Wednesday, March 18, 2020

कपिल शर्मा ने शो में पहना लग्जरी ब्रैंड का हुडी, जानें इसकी कीमत March 18, 2020 at 07:28PM

कपिल शर्मा के सितारे जब से बुलंद हुए तब से उनकी लाइफस्टाइल से लेकर पहनावे में काफी बदलाव आए। भारत के सबसे मशहूर कमीडियन में से एक माना जाने वाला यह स्टार कई महंगे ब्रैंड्स की चीजों का मालिक है। ऐसे ही एक महंगे ब्रैंड के हुडी को पहने कपिल अपने शो में स्पॉट किए गए। दरअसल, सोशल मीडिया पर कपिल के शो से जुड़ा एक विडियो शेयर किया गया है। इस क्लिप में वह अपने सिलेब्रिटी गेस्ट से बात करते हुए लग्जरी ब्रैंड Michael Kors का नेवी ब्लू हुडी पहने दिखाई दे रहे हैं। इस हुडी के फ्रंट में थ्रेड का यूज करते हुए ब्रैंड का नाम एम्ब्रॉइडर्ड किया गया है। हुडी की स्लीव्स में रिस्ट और वेस्ट पोर्शन पर वाइट फैब्रिक का इस्तेमाल किया गया है, जिस पर सिंगल ब्लू लाइन बनी दिख रही है। यह इसे और स्टाइलिश बनाता दिखा। कीमत अब बात करें इस हुडी की कॉस्ट की तो ई-बे पर इसकी कीमत 74 डॉलर्स मेंशन की गई है। भारतीय मुद्रा में कंवर्ट करने पर यह कीमत 5,550.18 रुपये होती है। यानी कपिल का हुडी भले ही लग्जरी ब्रैंड का हो लेकिन इसे आम इंसान भी आसानी से खरीद सकता है। यंगस्टर्स पर तो यह हुडी बहुत जचेगा भी फिर इसे चाहे वह अपनी जींस के साथ पहनें या फिर जॉगर्स के साथ। वैसे आपको बता दें कि इस हुडी के चक्कर में आप कपिल के फैशन से जुड़ी दूसरी चीजों को खरीदने के बारे में न ही सोचें तो बेहतर होगा क्योंकि यह स्टार Hublot और Audemars जैसे ब्रैंड की वॉच भी पहनता है जिसकी कीमत 28 लाख तक है। ऐसे में स्टाइल फॉलो करने के चक्कर में कहीं आपको लोन न लेना पड़ जाए।

Apparently, Some Of You Never Learned About “Inside Clothes”

When I visited Seoul for the first time, everyone told me that the shopping there would be unlike anywhere else, full of compliment catchers and look-at-me statement pieces. And it was! But the best thing I bought was something I never planned on wearing outside my house: a strange and special pair of sort-of sweatpants, quilted and slightly stiff, like a three-foot-tall oven mitt.

I bought the pants in an outdoor market at a store that looked like it mostly catered to retired ajummas. They were hung alongside flannel turtlenecks adorned with teddy bears and fisherman-style vests made of fleece and felt. I instantly recognized what kind of store this was: an outfitter of “inside clothes,” my absolute favorite fashion category. Inside clothes are not pajamas, they’re not athleisure, and they’re certainly not lingerie. They are what you wear when you actively live your life indoors, and their very existence is one that I’ve found to be curiously divisive.

“Are you staying in your depression clothes the whole time?” my husband asked me this morning. We’ve both been working from home after our offices closed in order to practice social distancing as COVID-19 sweeps across our city. Whereas he’s still dressing for the office in a nice shirt and stiff jeans with a belt, I am wearing my quilted pants, a tie-dyed shirt I picked up at a promotional event for The Cobrasnake in 2009, and a slouchy sweatshirt that’s become so smooth and soft over the years, it feels like wearing a top made of Greek yogurt.

As much as I love my inside clothes, I do understand why some people might think they’re depressing. Inside clothes are what protagonists wear during the three-quarters mark in romantic comedies about personal growth, after they’ve lost their job or relationship, and are ignoring their dogs and eating too much ice cream. These are clothes that have been as neglected as their wearer’s lives: utilized because they’re there, done because it’s low-effort. The garments themselves are stained and dirty, and the outfits they create are both chaotic and boring, thrown together without thought, consideration, or optimism. They are, in a word, depressing — but those are not the kind of inside clothes I’m talking about.

