I figure there are two types of women in this world. Those who carry a purse and those who don’t.
I’m not a purse type of gal. I think I was scarred at a young age by the sheer weight of my grandmother’s enormous purse. She always had enough loose change at the bottom of her purse to feed a third world country and a wallet that literally would bust at the seams with cards, receipts and Canadian Tire money.
It was like lugging around a sac of potatoes or a small child. I never understood it. That damn purse was so heavy that one of her shoulders was three inches lower than the other and she reminded me of a granny version of the hump back of Notre Dame. Minus the whole living in a church steeple, of course.
As a young woman, I vowed never to carry a purse. It was too girly and far too much work to find a purse that matched your outfit, your shoes and the colour of your car.
I figured God invented pockets for a reason. So what if it looks like I’m carrying a block of butter stuffed in my front pocket? I never had to worry about losing my purse. Or worse yet, suddenly dropping the damn thing at the foot of a hot dude only to have my tampons and nasal spray roll out while I try desperately to distract him from finding out I suffer from the curse of womanhood and congested sinuses.
How embarrassing would that be?
Yet my husband likes to point out the flaws in my thinking. I never have a kleenex on hand for emergency snot escapees. And as a parent to small children there has been many a time when a booger made a dash for the border only to be wiped on a sleeve because that was the only thing handy to contain it.
I have a lovely tendency to put cell phones on my lap while driving and then get out of the car and forgetting about it, only to have it drop on to the pavement for someone else to find or to smash it while I drive over it when leaving the parking lot.
(It has only happened three times. He won’t let it go. It’s not like I accidentally threw his brand new shiny phone into the fire with some trash. Oh wait. Maybe I did.)
I may have lost countless lipsticks and house keys as they wiggled loose out of my pocket and fell to the floor forgotten.
But in my defense, I have never lost my purse. That has to count for something, right?
So I stuff my bank card and my keys where ever I can fit them. Even if the only place is in my bra. (In my defense, I do try to avoid this scenario as I don’t really like looking like a pervert who likes to cop a feel as I’m digging for my debit card down my shirt while a line up of annoyed and possibly aroused customers wait behind me.)
Nothing I have lost could never be replaced.
Other than my dignity, my husband likes to remind me.
I ignore him as I don’t see him offering to carry a man bag around to tot tampons and kleenex.
I refuse to fall prey to the stereotypical woman trap of purse toting. I don’t believe bags are beautiful and I just shake my head when my lady friends coo over the cutest new purse they just purchased after having sold their newborn child to pay for it.
Yet sometime last week when I went shopping, I lost my bank card. Annoying yes, but problematic? Not so much. It just meant a trip to the bank to get a replacement card.
Again.
After standing in line for what seemed like an eternity, I finally made my way to the teller at my local branch.
“Hi, I seemed to have misplaced my bank card and I need a new one.”
“Do you know your account number and do you have any identification?”
“Yep.” I’ve been through this drill many times.
“Hmmm. It would seem you have lost a few cards before,” the ditzy teller announced. Loudly.
“A few. I may have melted a card in the dryer once before, broke another in half while trying to pick a lock. You know, the usual.”
“Our records indicate this is the 24th card you have lost since you began banking with us.” The teller is now glaring at me like I’m the sole reason she didn’t get a wage increase at her last annual review. Like replacing a few bank cards is going to come directly out of her pocket.
“That’s all?” I joked. “I was aiming for at least thirty.” Heh, heh. Aren’t I witty?
“This is your fifth card in a year.” Again with the disdain. You’d have thought I was speaking to my husband or my mother.
“Seems so,” I chirped back. By now there was a growing line of waiting customers who were starting to give me the evil eye. I could feel all the annoyed looks burrow into the back of my skull like laser beams.
I noticed then that my teller was the only teller on duty at the moment and she seemed to take more interest in hassling me than moving the line along.
“I promise, this will be the last card I will ever need. I’m planning on having it surgically attached to my left hand,” I joked as I raised my hand to show her. Come on lady. If you don’t hurry up I’m going to get whacked by all the elderly people’s canes who are waiting to pay their bills. It’s not like these people have all the time in the world. They don’t like to have it wasted by an irresponsible young person hogging the only bank teller available.
“I’m going to have to get my supervisor to approve this. I’m new on the job,” she sniffed. The patrons behind me were growing more restless. I was starting to sweat.
At this rate, it would have been easier to just bend me over and beat my arse with a rubber paddle.
An eternity later, she returned with a new bank card and a grim look. Thank heavens for small mercies I thought as I snatched the card from her claws.
“You really should be more careful with your bank cards,” she tutted loudly as I signed my life away for the 24th time and shoved the card into my pocket.
“Thanks Mom, I’ll try to remember that,” I politely replied as I turned to make my escape before the hordes of annoyed geriatrics ate me alive.
Walking past that line of elderly customers was like doing the walk of shame. They all eyed me like I was some irresponsible hoodlum who just wasted fifteen minutes of their precious life diseased.
