Katie and the Harrowing Escape from the Hoodie of Social Doom
Katie and the Harrowing Escape from the Hoodie of Social Doom

Katie and the Harrowing Escape from the Hoodie of Social Doom

I’m in Fourth Grade. All winter I’ve had to wear this ugly, faded, oversized dark green and blue hoodie. As with most of my clothes, I wish I could tell you where it came from – probably a hand-me-down that even my unfashionable teenage brothers refused. It’s the only item of clothing I have that is sufficiently warm enough to satisfy my mom as I walk out the door each morning. And I live in the Mojave Desert, so the warm jacket bar is pretty low.

Then one blessed day, I realized I have misplaced it. It’s not at home. It’s not in the Lost and Found. It’s not anywhere. I have unintentionally, but gratefully lost my ugly jacket. And with that realization, I have been liberated. The second part of my life has begun. I am free to dress like me again – the gangly, lower-middle class fourth-grader who hasn’t quite mastered the art of doing her own hair. I may be cold, but I am at peace.

Until three weeks later…

Our class is walking a single file line around the school building when Caden Flemming points to a small, muddy heap in the schoolyard.

“Isn’t that your jacket, Katie?”

I turn around and two horrifying thoughts strike me in that moment. First off, that is most definitely my jacket. Only now it’s devolved into a crusty, sun-rotted even sorrier excuse for a textile. And second, apparently my identity is so connected with that hideous soul-sucking mass that I can already see a few of my classmates nodding in affirmation.

Now, I haven’t told many bold-faced lies in my life, but honesty in this moment will throw me right back into the clutches of shame I had so recently escaped from…multiplied, this time, by the reek of irrigation water and colony or two of maggots. So with all the casual boldness a ten-year-old can muster, I simply respond with a solid

“Nope.”

And keep on walking.

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