Girdles: Matures

Eleanor bought it for twelve dollars.

That afternoon, she didn’t sit in her usual chair and wait for dinner. She walked to the community center and signed up for the senior line-dancing class. She’d been meaning to for a year. matures girdles

Eleanor smiled. “My mother, too. She had one almost identical. After she passed, my father… he couldn’t bring himself to throw away her things. But my sister and I, we cleaned the house in a weekend. I think we threw hers out.” A surprising pang of regret hit her. “I never thought I’d miss seeing it draped over the bathroom door.” Eleanor bought it for twelve dollars

She found it in a dusty glass case near the back: a girdle. Not the flimsy, modern shapewear she saw in drugstore ads, but a girdle . A heavy, beige, industrial-strength garment of firm latex and reinforced satin, with four metal garters hanging like a promise. It was stiff and imposing, a relic from an era when a woman’s silhouette was something to be constructed, not just revealed. She’d been meaning to for a year

That evening, alone in her quiet apartment, she held it up. The apartment was tidy, functional, and deeply lonely. Her husband, Arthur, had been gone for five years. Her book club had disbanded. Her knees ached. Lately, she felt like she was becoming transparent, a ghost in her own life.