Shame is a powerful tool. I went and bought a purse bag.
I reckon I’ll need it when I bring home a new kid. It can be a pseudo diaper bag-slash-purse. Really. I was thinking of my new duties as a new mom when I chose it. I swear I wasn’t remembering an old lady shaking her cane at me and my irresponsible ways when I selected it.
I have now just crossed over to the dark side. Thanks to my walk of shame, a bitchy bank teller and my husband’s years of pestering.
I feel so dirty.
I guess this means I’m a real woman now.
It sucks growing up.






Minnie
LOL!
I’m the anti-you. I have bags. Lots and lots of BIG bags.
Everyone makes fun of me until they need a bandaid, some dental floss, or button sewed back on.
That was hysterical!
Colleen
I’m the same way. I have a purse because I *loathe* situations like what you described – and for no other reason. I see no sense in switching new purses every day…in fact, I’ve had the same one for three years.
I was invited to a faux purse party once – to think some sucker thought *I* would shell out $150 for a knock-off designer purse – HA! I could buy like 50 fancy coffees for that price…
CourtneyRyan
Welcome to the dark side…on a happier note, my bank charges me everytime I need a new card. Even if its their stupid cards fault for being demagnitized or bent or scratched!
oh and I think our grandmothers might have been sisters…at the very least cousins because they have the EXACT SAME purse habits.
Assertagirl
Yeah, but if this is the bag I think it is, purchased at Roots on Yonge, then it’s a kickass bag. I think I drooled a little while you were paying for it.
I love me a good bag. I think I called myself a bag whore on someone else’s blog just this morning, in fact…
that girl
I hate carrying a purse. My ATM card and driver’s license are in my right back jeans pocket, if you’re pick-pocketing anytime soon.
Philly
I love bags!! Have lots and lots. Big, small, dark, light, leather, winter summer. The more the better, I say.
muddypelican
Wow, what kind of bank do you go to that magically manufactures new bank cards while you wait? I have to get mine in the mail and it takes at least a week.
daysgoby
Never been a purse girl. It’s the damned kids, I tell you!
With the first kid I carried a diaper bag. Then the second kid I couldn’t be bothered- I just bought a succession of bigger and bigger tote bags, until one day I realized the bag was BIGGER THAN THE BABY (and possibly bigger than the toddler, too)
But the big bag held everything – and now everyone was USED to me having everything. So now that I’ve connected my mysterious back pain with the fact that I’m dragging around everything AND the kitchen sink, I’ve been weaning myself off carrying the giganticus bagus.
So far, this means I have a smaller purse on my arm and a tote bag full o’crap in the backseat of the car.
You know, just in case I need it.
KK
Did you forget about ye olde biker wallet on silver chain??? I’m pretty sure you could pull it off. I have something similar on a clip that hooks conveniently to my beltloop.
You’ve entered the slipper slope. Purses are like potato chips, no one can ever have just one!
creative-type dad
I’m so glad guys don’t carry bags.
We just have THICK wallets that stick out of our butts like some freaky-looking tumor.
motherbumper
I gave into the purse thing when I had B – not enough pockets for the shit that little diva needs. Anyhow, be warned – it kinda becomes addictive finding just the right one – not too girly, not too mommish. It becomes one of those searches for the holy grail. You’ve been warned.
Backpacking Dad
Tumor-wallet? Check.
But for the dad-who-can’t-get-away-with-a-purse, there’s the Backpack. It even holds babies.
tiger lamb girl
C’mon Tanis – show us the bag! Photo. Stat.
Surely it occurred to you that we’d want to see it.
Welcome to the dark side:D.
Becky
I think I might have just had a heart attack. The teller gave you a GUILT TRIP?
Wild. Just wild.
toyfoto
I don’t want to sound presumptuous … ya know, myself having resolved to be a non-purse carrying member of the fairer sex and all … but my guess is like me … after the newbie’s out of dipes you’ll be back to wondering where your cards are.
the planet of janet
purses? ugh.
i’m a stick-it-in-my-pocket girl. (and i only washed my ipod headphones ONCE, i swear!!)
Mac & Cheese
24???
habanerogal
just make sure you leave the purse at home when you go out partying, those new cards will be left sitting on some chair at the pub before you can blink an eye but at least there won’t be anymore bulgy pants or snot on the dashboard
Saltgirl
If it is any consolation, I carry a purse and still never have a kleenex, lose my lipstick, misplace my credit card and drop my cell phone…
bowling relative
I really wish my son’s mom was like you I don’t think I can count how many purses she has had or has. Last week she was the maid of honor at a wedding she really didn’t want to go to bought 4 different dresses and purses to match . This makes sense to a man NOT. anyway she decides on the dress can’t on the purse . Weeks before the wedding soon become days no purse still . Then all heavens open up 1 day before great day a purse is found . She buys it and I watch for about 2hrs no kidding her try to shove all this crap in it OOPS to small. And don’t get me started on about her shoes. I love being a guy