I still remember walking my daughter down the aisle – heart pounding, tears threatening, and… “Why did I wear this?” Two days later, scrolling through wedding photos, I did that thing we all do: zoomed in on myself. Not the radiant bride, not the smiling family – me. And the only thought louder than “How beautiful was the ceremony?” was, “What was I thinking with that jacket?”
Welcome to the next episode of Fashion Regret Theater: Special Occasions Edition. Or “How Come I Didn’t Plan Better?”
Let me back up. I tried. I really tried.
I scoured racks. I ordered dresses online and returned most of them faster than you can say “final sale.” I danced in reversible jackets (adorable – but only if you’re under 5’3″ or wear pants with dramatic flair). I flirted with boho maxis, tried on silks that screamed “Mother of the Groom in 1989,” and even slipped into a daring tiered blue number… until a glimpse of the side view made me ask, “Who’s pregnant?” Spoiler alert: not me.
After weeks of trying to become someone else’s vision of festive elegance, I defaulted to what I always wear: sleek black dress, interesting jacket, trusty boots. Because after all, my daughter’s only request was simple: “Mom, dress like you always do.”
I thought I did. But somewhere between confidence and comparison, I lost my way.
And so, I spent the weekend doing what women are world-class experts at: silently critiquing ourselves in the middle of big, beautiful moments.
Meanwhile, I was surrounded by love, joy, great music and people I love, and I was worried about my shoes? If there were an Olympic event for focusing on the wrong thing, I’d podium. Gold, baby.
In the days after the holy matrimony, something shifted. Maybe it was looking at the photos for the eighth or ninth time. Maybe it was the moment my daughter sent the photographer’s proofs and texted, “You looked beautiful, Mom.” Or maybe it was that subtle, unshakable truth whispering, “It was never about the dress.”
Here’s what I’ve come to understand:
My daughter’s smile outshone everything. Her joy filled the room. I was lucky just to be standing beside her.
I showed up. I laughed, I hugged, I cried. I was fully there. And no outfit – no matter how expensive or in vogue – can replace that.
The real question isn’t, “Did I wear the perfect dress?” It’s, “Did I feel like me?” And if the answer is “not quite,” then the work ahead isn’t about clothes. It’s about letting go of who we think we should be and embracing who we are.
Not what’s trending. Not what your neighbor wore to her cousin’s bat mitzvah. What makes you feel strong, relaxed, radiant? Start there.
You’re juggling life, family, maybe some hot flashes and a to-do list longer than your arm. No one expects you to emerge in full Met Gala couture. Just aim for you, elevated.
Will you remember the silhouette of your jacket – or the warmth of hugging your child as they step into a new life?
Here’s the funny part: The wardrobe quest didn’t end when the music stopped, and the cake was eaten, and she took her bouquet home.
Something woke up in me. After years of style autopilot (black on black with a touch of black), I started shopping again – more purposefully with curiosity. I didn’t find the outfit for the wedding, but I found something better: a cute sundress, a great jacket, pants that fit, and – gasp! Not one, but two blouses that weren’t black.
Weeks after the wedding, the weather got warmer and, as I trepidatiously approached my closet, it was different, welcoming. The clothes hanging in a row were punctuated by splashes of color. New choices. A little joy. And a glimmer of satisfaction that I am still evolving.
I’m retiring from fashion regret. I’m giving myself a break. I’m wearing what I love – and loving what I wear. I’m ditching the idea that one dress can make or break a moment and embracing the truth that the best accessory is always presence.
Here’s to showing up as ourselves, finding joy in the journey, and dancing down the aisle of life – in boots, jackets, or whatever makes you feel you.
What was the most recent event you attended? How did you pick your outfit? Did you end up having outfit regrets?
Tags Inspiration
I’m currently searching for a dress for my son’s 2nd wedding. (His first wife passed away at 39 years old). I’m chunkier now that at his first wedding 11 years ago but I think I’ve found a dress. At 5’4″ I’m worried it will be too long, but I don’t see myself as petite. I’m shopping online and I’ll probably have to order a couple of sizes and return the one that doesn’t work. Hope I have no regrets about the dress…
I’m under 5 feet but long works and I’m sure you’ll look wonderful!
Thanks for this read.
I love that she turned her issue with the outfit into a positive admonition of kindness to herself and reflected on the true focus of the day.
Do you wish we can be that with everything — treat ourselves with kindness
I am also struggling to find the perfect outfit for a wedding. When did all this get so Hard ?
I know online shopping should make it easier, but it’s just more, more to look at more returns. Yes, we yearn for simpler days!
My daughter was singing the National anthem at her university graduation. We had field seats and when my grandson arrived, I bent over to greet him. Suddenly, a woman behind me said “although it was a lovely site, I was mooning the whole stadium!”. I had not factored in the sheerness of the dress. How embarrassing for me who was most likely to tell another person of this view when sometimes they mean to wear revealing clothes.
You have to laugh at our best-laid plans sometimes – thank goodness for the woman behind you!!
Yes!!!
My outfits were this summer around my nephews’ graduations. But what is right about it this time was I am where you landed. I realized this past year that I was dressing for everyone else and everything else. I was overweight for a long time, and I bought clothes just because they fit. But after the weight loss, I was still buying because “Yay” they fit. I bought just because I could get that smaller size. I wasn’t looking at what I felt wonderful in, what made me feel beautiful and radiant. When I figured that out, I began looking in places that had the styles I liked, the colors that I liked, the fit, what looked best on my body. It became a whole new experience for me. Loving myself was the first step. I was no longer afraid to make choices regardless of my age, but what I now know is the right look for me. I don’t follow old rules, actually any rules about clothes. If an outfit feels good, if I feel good in it, if it is part of my color palette, then it needs to be mine. I don’t have near as many clothes that I used to have, and I am learning to create my own signature look with the right accessory, or hair style, even the shoes. And the mixing and matching and pulling things together in different ways makes it so much fun!
A good lesson for us all – create our own signature look!