Inside clothes are something to be worn with care and exuberance. I buy them more often than I buy outside clothes, and I aggressively cull and curate them, because my standard are very high. They must be incredibly functional, with deep pockets, just-right necklines, and sleeves that will stay pushed up but are also long and roomy enough to bunch around my hands and hold tight from the inside, turning my arms into fabric hot dogs (I do not know the scientific reason why this posture helps with severe writer’s block, but it does). They can neither pinch nor pull nor gape nor pill nor shed nor itch. They must spark at least joy, if not pure rapture. These are clothes that work three times as hard as anything else in my closet.

Inside clothes offer additional peace of mind because they’re more hygienic — they’ve never been on the subway, or in a movie theater. They give me the feeling that I have control over my environment, which is no small thing even in the best of times, but particularly worthwhile right now.

Part of my feeling about this is cultural. I grew up learning to leave my shoes in the garage, to transfer into house slippers in the mudroom, and to go straight into my bedroom — no detours to the kitchen or, god forbid, the sofa — to immediately strip out of my outside clothes and get straight into my inside clothes. On the occasions that I’d trespass this sacred threshold — say, plopping onto the love-seat in my jeans to watch the last five minutes of Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman, or sneaking out to get the mail wearing my inside sweats — I’d be told that my indiscretion meant the house would be forever unclean. Ai-yah! My mom would rush in, holding a Clorox spray bottle at arm’s length as she wiped down the leather couch. Dirty girl!

It used to mortify me when my friends would come over and my Chinese parents were both walking around at 2 p.m. on a Saturday dressed like a cozy flu-season Kleenex commercial: fleece bottoms, flannel sweatshirts, plush house slippers. for what it’s worth, fellow immigrant friends, no matter which countries they came from, all seemed to be familiar with the concept. But my American friends, who didn’t think twice about wearing shoes on their beds, were baffled. Were they sick? They wanted to know. Or were they just…unwell? 

It’s understandable that one might associate inside clothes with a kind of ailment or defeatism, a sign that you’ve given up on ever going outside again. An introvert’s badge of honor. Conversely, wearing your street clothes at home feels like a headstart on life, like you’re always up for anything at a moment’s notice. If outside clothes are an opportunity to express your best self, an embodiment of your most optimistic plans, then inside clothes are seen as an admission of your worst inclinations and your dashed desires.

There’s probably some truth in that for some, but it’s certainly not true about my inside clothes. I’m more inclined than ever to believe that inside clothes are our one shot at understanding the pleasure that comes from really dressing for yourself. No matter how comfortable you are with your own style, when you’re dressing for the outside world, you’re still adhering to codes and expectations. Not so with inside clothes. In my oven-mitt Korean sweatpants and souvenir T-shirts, I am fully dressed for my own eyes, actions, and plans. It’s not something I would have appreciated when I was younger, but I cherish it now. Last year, GQ’s Rachel Tashjian wrote that people should always take off their street clothes as soon as they get home “no matter how beautiful they are or how few subway or taxi seats they touched.” It’s not just a cleanliness issue, or even a coziness one, she argues. Inside clothes give her an easy way to relax, something she deserves.

Besides, if I need to leave the house, I do. I just — gasp! — change first. Now that we’re in quarantine, my inside clothes are a reminder that I’m doing my part, and that I should enjoy the inertia.

For the foreseeable future, we’re living our lives inside in order to be mindful of one another’s health and security, our collective well-being and peace of mind. Inside clothes are a way to practice that, while also being kind to ourselves.

Like what you see? How about some more R29 goodness, right here?

Closeness In The Age Of Coronavirus

What It Means To Wear A Face Mask In America

There's No Such Thing As Work-From-Home Style

Here’s A Feel-Good List Of Indie Fashion Shops To Consider

Back in the early days of Refinery29 (we’re talking 2005/2006), there was a really exciting surge of independent designers and boutiques sprouting up in big and small cities alike. Katayone Adeli, Seize Sur Vingt, Opening Ceremony, Steven Alan, and Brooklyn Circus are just a few of the cult boutiques that came to define a new era of shopping and the community created as a result of those unique and personalized worlds. Fifteen years later, many of them have come and gone, but they continue to inspire a big chunk of how we still see shopping and discovery at R29 today. 

