
The best way to describe my fashion style is... colourful. I have one black dress in my wardrobe I bought to look professional. It’s not me. It taunts me from the hanger. I flip between selling it on Facebook Marketplace and keeping it as a reminder that black isn’t my thing.
Enough about black; I’m boring myself.
Since wearing a tartan silk bubble skirt to my school formal in the 90s, my love affair with colourful clothing has continued. Until now. Because the teens aren’t happy.
While you're here, watch the Mamamia team confess the fashion items they've blown too much money on. Post continues after video.
As toddlers, they might have thought that their mum wearing play dough coloured clothes and tutus was cool. But a teen does not.
I’ve seen the embarrassment of mates asking if I really have pink hair. They have also asked me to wear 'normal' clothes to watch the rugby.
I have lost countless nights' sleep worrying about whether I should tone it down for the kids. I mean, I have always said I’d do anything for them. Is it too much to ask that I dress differently to look normal? Am I risking my precious relationship with my teens by not changing for them?
Yep, mum guilt is real. Even when it’s simply about what I wear and how I colour my hair...
So, what did I decide?
Well, the title of the story gives it away.
I did nothing.
When I say I did nothing, I mean I did nothing about my appearance. Instead, I explained why I wear the clothes I do, and I hope they can be okay with it.
This is what I told them:
I want them to see me.
Not in a profound and philosophical way, but literally, physically, see me. I have spent the last decade spending my Saturday and Sunday mornings on the side of a sporting pitch, yet I can’t tell you how often I get told that I never go to games.