| PRINCESS
IN PARADISE
Recently I heard a young mother I know explain how she couldnt
quite bear her
daughter’s school clothes to have the standard Cash’s
woven nametapes sewn
in to them, becasue they were so severe looking, so ‘orphanage’.
No, this
woman had discovered a special order service whereby for only
about six times
the price, her daughter’s little school dresses could
sport Special Order baby
blue designer labels with baby pink lettering. They did look
exquisite, I
had to admit. But I regarded them and her with a hollow feeling.
I felt she
had some sort of duty not to raise the game in this way. Why,
I always weave
and embroider the fabric myself, I felt like declaring.
At my daughters school the birthday party season is upon us
and all sorts of
insane equations are flying through my head. If I make Mary
the amazing
pink fairy princess castle cake of her dreams her freinds will
all behighly
impressed, they’ll treat her with extra warmth and respect
at school which she
will subsequently grow to adore and where she’ll be more
likely to flourish,
which will lead to her gaining a good education which statistcally
will make her
more likely to have a happy life-and all because of my skill
with an icing
nozzle. I curse myself now for not taking an advanced course
in sugarcraft when
I had the chance a few years ago, while remembering that someone
once told me
upside down ice cream cones smeared with pinkish butter icing
make mighty
realistic princess castle turrets.
Princess parties are the requirement du jour in this neck
of the woods.
We’ve been to four or five this month. Each of the little
girls I know has a
favourite princess. Mary’s is Belle from Beauty and Beast,
who’s bookish,
confident and not afraid to seem unconventional, eschewing
pink for outlandish
yellow hues when it comes to ball gowns. She wants so much
more than her own
provincial life and marriage to the smug village hunk. Mary
has informed me that
she wants to be a princess doctor when she grows up. Not, obviously,
a doctor
who looks after the worlds ranks of highly neurotic princesses,
although this
job would have obvious perks: the nicest house in Primrose
Hill was presented
by Queen Victoria to her favourite Doctor. No, Mary wants to
be a princess
who serves to heal the sick in her community. Which is nice.
I am, of course, happy to incorporate as much princesserie
into the party as
Mary desires and will attempt the pink versailles style gateau
complete with
gold and white plastic carriage parked out front on the palace
forecourt,
but what’s really keepingme awake at night is the party
bag question, for it is
ont he strength of these that the true merit of the party is
really assessed.
There are a few unspoken rules when it comes to putting these
together.
Firstly no 2 bags must resemble each other entirely: will a
14 month old baby girl
requre the same as a five year old boy or a three year old
snow white
impersonator? She will not. Each bag must contain at least
seven different items,
only two of which may be edible. The enitre cost of the bags
must not exceed
about £4.00 or it will seem as though, in a transparently
despicable manner,
money and not care jhas been thrown at the problem.
Whenever I try to imagine these thirty littel bags I feel
an extrmely rare
desire to rebel in a hideous fashion. I keep imagaining the
world’s most
unsuitable gift selection: a packet of Rizzlers, some stink
bombs, an assortment of
plasters and gauze and bandages from John Bell and Croydon,
a sheet of Virgin
Mary and crucifiction stickers, baby pots of ink in purple
and bottle green,
some chocolate liquers, a pack of candy cigarettes, a small
selection of
Kentucky Fried chicken and a gun. How bad would a gift have
to be to ensure it
was handed back with a crisp, ‘No thanks’, I wonder.
What would hapen if I
just gave each child a stack of coins?
Of course the gifts bags will contain no such things. I’m
not deranged. I
will run up little sacks mysef from red gingham and they will
be fastened with
lilac satin ribbons. Inside little heartshaped notebooks will
jostle with
the PAris bought buterfly hairslides, sweetie necklaces, princess
lollipops,
miniature paintboxes,candy canes, teeny teddies, bubbles, a
tiny princess
figurine and some little item bearing that child’s name
to make it feel special.
I love doing that kind of thing and it will bring me great
pleasure and joy.
It’s just nice trying out what it’s like to be
someone else sometimes. Every
party needs a bad fairy.
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