Whether they are open and thriving for two years or 20, an independently owned-and-run shop can literally function as the beating heart of your neighborhood. Which is why it’s one of the many things at stake as countries around the world issue quarantines, close off borders, and shut down businesses in light of COVID-19. Practicing social distancing and self-imposed isolation is the only way to prevent the virus from spreading further, dangerously affecting people at risk of serious hospitalization and death. At the same time, it’s also critical we consider how we can support our local businesses like restaurants, bars, and boutiques so they, too, aren’t a casualty of this world-wide pandemic. 

You’ve probably read this in countless news feeds, but gift cards for future meals and rounds of drinks at your favorite restaurant or watering hole can go a long way to provide a cushion to all your locals being affected. And, the same goes for your go-to designer or shop, too. Many of these companies are run by women we admire and depend on, not just for providing (often) locally made wares that keep our closets up to speed, but for setting an example of how to continue to do retail right — by creating a welcoming world we want to discover beautiful, surprising things in, and also, more deeply understand who we are and what we love in the process. Of course, since many of us are now restricted to screens at home, we suggest scheduling a coffee break to shop some of our favorites online. You’ll not only be supporting an independent woman-run business, but we guarantee you’ll very likely discover something that could make the next few weeks a little bit easier (for the record, the TK is currently in my shopping cart as we speak).

Everyone has their own way of dealing with and moving through stress, and it’s really okay to deal with the immense anxiety and uncertainty of what’s happening right now with some shopping — especially given the fact that spending money with small businesses right now has the impact to change lives. It is very simply about paying it forward —  helping people who need it, no matter where they are or what they do. We are all doing our part to make sure that life after Covid-19 — and there will be life after Covid-19 — offers hope for big AND small business owners alike. And if it means finally hitting “add to cart” on a certain plaid trench you’ve been eyeing all winter, well, we’d consider that a win for everyone.

COVID-19 has been declared a global pandemic. Go to the CDC website for the latest information on symptoms, prevention, and other resources.

Rachel Comey


If you're on the lookout for clothes that are made for women, by a woman, look no further than Rachel Comey. In the 18 years since she launched her namesake label, she has consistently kick-started trends and helped to revolutionize how an independent business can have an immense industry-wide impact. From the jean (called the Legion) that continues to inspire a thousand copycats to perfectly cut dresses and signature jumpsuits, Rachel Comey is the place to invest if you're looking for a piece you'll want to wear for seasons and years to come. Better still, when you shop with Comey, you are inadvertently supporting local factories and suppliers, which, in our book, is always a plus. 



Rachel Comey Luma Earring in Burnt Orange Marble-Red Acrylic Regular, $, available at Rachel Comey

Bird Brooklyn


Bird has been a staple of Brooklyn's art and fashion scene since it first opened its doors to the Park Slope community in 1999. Since then, the multi-brand concept shop has expanded significantly, with four stores scattered throughout Brooklyn and one in Los Angeles. The founder Jen Mankins got her start at Barneys as an assistant buyer and has always followed in her former employer's footsteps with Bird: providing creative designers with a platform to flourish and succeed.


Toteme Flair Jeans, $, available at Bird

No. 6


No. 6 opened shop in Manhattan's Little Italy neighborhood in 2005 and has since served as a go-to destination amongst locals for everything from classic Swedish-style clogs (which the brand is known for) to indie designer finds from PriscaVERA and Rejina Pyo.


No. 6 Rosalia Clog On Wedge, $, available at No. 6

Goose Barnacle


This Brooklyn Heights hidden gem has it all: a men's clothing shop (not stopping us from shopping those virtual racks!), a community center, an art gallery, and a "members" club in the back where the proprietor serves Spanish wine and beer, an homage to his family's roots. Basically, Goose Barnacle is everything you love about Brooklyn, all in one place.


Goose Barnacle GB Tapered Italian Raw Denim, $, available at Goose Barnacle

The Break


Hannah Richtman, founder of Greenpoint's The Break in Brooklyn, has created more than a store — it's a community. Walking into her Norman Avenue store, you'll be welcomed with a glass of rosé, a smiling salesperson, and the oh-so-comforting scent of the brand's very own candles — oh, and of course, a whole slew of expertly curated vintage that won't empty out your bank account. The Break might not be open at the moment, but its online site most assuredly is, and it doesn't disappoint.


