In haste I traded the blazer for a leather jacket and ramped up the black eye liner. I fear the effect was more Theresa May channelling her inner rock chick than desired, but I figured it had to be an improvement.
When I got to the restaurant, however, I found myself in a room of women in their 40s and 50s, all skinny jeans, high heels and biker jackets, all patently paying their hairdresser through the nose. It was like a uniform. And now wherever I look, I see women dressed just like me. With our leggings and puffer vests on the school run, it is as if we are foot soldiers in some amorphous army, putting up a fruitless fight as time marches unstoppably on.
I thought I'd dealt with this, I said to a friend. I rid my wardrobe of anything too short, anything too revealing, when I turned 40. But now I find everything I bought with the long view to being able to wear it into middle age, what I had deemed sophisticated, mature, just makes me unhappy.
Ignore what they say about black washing you out, said the husband of a friend, with unusually specific ideas about womenswear. Make it your friend. He's right, pale greys and blues, long a staple of my wardrobe, now make me look like I have the flu, as does going without makeup. Wear trainers, said two stylish friends. Or boots. Rarely heels. They, too, are right. Heels, my old flame, now make me feel like an ageing, slightly tragic, female impersonator. I feel much edgier in something more casual, and edgy has to be sexier than feeling like the trollop I do when all frocked up.
In a fortnight it is my husband's godson's 21st birthday. It is the first 21st I have been to since I was 21. There will be many people there I haven't seen in well over a decade, since we were all firmer, fresher, and I am all in a quandary as to what to wear. In the weekend I pulled out some leather shorts. No, I told myself, you are one of his parents' friends, not his. I considered a chiffon dress. No, I told myself, you are not yet in mother-of-the-bride territory. And so on it goes ... and when not indulging my petty mid-life wardrobe crisis I think of Turei, of how I hope her intention to shed light on the paradox that we expect people to lift themselves out of poverty without providing sufficient means for them to do so is not lost in the sea of spittle and shaming.