Are you there, God? It’s me, Kim, and I just want to go to Target by myself…

Posted March 18, 2008 at 12:52 pm by

Remember those great Judy Blume young adult books?  I checked out the one about Margaret awaiting her period from the library about a thousand times.  Looking back on that book now, I can so relate to the waiting, the wondering.  Except in my case, it’s not the waiting for my period.  I got that about 26 years ago, and that’s what’s gotten me to the more important waiting I’m doing now.  

I’m waiting–and praying–for the day I can go to Target.  Alone.

When I can, the first thing I’ll do (after I tell all my friends about it and they beg me for all the gory details), is go browse the bra the undies section.  And browse, I will.  I will pluck every single bra off the rack and hold it up to my chest, read its label, and perform a material-feel check, just because I can.  And then I’ll take another hour to try them all on. I will not spend my time there picking up and rehanging forty bras that little hands have strewn along the aisle, or chase small people out from under racks of underwires, or shush little-boy shrieks of, “Mommy, these are for your boobies!”

After I’m done QC-ing all the underthings, I’ll shuffle over to the sunglasses section and try on every pair.  I need a few new ones now because my last two were thrown on the ground at the zoo and run over with the stroller, and stretched out until they snapped in half.  Not by me.

Moving on, I’ll grab a coffee at the food bar without even looking at the snack bag rack and cold juice box display, then head to the media section, where I’ll read every single magazine and newspaper cover-to-cover.  I will read for comprehension and finish every sentence the first time, even if it’s about poor Brit or silly Posh, just because I’m actually reading.  I’ll relish the muted house muzak in the background as opposed to the elevated, “Mommy!  He’s eating my yogurt!” background noise at my house. 

Then, I will go try on clothes.  I might even buy some, since I think the last time I bought anything new was 1963.  Oh wait, I wasn’t born yet.  It just seems like it’s been that long.  Say what you want about a woman who fantasizes about buying clothes at Target; they make good enough stuff and if I can do that in the same store I get my coffee drunk and my reading done, well, good for me.

Of course, I’ll follow all this up with a trip over to women’s shoes, where I will try on several pair and stand very still in them, instead of trying to run in the damn things, tripping over those bloody elastic shoe-attacher bands while chasing cackling little boys up and down the aisles.

On the way out after 8 hours with my overflowing cart(s), I will bypass the toy department (actually, in my ideal Target experience, there would be no toy department), the Pokemon card display, the diaper section, the birthday party aisles, and the toy department (did I already say that?).   

And I will be a good girl, and use my manners, and be nice to my brother.  Please, God?

  • http://www.mommyweirdest.com/ Tracy

    This sounds so incredibly perfect

    Target is my mecca

  • Rita

    Cute piece, but you know, REALLY? Really, you can’t just get the kid’s father to watch the kid for a little bit while you go to Target by yourself? I know you meant this to be funny, but it’s really just kind of sad that something like this even crosses a mom’s mind. So much sadder that anyone can relate to it. Tell your husband (boyfriend, whoever gave the sperm) that you’re off shopping tonight and he’s to take care of the kid and go.

    I don’t understand how this lack of personal freedom has become a part of motherhood. It’s so not right.

  • http://www.kimberlyyounkin.wordpress.com Kimberly

    Hello, Rita. FYI, “Sperm Donor” loves the kids, as do I (surprised?!), and gladly stays home so I can Target all I want. While I’m there I contemplate how very pathetic and sad I am in striving to be a multifaceted individual with more to offer to myself, my family and humanity. It’s called humor, invented somewhere around the dawn of man.

  • Rita

    It’s just such a common theme–mom doesn’t get to do “X” by herself and it’s spun around and around, and yeah, like I said, the piece was cute, but it’s the subject matter that I have a problem with. I guess it’s just my feminism rearing its howling head. I know, whenever anyone disagrees with the actual topic of a “humor” piece it’s because they have no sense of humor. Yeah, that’s me, stone-faced and unfunny. But, I will talk about the topic at hand dammit.

    I’ve been listening to this stuff for 13 years now, and believe it or not, some people mean it! They really feel they “can’t” leave their kid at home and get out, because their husbands have them trained by calling them the minute they leave with some out-of-control problem that mom has to rush home to tend to. And return home is what they do, believing THIS is motherhood. That is sad.