Vintage Vintage Black Leather Button Down Jacket, $, available at The Break

Lisa Says Gah


Just because this San Francisco-based cult favorite e-shop and showroom doesn't have a brick-and-mortar location doesn't mean it isn't in need of our support right now. Rather, Lisa Says Gah, a female-led and female-focused business, needs it more than ever if it's going to continue supporting small brands like Ganni, Paloma Wool, and Alterita Jewelry — all made by women across the globe.


Paloma Wool Callisto Wedge Boot - Chartreuse, $, available at Lisa Says Gah

Catbird


This jewelry brand is such a staple among Brooklynites, they actually publish their own neighborhood guides (that is, when they're not crazy busy hand-making sustainable pieces out of their Brooklyn Navy Yard studio). The company comes from humble beginnings, founded by Rony Vardi in what she describes as a "cheap, busted storefront on a not-so-pretty street in Williamsburg." Now, Catbird is known and loved among its cult-like following for its covetable selection of minimalist designs.


Emily Levine Milan Daisy Chain Necklace, $, available at Catbird

Salter House


Salter House is more than just the home of Brooklyn Heights' best oat latte. Located on the corner of Henry St. and Atlantic Ave., this cafe-slash-home-goods-apothecary is a one-stop-shop for anyone looking to give their WFH space some TLC.


Salter House Lavender Salter House Linen Robe, $, available at Salter House

Apiece Apart


As you Marie Condo your wardrobe over the next two weeks, look no further than Apiece Apart for the elevated basics your wardrobe really needs. Sailor jeans, linen jumpsuits, and flouncy throw-on-and-go dresses — all of which come in plus-sizes — are right at your fingertips when shopping with Apiece Apart.


Apiece Apart Chabrol Jumpsuit, $, available at Apiece Apart

Rodebjer


Rodebjer is the brainchild of Carin Rodebjer, a Swedish ex-pat who moved from Stockholm to New York City to study fashion. At its core, the brand is about making women feel special and confident in what they wear, a task the designer has succeeded in by creating easy-to-wear and luxurious pieces like flowing caftans and slouchy suits.


Rodebjer Sandler Quilted Puffer Jacket, $, available at Moda Operandi

Anthom


Anthom, a contemporary womenswear company, was started in early 2013 in Washington D.C. as a tiny self-funded website for independent designers. Since then, Anthom has made its way to Soho, New York where it operates a sizable retail location and online store. To shop Anthom's selection of impossibly sleek staples means to support a company that values its employees and celebrates inclusivity and diversity — a real win all around.


ANTHOM Theresa Pullover, $, available at Anthom

Erica Weiner Jewelry


When Erica Weiner recruited her friend Lindsay Salmon to her entrepreneurial endeavor, their plan was to convert a shared passion for antique jewelry into a Brooklyn-based business. That plan worked, and while New York is ingrained in Erica Weiner Jewelry's DNA, the all-female company just recently announced its move to Portland earlier this year. Expect to find one-of-a-kind vintage pieces, jeweled curiosities, and meaningful talismans to add to your accessories collection.


Erica Weiner Victorian Silver Floral Swag Locket, $, available at Erica Weiner

Edge of Ember


This trying moment of uncertainty is one that's shared across the globe. While our hearts and minds are very much invested in supporting our local communities, we're also thinking about our favorite women-led companies from abroad, like Edge of Ember. The charming jewelry brand, launched in 2014, has evolved into an all-female operation based out of a busy little London studio. We love the company's ethical and sustainable approach to everything from the design process to packaging, but we love the good luck that comes with their numerical and zodiac collections even more.



Edge of Ember Lucky Number 3 Necklace, $, available at Edge of Ember

Nomasei


Also operating out of another part of the world is Paris-based footwear company Nomasei. The brand was founded by Paule Tenaillon and Marine Braquet, who met while working at Chloé. In addition to mastering the je-ne-sais-quoi quality that makes French fashion so damn good, the duo works exclusively with suppliers and factories that are certified in sustainable sourcing and practices. Considering the fact that Nomasei aims to be carbon neutral within the next six months, this is one purchase that'll definitely look as good as it feels.

Plus, as if you even needed another reason to shop this brand, Nomasei is proud to work with a family-owned factory in Montopoli, Tuscany that has started to use its resources to produce face masks for Italians in need. So by helping one another, we really can help the world — all while wearing a cute new pair of kicks.



Nomasei Hotel de la Plage Mule, $, available at Nomasei

Cara Cara


We're always excited about a female founder story, and Cara Cara's got a good one. The online brand is the work of one 29-year-old Rachel Gannon who simply wanted to bless us all with the best of indie brands at a 20% to 60% discount. In addition to offering great prices on Baggu, Samantha Pleet, Charlotte Stone and more, the site features whimsical imagery and vibrant colors for a truly delightful shopping experience.


