Thursday, August 14, 2014

My Social Faux Pas

I'm usually fairly sensitive to things going on around me.  That is to say, most of the time anyway, you could take me out in public and I wouldn't embarrass you by saying or doing something stupid. Yesterday, however, wasn't that kind of day.  I embarrassed myself!

As part of her birthday present, I took my granddaughter (Robin) to a clothing store where she has wanted to shop to get tee-shirts with band names/logos on them.  The place is called Hot Topic, and Plainfield has one.  I gave her a budget and turned her loose to pick out what she wanted.  A clerk approached us offering assistance if we needed it.  While Robin shopped, the clerk and I had a small-talk conversation.  This is where the problem came in.  I could NOT tell if the clerk was male or female!  S/He was short and stocky, with a colored and coiffed off-center longish hair style that seemed distinctly feminine.  The voice seemed male but had feminine affectations, like a gay male might have.  S/He had no facial hair and no sideburns, sported earrings and a sparkly stud in the side of his/her nose.  No real breasts, broadish shoulders in a Nike tee-shirt.  Daizy Duke shorts--VERY short and tight--so short, in fact, that the pockets hung down below the leg length from the inside.  The shoes were high-top and clunkyish--another female style trend that I've never liked, but that's because I'm old and old-fashioned.  S/He told me that s/he was leaving Hot Topic soon in order to go to cosmetology school. All s/he wants to do is hair...doesn't care about learning about nails, etc...just hair.  Everything within me screamed that this was a guy wanting to look like a gal...a gay guy, perhaps...but I honestly didn't know for sure.  It shouldn't have mattered, one way or the other.  And it didn't until checkout time.

A different clerk worked us at the register, with the other clerk right behind her. When she asked, "Did anyone help you today?" I said, "That gal right there"...and pointed to him/her. Then it hit me what I had just said, so I promptly made it worse by blurting...."Er...guy...er...whatever."  S/He heard. Both clerks heard but, gratefully, ignored my comment, or seemed to.  Not only had I messed up, I had messed up TWICE!  There was no one else in the shop.  No way I could have hidden behind someone or crawled under the counter.  There was no chuckle from the clerks--no comment at all about what I'd said--but there was also no eye contact from them, either.  I was mortified!!!  I didn't apologize for what I'd said because, in doing so, I was going to have to explain my confusion, which would have compounded everyone's embarrassment, including my own.  I paid for the merchandise and out of the store we went.

The first words out of Robin's mouth when we left were, "I have an important question:  was that person in there a guy or a girl?"

I wish I knew, Robin.  I wish I knew!

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