(First published in the Manawatu Standard and Nelson Mail, January 10.)
There’s no point in mincing
words about this. I have skinny legs.
There, I’ve said it.
At boarding school my
nickname was Twiggy, after the waif-like English model whose emaciated face and
body were the symbol of fashionable Swinging London.
My older brother cruelly
joked that I risked being arrested under the vagrancy laws because I had no
visible means of support. “Boom boom!”, as Basil Brush would have said.
I was the 90 lb weakling who
got sand kicked in his face at the beach, as in the old Charles Atlas
body-building ads. The girl I fancied at an earlier secondary school shunned me
for a brawny member of the First XV. Who wouldn’t develop an inferiority
complex in such tragic circumstances?
I could sympathise with the
character in Spike Milligan’s comic novel Puckoon,
who objected to the legs the author had given him.
“Did you write these legs?”
the feckless Dan Milligan demanded to know. When the author admitted he had,
Milligan grumbled: “Well, I don’t like dem. I don’t like ’em at all at all. I
could ha’ writted better legs meself.”
All my life I have been
self-conscious about my legs. Growing up tall and skinny in a culture where the
ideal male body type has a low centre of gravity, a barrel-like torso and legs
the thickness of jetty piles – in other words, the build of a rugby prop – I
felt out of place.
I was often reluctant to wear
shorts, although I observed that overweight people felt no constraints about
exposing their surplus flesh. Some even seemed proud of it.
Somehow that was OK. Being
beefy was culturally acceptable in a way that skinniness was not.
My mother, a practical woman,
did her best to console me by pointing out that my legs reached all the way to
the ground, which was all that mattered.
Later, after I got married,
my wife often told me I had legs that would be considered highly desirable on a
woman. Strangely enough, this was no comfort. What self-respecting heterosexual
Kiwi bloke wants to be fancied by other men because he has shapely legs?
My physique posed practical
problems for me too, and still does. The jeans and trousers stocked in New
Zealand menswear stores are made for men built like … well, like rugby props.
The waists are too low and the legs too short.
I wait until I’m travelling
overseas. Then I go crazy, bingeing on jeans and trousers that actually fit me.
I’ve found Germany good for this – there are lots of tall men there – and
America even better.
Today, my wardrobe has
several surplus pairs of jeans from the US. Set loose in American clothing stores
with an infinite range of sizes, I’m like one of those grizzly bears you see on
TV wildlife documentaries when the salmon are running upstream. I barely know
which one to grab first. I gorge myself.
But here’s the thing. At my
advanced stage of life (I’m 67), I’ve decided I no longer care what people
think if I walk down the street in shorts. Who the hell do I need to impress?
Besides, after growing up
feeling a bit inadequate because I didn’t have the right physique for most
sports, I discovered a physical activity at which I was at least competent. I
started riding a bike, and discovered my legs weren’t totally useless after
all.
These skinny shanks have
propelled me around Lake Taupo several times in the 160 km Lake Taupo Cycle
Challenge. They have tackled some formidable mountain bike rides: the Karapoti
Classic, the Rainbow Rage, the Haurangi Crossing, the Heaphy Track and the St
James Cycle Trail, to name a few.
They once even stepped up on a podium when I finished second in my age group in a mountain bike race. I
began to feel a defiant pride about my spindly limbs.
But while my legs are no
longer the source of self-consciousness that they once were, I’d like to make a
statement on behalf of skinny-legged men everywhere.
I’ve noticed many times that
people don’t hesitate to comment on my legs – not necessarily in an insulting
way, but bluntly making the point that they’re, er, rather deficient in the
flesh department. Only a few days ago, my brother-in-law remarked on how skinny
they were.
He’s a good-hearted, generous
man, my bro’-in-law, but he’s Polish, and he tends to say what he thinks. It
doesn’t occur to many Poles that just because you think something, you don’t necessarily
have to say it.
I invited him to consider
why, in our culture, it’s considered okay to comment about a person being thin
when it would be deemed offensive to draw attention to the fact that someone is
overweight. I think he got my point.
Incidentally, he turned up
the following day wearing shorts himself. I was tempted to comment on the ghostly
whiteness of his limbs, but held my tongue.
It's just unacceptable.
ReplyDeleteImmediately launch a campaign to bastardize the bullyers of the skinny legged. Ensure you dredge up every childhood culprit. None must escape censure or stigma!
Totally agree about Germany being a good source of clothes for the skinny!
ReplyDelete