Samantha Pleet Eclipse Bag, $, available at Cara Cara

Antidote


For ethical shopping made easy, look no further than Antidote. The curated digital destination of eco-friendly everything was founded by French-born Sophie Zembra, a notable force in the sustainable shopping space.


Mother of Pearl Alex Ruffle Top, $, available at Antidote+

Giovanna


Founded in just 2019, Giovanna is a new New York-based lifestyle brand inspired by the personal wardrobe of founder Leonora Giovanna Arslani's great aunt. Her great aunt's travels around the globe are re-imagined in Leonora's collections, which include handmade raffia mules from Morocco and statement jewelry influenced by Japanese design.


Giovanna Venus Raffia Mule Peacock, $, available at Giovanna

Tai Jewelry


By making a purchase from Tai Jewelry, you're not just supporting a small brand — you're contributing to the company's efforts to help communities in need as 20% of their online sales this March will be donated to FeedAmerica.org. What began as a Santa Monica flea market stand has since turned into a worldwide business that is proud to employ and support some of the finest artisans in Thailand.


Tai Jewelry Birthstone Ring, $, available at Tai Jewelry

Like what you see? How about some more R29 goodness, right here?

Thank You To The Retailers Closing Their Doors RN

Shopping Could Calm Coronavirus Anxiety

How To Support Small Brands During The Pandemic

Closets in The Time Of COVID-19 (& Other Lessons Learned In Quarantine)

This self-isolation is hard stuff. Working from home or, more precisely in my case, not working from home has me climbing the walls. Yes, I take walks and self-distance. Yes, I’m binging on TV (watching the news is a big no-no for more than 10 minutes). 

I can’t sit around and do NOTHING. A meaningful task must be accomplished with all this… time. And, suddenly at 50, that’s a precious commodity. Unlike my youth, where this week would have felt more like a snow day, now I feel trapped and even a little scared. And I need to do something to get some control back. Maybe learn a language. Maybe read one of the many books sitting next to my bed. Maybe write more. Here’s the one thing I do know: The first episode of Westworld’s new season makes even less sense than ever. So Spring Cleaning feels like the natural place to start.

Okay, so I’m standing in my dressing room in front of my closet — well, it’s three closets, and all of them have doors. I think I saw a photo in a magazine once, back when magazines were very important, and I liked the idea of a dressing room where the closets have doors. And you could have poufs to sit on and a vanity table if you had the space. A light fixture. All elegant and chic. Everything in its place. A haven. And, when I had the chance to decide, I put doors on my closets. 

So, I’m staring at the closets. Usually, the door on the left, Door #1 is for all the clothes in rotation that I’m wearing right now for a given season that are full-length: dresses, suits, jumpsuits, gowns… They don’t get their own closet. That feels pretentious. And above them are casual pants and jeans that can be folded.

The middle closet, Door #2, is for full-length clothes not in rotation that I’m not wearing either because they are out of season or a style that isn’t quite on trend. But I’ve been around long enough to know what will come back: military, safari, pink, red, bootcut jeans, low-rise, literally every shape denim, etc.

The 3rd closet, Door #3, doesn’t matter. It has trousers and skirts, if you must know, but it isn’t relevant here.

One thing you should know about me is I’m not sentimental about clothing. I edit my closet on the regular. I put things on consignment constantly, I give things away, I don’t care. If it doesn’t serve me, it’s o-u-t.

Until now…

Because if you opened Door #2 today, it’s packed to the brim, not simply overflowing. The rack on which the hangers, the tiny skinny hanger kind, is about to buckle from the weight. There is no room to push the clothes aside to add one more piece, even if it was a tiny piece of lingerie (no one hangs lingerie. you get my meaning.) The reason Door #2 is a complete disaster is that it is filled with a new category of my clothing: Clothes that don’t fit. 

Now, any of you who may know me and if you don’t, I’ll explain. I’ve based a big part of my career on telling people what not to wear. And one of the cardinal rules of that philosophy is never keep what doesn’t fit. It is psychological torture to open your closet and see a bunch of clothes that remind you of who you were, not who you are. Your cheerleading days are over, my friend. Your raging 20s in a double 00… gone. 

Move on, Sister. 