    I’m glad you get to get out and do your thing. But, then I’ve got to ask, why’d you write it if it’s not you? If you get out when you want to, then why write about not being able to get out? Because you thought it would be a pretty universally appreciated feeling? See? See? Go back to my second paragraph here–the fact that it *might* be a universally appreciated feeling, to not be able to shop (cook, shit) without being held down by a kid, is in fact, very, very sad.

  • http://www.kimberlyyounkin.wordpress.com Kimberly

    I wrote this piece because it is me, it has been me, and it has been every single parent, man or woman, who has taken small kids shopping at one time or another. That’s it. I think it’s a pretty universal feeling to have been through hellish outings at the store and want to go alone. And I exaggerated it for “humor’s” sake.
    Okay, so maybe the piece has been done before and I need to hit the drawing board on ideas.

    That said, I do agree that there are many mothers who truly feel they cannot “ask” their significant others for time to go to Target or shit alone. I know people who try to go out and they shoot right home if sweetie calls on the cell phone. I don’t agree with that at all (nor did I imply that was the case in this piece – maybe my or others’ Sperm Donor is/are in Iraq).

    Regardless, let’s not pretend we don’t wish for more time for ourselves when we have small children. It’s joyous, and it’s also intense, and sometimes we need a laugh to stay even.

  • http://quietlyshoutinginside.blogspot.com GHD

    Wow! That sounds like HEAVEN! Please take me with you. I promise to keep my hands and feet in the cart… please, please, oh, pretty please.

  • difficultdecision

    My husband and I have decided not to have kids and I very openly and honestly admit that although I 98% believe it’s the right decision, I will never be 100% sure. I will always wonder about the benefits of raising a child that I know I’m missing out on with some regret.

    But for us these potentials are outweighed by the things we know we get in exchange. And although I get that this post was exaggerated for humor’s sake, some of the ideas in it reinforces one of the top reasons why I don’t want to have kids: that I fear it will turn me into someone who longs for a long trip to Target. Not for a backpacking trip to Turkey, not for a day volunteering at a homeless shelter. Not even a trip to a store that sells stuff NOT made in sweatshops, that does not have tons of human and environmental costs hidden behind a discount price tag. But Target. Because you can get everything you crave, no matter how shallow the craving is, under one (very large) roof, and feel a certain satisfaction as a result.

    I know a lot of parents who do not use parenting as an excuse to forget about other people’s families in the world earning 30 cents an hour to make those flip flops. I know that being a parent doesn’t necessarily make you a more shallow person. What bothers me is how many more parents DO give up on caring about anything else than their own nuclear unit, despite the fact that their children will inherit this world, this world that we are actively creating every day with our purchasing decisions.

    I fear becoming that. And I see how much marketing dollars are used exactly to create that, how intense the pressures are to become that (i.e., working moms who honestly don’t have the time or energy to make the more creative choices). And that is largely why I have decided not to be a mom, because I don’t want to succumb to this lifestyle.

    Kudos to you out there who manage to raise kids and remain involved in helping to better this world outside of your own family. You are my heroines. I just wish there more of you, and that I could be certain I would follow your lead if I had my own kids.

  • Whatevah

    Oh, difficultdecision, go tell it to someone that gives a rat’s ass about your stupid martyrdom. I’m glad your ass isn’t having kids. The world doesn’t need another Jesus Christ.

  • Rita

    Difficult Decision–I am pretty anti-consumer, myself. Well, compared to my peers. But, I also know a lot of childless couples who are way more consumer-oriented than I am. Way, way, way more consumer oriented than I am. I used to watch Sex and the City not because it was funny (because honestly my friends have better lines most of the time), but as a study in anthropology. Those women–those white, educated women, living just one state away from me (I was outside Boston at the time), who were MY same age, couldn’t be more foreign to me than if they lived in some African tribe. It was just so odd to me that they chose to live that way. And, well, for most of the series, they were all childless and single.

    So, personally, I think the child angle is an excuse. I know a lot of really globally conscious parents, who don’t buy things that exploit poor labor laws. I don’t think that reproducing changes your morals any.

    But, really, Target is not a horrible corporation, either. I’d consider it middle-of-the-road. Yes, they do carry merchandise that is made in exploitive countries, but they are a relatively good company towards their employees and such. They’re not Wal Mart.

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