
The
International Writers Magazine: Pink
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Never
Have Me
Natalie Tehranie
My
msn screen name reads: "Princess Nat-Ive got a castle
in my room!"
My bedroom is very pink. The walls are covered with pink birthday
cards, notes from my friends and various pieces of fancy dress.
My mirror alone is adorned with fairy wings, a wand and a pink
dream catcher with a fairy on it. My bed is covered in a pink
duvet, splashed with pretty flowers. Sitting on my pink pillow
is an array of cuddly toys and a Tinkerbell cushion. My notice
board is bursting with smiling faces of posing girlies and memorable
moments
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I am a very girly
girl and this is evident in my room. So I guess you could say that my
possessions tell you a little about me. They are a part of my identity.
But they dont define me. Theres a lot more to this young
woman than her love of the colour pink.
Yes, I do love pink, glittery objects and cuddly toys because I think
they are sweet and they let me stay young. I suppose they remind me
of childhood; when we were free to just be. Run around naked screaming
"I want chocolate" when youre three and adults sigh
and say how sweet you are. Do this now and youll find yourself
either in a mental home or prison.
I think the problem with possessions now is that people place too much
emphasis on them. You are judged whether you like it or not, on what
you wear, what phone you have or what car you drive. Girls will actually
consider not dating a guy if he doesnt drive. Believe me. I am
one of those girls. I promise I am not a shallow person and if I like
someone it wouldnt matter to me whether he drove or not; but like
almost every other girl on the planet I do see the perks of having a
boyfriend who can drive.
I wouldnt want to be judged solely on my possessions, sometimes
we cannot afford the latest trends or dont want them. And why
should we have to have certain things for people to like us? Yet most
of us still play the game. We fall into the hands of the fashion industry
and follow the Celebrities who we moan about over our highly fashionable
Starbucks coffee cups.
No one is an individual anymore. The individuals arent individual
because they are trying to being individual; along with the other half
of the planet who decides that this week they are going to be different.
When did we get so materialistic? I remember liking toys when I was
younger but I wasnt constantly asking for the latest Barbie doll.
Although saying that I do remember once, feeling deeply disappointed
when I received a Sindy doll one year instead of the Barbie I had wanted.
But at least I had the decency to feel guilty. I knew, even then that
I should be grateful for what I got.
Perhaps then materialism and the need to possessions is programmed into
us at birth. Along with the highly irritating obsession we seem to have
as humans to want whatever it is we cant have. Didnt Eve
want the apple, she wasnt content with living in paradise and
neither are we. Our old 3310 Nokia phones were fine, they worked but
no we have to have the newest technological masterpiece, because this
one not only takes pictures but it prints them too! Perhaps a slight
exaggeration but you get the general idea.
The problem is that there is too much choice. If you want a pink phone,
you can have it. You want red hair with blue stripes in it, its
yours. People can even buy babies on the internet now. Illegally of
course; but what is happening to society? Why would anyone want to choose
their babies eye colour or the size of their feet? This defeats the
point of having children, people are meant to be individuals, a miracle
of life. They are not meant to be moulded out of clay, or scientific
experimentation.
So you see I have views, I have questions, Im an inquisitive person
but who would have thought that from my room. I can just imagine doing
a survey and asking 100 people what sort of girl do you think lives
here? How much do you want to bet most would make comments like: blond
and girly or pink and obsessed with fashion. I doubt anyone would say
that I seemed like a lovely, intelligent, down to earth girl. You cannot
judge people by their possessions just like you cannot judge a book
by its cover. This has been said for years and yet people still
do it. And they probably always will.
Throughout history possessions have defined what class you belong to.
Perhaps if you arent born into money you can never quite be one
of the aristocracy but you can acquire wealth and be in the middle classes.
This whole class was created because people made money so they werent
poor yet they werent of noble blood either.
I think that possessions are an aspect of yourself but not a definition
of who you are. I asked my flatmate what he thought n the issue of possessions
and he said that if he went into a room full of star trek posters he
would assume the person that lived there was a geek. The thing is, a
lot of us probably would. Possessions are always going to form part
of your identity. We live in a materialistic world so it is inevitable.
Perhaps it is time to start thinking how we want to be judged and whether
these possessions suit the image we wish to portray of ourselves. I
think we need to be careful as a society not to go to far; we must remember
what is important in life and not let the latest pair of hot Topshop
boots we just have to have let us lose sight of that.
© Natalie Tehranie November 2006
Nat is studying
Creative Writing at the University of Portsmouth
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