Or you were bigger as a kid, you’ve worked to get fit. (Anyone watch Brittany Runs a Marathon? I watched it and cried… all three times.) But maybe you hold on to a larger size because you don’t trust yourself to stay fit. Same kind of psychological torture. I used to say after a year, it’s time to let go. And if it’s been five years, 10 years, maybe light your closet on fire and move.

Now, there are exceptions to this idea: pregnancy, injury, extenuating life circumstances… I just never realized they would extend into mine.

Over the past 15 months, I’ve crept up about three sizes, which is approximately 30 pounds. During this time, I lost my Dad, fell down my stairs, broke a rib, (those two are unrelated, believe it or not), started a new company, fell in love with a woman, lost my health insurance, and am now in the throes of menopause. How was your 2019? 

These aren’t meant to be excuses. This is context. 

It’s pretty common to gain weight or lose weight under emotional circumstances. But weight really isn’t the issue. In my case, it’s just one of the side effects of a hard and difficult time.

Add to that, I’ve turned 50.  Let’s take a look at that for a brief second. 50 is a big number. BIG. If you’re 20-something or 30-something reading this now, as I was once, too, you probably can’t imagine this ever happening to you… Yep, same. And for those of you about to tell me “age is just a number,” it’s because you aren’t here yet. And menopause. Why? Why can’t we just celebrate the end of our childbearing years with the cessation of our periods (which is amazing! Think of the money saved on tampons, pads, cups, etc! All the lattes we can buy!) and call it a day? Why the hot flashes? The insomnia? The mood swings? The memory loss? The weight gain? Though I can’t blame my uptick in sizes on menopause, it’s from eating like crap and not exercising — I’m only going to be able to blame menopause on how hard it will be to LOSE the weight. 

After my Dad died, I ate a Party size bag of caramel M&Ms every day for six weeks. A party size bag, not a sharing size bag. That’s a two pound bag of caramel M&Ms every day. Not only did I not want to share it, was a party for one every day, all day, for 42 days… That’s 84 lbs of M&Ms right there. It’s amazing I haven’t gained more weight when you think about it. 

For me personally, I’d LIKE to lose the extra weight. Not because size is the issue. It’s because as I age, I feel less and less like myself. I look less and less like myself. Perhaps feeling strong and healthy again can minimize some of that… fear. Changing as we age takes some acceptance and courage. It isn’t for the faint of heart, I gotta tell you. Eating 84 lbs if M&Ms isn’t healthful behavior. That isn’t where I want my body to be. EVERYTHING I do now, everything I eat today at 50 will inform my health at 60, at 70, even older if I’m lucky. And frankly, I’d like to keep my wardrobe budget in check by being able to wear clothes I ALREADY OWN.

Anyway back to my closet. I’m standing there with Door #2 open, looking at those clothes that used to fit me in 2018, which honestly feels like it was just a  heartbeat…a second, away. Some I can still manage to get on, to zip on, but they don’t really fit. They are sitting there, inches from me, but they feel like they are receding farther and farther, like my top lip, or the Malibu shoreline. And, I realize, kind of suddenly, that a year may not be quite enough time before tossing something out or giving it away, because I just don’t feel emotionally (or economically!) ready

When I was 47, I wrote an article for this site about how I moved on from my style on TV, which was pencil skirts and floral tops and crazy stupid high heels to suiting and flats and leather jumpsuits. Having had a public persona on TV for so long, I felt guilty about evolving my style and disappointing an audience who expected me to look a certain way for so long. But of course my style was going to evolve, just like every other part of me… and yours, too. How could I possibly deny that to myself or anyone else? A quote that became quite infamous from that article was “At 47 my pockets are filled with fewer and fewer fucks.”

Three years later, I may have even fewer fucks, but the pants with those pockets don’t fit.

So, what now? I love my style. I miss my clothes. A few years ago when I wrote that piece, my style felt truly in sync with where I was, with my sense of identity. Today, Door #1 is filled with “style-on-pause” pieces: They are nice enough. Placeholders. Flirtations. Not commitments. They are for a body in flux. A body changed in more ways than one over a long hard 15 months. But at 50, I’m kinda tired of all the back, the forth and all the flux. My weight has been all over the place for years. And, honestly? Maybe I’m kind of ready to love myself just where I am.

