my Activia kicks in.”
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The most adorable woman casually eating Chinese food that I’ve ever seen.

Visiting an actual Soft Surroundings store smells like the tranquil home of a woman who favors the shabby chic life and endless varieties of shirts with snap-cuff, roll-tab sleeves.

To determine if you are, in fact, a Soft Surroundings woman, you will agree with or respond affirmatively to the following:

  • “Sensual,” “luxurious,” “carefree,” “elaborately smocked hemline,” “epicurean,” and “mysterious” are all words you would use to describe your ideal romantic relationship or candle scent.
  • Your online dating profile would read: “Urban gypsy loves floral prints and the color aubergine. Come away with me to Morocco so I can better utilize my collection of beaded tunics and bangle bracelets. Or, we can just drink a bunch of wine on my patio, and I will wear my $150 genteel gauze pajama set.”
  • “Tunic,” “caftan,” “cami,” “shrug,” “cowel top,” “weekend tank,” and “embellished thong sandal” are each part of your general vocabulary.
  • A man’s penis will never crawl inside itself upon viewing an elaborately ruched comforter, toile chaise lounge, and pile of silk, anti-wrinkle pillowcases in dusty rose and periwinkle.
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If you are a man who would have sex in this bed, please reveal yourself.
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“Cracking open the wine at 2:00 P.M. because I didn’t bleed through these pants today” (is what I would be celebrating).

If moving up in age entails dressing like a woman with unattainable notions of romance who needs to eat, pray, love her way around Provence to recover barefoot and get perpetually drunk on Cabernet in a Victorian nightgown, then I’m not quite ready for it. But if it means wandering about my home, buzzed and barefoot in a chiffon tunic and no pants for 30 more years, then deal me in.

Stay tuned for my next pieces “Dress Barn: For the Times You Want to Pretend You’re Mad Men‘s Joan Holloway or Megan Draper in the Privacy of a Suburban Strip Mall Dressing Room” and “Marshalls: Where You Go for Affordable Shoes but End Up Buying 27 Throw Pillows Because They Are Next to the Seasonal Decor and Kitchenware and You Can’t Tear Yourself Away (Again).”

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Two seconds from lighting a cigarette and singing “Zou Bisou Bisou” in this Dress Barn

**For reference, I asked my Facebook friends if they had any strong feelings about the Soft Surroundings catalog, and they responded with varying degrees of familiarity:

Leslie: “My strong feeling is that in order to afford the clothes in that catalogue I’d have to sell a kidney.”

Wendy: “Soft Surroundings sounds like a bad adult contemporary album.”

Cat: “One day I walked into the Soft Surroundings store at La Cantera (I’d never heard of it before, so [I] decided to explore), and nothing seemed particularly soft, so I walked out.”

Heather: “I wish I had a caftan-wearing life!”

Me: “Barefoot, wearing a caftan, and drinking a glass of wine is how I want to move through life.”

Shelby: “Soft Surroundings’ catalogue is the place where Nora Roberts’ characters come to LIFE. (NOW THERE IS PUBLIC DOCUMENTATION THAT I HAVE READ NORA ROBERTS.)”

Lauren: “It’s hard not to have strong feelings about the Midnight Garden Dress, perfect for conjuring spells and capturing hearts. $128 seems like a steal.”

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(For reference)

Nora: “My mom loves that store!”

Ashley
Ashley is a back-up dancer for circa 1989 Janet Jackson in her dreams and a mother of two preschoolers in her waking life. An Alamo City native, she spent her college and post-college years in TN, CA and AZ (all lovely states completely incompetent in the fine art of breakfast tacos). After crying everyday in radio sales, working next to a sheep pen at a rural telecom, being totally confused in agriculture, and completely giving up and drawing cartoons of co-workers at an online university, she finally found her calling in grant writing for a non profit arts organization. And then her husband (who, no joke, watches college football for a living) was like, “Hey! We can move to San Antonio to be closer to your family if you want to!” And then Ashley was like, “Hey! That’s good timing because remember all that drinking I was doing last week because I thought I had really bad PMS and wanted to power through it? Well, that PMS is a baby!” So they moved to S.A. and Ashley found a job with a rural non profit, but when she tried to go back to work after the baby, living on no sleep with a newborn and a traveling husband unable to share in the workload, she quickly learned she was about five seconds away from a mental breakdown. Cut to today where she is a full time mom, loving the freedom to run all over the city each day with her kids, despite a 98% decrease in her ability to pee alone/do less than 19 loads of laundry each week. She chronicles her most embarrassing childhood moments and photos at This is Me at 13-ish (http://meat13.tumblr.com), in hopes that she never forgets that as difficult as it is to be a parent, it is just as much of a struggle to be a kid.