The most important election in our lifetime is barreling toward us and you're writing about a candidate's shoes?
For the first time a woman of color is on a major presidential ticket and you're writing about her shoes?
The world is burning literally and figuratively and you're writing about sneakers?
That guy from The
I'm not the first person to note that
As the campaign nears an end, it's worth taking a moment to fully appreciate the importance of the shoes Harris has chosen to wear while walking that rocky trail.
The shoe story took off in September after Harris stepped off a campaign flight in
The Kamala Converse sightings have been frequent since then, most notably this week when she wore them during a campaign stop
in
Many people applauded the sneaker dance, though some were predictably derisive, like the tweeter who sniffed, "What kind of candidate for public office wears fish head sneakers on stage like they were going to wash clothes or a college party?"
What kind of candidate does that? The gutsy kind. The practical kind. The kind who has been liberated from the cruel high heel.
Harris' sneakers have inspired sociological interpretation, like a piece in the British newspaper The Guardian.
Under the headline "
(I had to look up "semaphores" as a verb too. It involves visual signaling.)
Some of the sneaker sociology verges on ridiculous, but even so, Harris' shoes do matter, not so much for what they are but for what they're not.
They're not high heels. They're not even low heels. They're shoes that hug the ground, comfortable shoes meant for walking, moving, doing. That shouldn't seem revolutionary, but even today it is.
Even in an age in which yoga pants can pass for office wear, women continue to live under the tyranny of the high heel. Ask heel-wearers why they wear them and many will tell you it's because heels make them look better. But look better for whom?
Women are raised to believe that strapping their feet to sloping platforms raised on sticks is sexy. Or professional. Or the
only way to be tall enough to look men in the eye.
(Yes, expectations are placed on men, too, but rarely the kind that cause bunions, hammertoes, shortened calf muscles and low-back pain.)
When I gave up heels as regular attire in my early 30s, I was sad at first. I missed the sassy way they made me feel. Then I realized how much heels hurt, and that the sassiness was largely, if not entirely, a social construct. These days I occasionally wear a pair of low heels I keep for the times when I want to make it clear that I know I'm supposed to be dressed up, or when I don't want to feel as short as I am.
And every time I put those shoes on? My feet and legs ask me afterward: Why? Why? What's wrong with being short?
By the common definition, Harris is short too. But, though she sometimes wears heels, she gains a different kind of stature by demonstrating the courage to wear practical shoes. Her footwear says: Women deserve the freedom to choose shoes that don't lead to foot surgery or back braces. By making that conspicuous choice, Harris helps to liberate other women.
In the past few days, social media has been full of women posting photos of the "Kamala sneakers" they've worn when they went to vote, proving that style always sends a message, and one message Harris is sending is: There's a better way.
(COMMENT, BELOW)
Previously:
• 09/30/20: Tis the (election) season. Don't despair, take deep breaths --- and did I mention don't despair?
• 09/15/20: Winter's coming. The secret doctors won't tell you about surviving it in a pandemic
• 09/04/20: It's September. Already. Again. This year many wish we could skip ahead as an election and cabin fever loom
• 08/19/20: Is 2020 the worst year ever?
• 08/14/20: Mailmen brave the storm, and not just the political one
• 05/05/20: Coronachondria, coronacravings and pandemania: A few words to describe our strange new times
• 04/14/20: If you get the coronavirus, would you, should you, make it public?
• 04/02/20: The pandemic, a professor and a duck named Honey: A story of life in a time of death
• 03/23/20: It's OK not to feel OK right now. But here's how to feel better
• 03/20/20: Befuddled and grieving: As nursing homes restrict visitors in the COVID-19 crisis, one woman fears she'll never see her mother again
• 02/04/20: Where do we find relief in a relentlessly jangling world?
• 12/13/19: Reject the comparisons. Embrace the complication. Be the brightness you want to see. Tips for happier holidays
• 01/21/19: Farewell, Mary Oliver, a poet whose name you may not know, but whose words you most certainly do
• 09/06/18: A breeze of hope blows in the Windy City
• 08/29/18: Another summer. Again, a gift
• 08/17/18: In search of family in a small-town graveyard
• 08/09/18: Courage, kindness two years after 12-year-old blackboy was shot in Chicago
• 07/26/18: An everyday encounter made brighter by a good question: 'Do you have a story for me?'
• 06/19/18: A Big Sister's Guide to Life: Don't chase men and other practical advice
• 06/12/18: For 13 years, 2 friends wrote letters daily. It was a love affair of poetry, separated only by death.
• 06/01/18: What would we do without our brothers?
• 05/17/18: Forget a fiddler. City woman awakens to find a goose on her roof --- and laws about removing it and her eggs
• 05/10/18: A high school senior with college dreams was paralyzed by gunfire. Two years later, he's still pushing forward
• 04/05/18: Remembering the youngest history makers
• 04/03/18: The Parable of the (Expletive Deleted) Comfort Dog
• 02/15/18: Fees, fines, loans, scams: How the poor get poorer
• 02/01/18: When Paul Simon, Daniel Day-Lewis and Elton John say 'farewell' to work they love, should we too?
• 01/25/18: At Oscars time, let's snub the snubbing
• 12/28/17: The real 2017 word of the year
• 12/20/17: The laundry-folding robots are coming
• 12/13/17: How not to waste the last days of 2017