What IF, and stay with me here for a minute, the choice wasn’t Door #1 or Door #2 but somewhere in between, above and beyond? Maybe I do fit into the Door #2 clothes again someday. Maybe the Door #1 clothes become permanent, the weight stays on and my style evolves into them: a new sense of identity for a new age. But what if either way, this way of thinking is a jumpstart to living into my 50s and maybe taking the fucking doors off my closets altogether? 

I mean, if now is not the time for radical self-acceptance, when is? At this age, at this time when the world feels scary, I’m not sure I can think of a better use of time than that.

Parts of this essay have been adapted from a story performed live at Generation Women.

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Arielle Charnas Of Something Navy Has Tested Positive For COVID-19

BROOKLYN, NEW YORK – SEPTEMBER 11: Arielle Charnas attends the Michael Kors Collection Spring 2020 Runway Show on September 11, 2019 in Brooklyn City. (Photo by Lawrence Busacca/Getty Images for Michael Kors)

Arielle Charnas, the influencer behind Something Navy, announced this morning that she has tested positive for COVID-19.

Yesterday, she documented her quest to find a coronavirus test via Instagram live. Charnas, whose Instagram account has 1.3 million followers, shared on Monday that she’d been feeling sick for the “past two days,” experiencing a fever and sore throat, but that a doctor said her symptoms sounded more along the lines of the flu, advising her to stay home and “quarantine herself.” 

She posted again to the platform yesterday, this time with a caption that explained her symptoms in detail. “Each day the symptoms evolve into something else and while I can’t imagine how I’d ever catch coronavirus (from what I know I haven’t been in contact with anyone who has it) I’m dealing with the weirdest virus I’ve ever had since mono. I’m so happy my fever is gone but the body pain that I’m feeling today is unlike anything else,” it read. The post was flooded with comments and likes — over 38,000 to be exact — many of which advised the 32-year-old blogger to head straight to her closest medical facility in order to get tested and asked her to share her results once she received them. 

Charnas was able to do what many Americans cannot right now: She got tested for COVID-19. In her livestream, she shared that her friend Dr. Jake Deutsch told her that his urgent care facility on Manhattan’s Upper West Side would be willing to swab her from her car for both the flu and the coronavirus. As anyone in her circumstance would do, she drove right over. 

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A post shared by Arielle Charnas (@ariellecharnas) on Mar 18, 2020 at 5:46am PDT

Many people online are upset by the fact that Charnas was able to receive a coronavirus test while many symptomatic individuals continue to be denied access. But as it turns out, her test was necessary. One hour ago, Arielle Charnas shared with her followers that she has, in fact, tested positive for COVID-19. 

“I realize that there are many individuals, both in New York City and nationwide, who do not have the ability to receive immediate medical care at the first sign of sickness, and access to care is #1 priority in a time like this,” she writes in a statement posted to her account.

According to a March 11 report by The New York Times, less than 2,000 people have been tested in New York State since late February. President Trump said that anyone who wants a test can have one, and Governor Andrew Cuomo of New York proclaimed that 1,000 people should be tested per day, and yet, the reality is that there aren’t enough tests for the number of people who need them — not even close. 

“It is the responsibility of our government offices to ensure all Americans can access necessary tests and I acknowledge how lucky I am to have had that access. I hope it ignites faster movement in the future,” her statement continues. 

After sharing the news of her positive test result, Charnas goes on to urge her followers of the importance of following the CDC’s guidelines, as well as city and government officials. “Now more than ever, it’s become even clearer that these precautions are absolutely necessary to slow down this virus and protect people most vulnerable to its spread.” She also shared the recommendations that her doctor gave her post-diagnosis. 

“Continue to quarantine/self-isolate, get lots of rest and drink fluids, get in touch with family and friends that I’ve been in close contact with over the past 2 weeks,” she writes.

At this time, her two daughters aren’t showing symptoms, but her husband Brandon is. 

In a press conference on Tuesday, Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York City shared that the city would now be able to test 5,000 people per day for coronavirus, a number much higher than the capacity currently being tested, which is only around several hundred people. His statement follows news on Tuesday that more than 1,500 people in New York State have tested positive for the virus, 814 of which were residents of Manhattan. The Times reported that 10 of the 15 coronavirus-related deaths in the State were residents of the city. 

“We are certainly going to have thousands of cases next week,” De Blasio said. “It is not that long before we hit 10,000 cases, that is a true statement.”

COVID-19 has been declared a global pandemic. Go to the CDC website for the latest information on symptoms, prevention, and other resources.

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