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Search tags: Shoe-Fetish
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text 2018-11-26 19:05
24 Festive Tasks: Door 11 - Russian Mother's Day, Task 3 (Favorite Shoes)

These days, literally all I care about is whether "the shoe fits" and is comfortable and can be worn for hours on end without making me feel like I've stepped into some sort of medieval torture instrument.  That was radically different when I was a kid, however -- even when I was a little girl, I loved to stalk around in my mom's high-heeled shoes, never mind that you could have fit both my feet into one of those shoes back to back ... and once I'd hit my teens, my way of asserting that I had left childhood behind began with my feet.

 

My first obsession was with a pair of white, almost knee-high lace boots -- which had actually once belonged to my mom, too, but been discarded by her, the whole lace thing making them ridiculously impractical.  But unimportant little details such as this didn't deter me in the least, and I couldn't wait for the day when the coveted boots finally (just about) fit me.  That happy day finally arrived when I was 12 (I think -- or maybe 13) years old.  I don't think I ever wore them to school -- if I had, my classmates probably would have had a fit -- but they were proudly on display at family reunions and other sorts of festive occasions, probably much to the amusement of the rest of my family.

 


At Christmas, age 12 or 13, with my grandparents (2d from right and left, respectively), my grandpa's sister and her daughter (my mom's cousin)

 

And a little later, I landed the footware coup of coups; at least by my definition at the time ... a pair of sky-high (we're talking 6-inch heels), bright red sandals with delicate, slim ankle straps.  I was maybe 14 years old when I acquired them (I think I talked an aunt into buying them for me), and I'm still amazed my mom let me wear them at that age at all.  But wear them I did -- proudly, and wherever high heels were called for ... as well as, sometimes, where they weren't.  I owned them for a looong time and hereby present them to you in all their glory -- heels first, since it's the heels, after all, that counted!

 

 

(Side note: If you've seen my Women Writers Bingo master update post, you'll now understand that there really could only be one square marker for me in the context of that particular challenge.)

 

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text 2013-10-28 21:37
Girlie Girl Romance Heroines
Storm's Heart - Thea Harrison
Her Best Worst Mistake - Sarah Mayberry
Getting Lucky - Susan Andersen
The Chocolate Kiss - Laura Florand
Coyote's Mate - Lora Leigh
Undead and Unwed - MaryJanice Davidson
After the Kiss: The Stiletto Series - Lauren Layne
Here Kitty, Kitty! - Shelly Laurenston
Motorcycle Man - Kristen Ashley
Charmed - Beth Ciotta

While I am just this side of Tomboy myself, (my husband describes my style as pretty but sturdy), I appreciate a heroine who clearly invests some of her monthly budget in fashion magazines like so many women of the world do. 

 

I like quirks in my characters so I think a shoe fetish, clothes addiction, jewelry needs, and the compulsion to wax poetic about housewares are just as good of quirks as any others. 

 

I, of course, could have filled every slot on this list with Kristen Ashley's ladies and their shopping and long passages on hair alone.  I restrained myself.  I also left off some classics such as Minerva from Jennifer Cruise's Bet Me to make room for some other heroines and their lovely painted toes. 

 

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