So maybe I wasn’t being completely honest with you, even if I didn’t know it at the time. Give me a break, kids, I was in the dark about this one, too:
Apparently my toe is not broken.
But before you jump up and accuse me of being overly dramatic and crying curse where there clearly is none, I have an even more WTF injury than a plain ol’ broken toe: neuropraxia, or a condition in which a nerve remains in place after severe injury although it no longer transmits impulses, aka transient motor paralysis.
Um, okay. I’ve paralyzed the nerves in my big toe, which wouldn’t be, you know, a big deal or anything if I was just planning to spend the next few weeks bumming around the house making floral arrangements, drinking Pimms, and re-reading Brideshead Revisited, but that’s not exactly the case.
In 48 hours, I leave for the south of France, because a bunch of us are going out to Cannes for the film festival, and we’re staying on a freaking yacht. Then a friend of mine has his first solo art exhibition God-knows-where in the Midlands, and then I have to go to New York to moderate a panel discussion at the BookExpo. So it would be helpful if I didn’t currently have nerve damage in my foot, the kind of nerve damage that prevents a person from being able to wear shoes.
That’s right. I am unable to shoe myself. Yesterday was the first day in which I managed to half-shove my foot into a slip-on Converse to go to the emergency room. Today I also managed to half-shod myself in same Converse and limp over to Oxford Circus with my housemate Mary in order to pick up some necessities for our Cannes trip.
We went to Primark. Now, I don’t know if you have ever been in a Primark before, but on the off chance that you haven’t, let me describe it to you: Picture the Bronx Target, the ridiculously busy one. Picture it on the Saturday afternoon before Christmas. Now picture all of the people on the packed red line train you had to take to get to the Bronx also crowding into said Target. Now picture the lines at the DMV. Congratulations, you have a complete mental image of what a random Wednesday afternoon is like at the Oxford Circus Primark.
Mary and I wandered around, picking up things we needed. For Mary, these things were pajamas.
“Look, Robyn, this one’s only £2!” It was a pair of pajama shorties covered in green anchors.
“Ah, dahling. You’ll look ravishing on the yacht wearing that one, I daresay,” said I, limping fetchingly through the crowded sleepwear aisle of the bargain superstore.
And so it went, sufficiently ridiculous, with me trying desperately to find a pair of throwaway flat shoes that I could wear until my nerve paralys–thingummy subsided. And then I spotted them: deck shoes, with white soles, the kind that those preppy St. A’s types were always wearing to class at my university, along with their bleeding madras (oh, sorry, that’s a Vampire Weekend song. Nevermind). Except, I actually needed these shoes, as the only shoes you can wear on this boat are deck shoes. At Primark, they were £6. And the line to pay for them was longer than my senior thesis.
There’s something vastly amusing about seriously shopping for boat shoes in Primark, where the sunglasses cost £1 and the line for the dressing rooms is over 100 people long. But then, there is something deeply depressing at how thrilled I was to be able to fit my swollen, sad little toe into said deck shoe–into anything that wasn’t my grody Converse. Nevertheless, I quite like my cheap, melancholy little boat shoes. I like what they represent: the absolute absurdity of my life.
Sometimes its yachts and parties, other times its emergency rooms and nerve damage, and still other times, it’s having a laugh in the boat shoe aisle of Primark. And, occasionally, it’s all of that at once.
Also, I kind of hate Primark. But I can’t help myself; that store is Recession Crack. I think I’m going back tomorrow for beach towels. And I’m sort of hoping they’re 99p.