There is nothing more comfy and comforting than crawling between soft flannel sheets at the end of a long day. Or changing out of your stuffy work clothes and pulling on a worn flannel shirt with leggings. It’s the same feeling that I get when I step off the plane at PWM after a brief but typically stressful flight from my (current) home in New York City – the air smells, tastes, feels different. Like home.
That is what flannel (especially of the plaid variety) means to me.
![]() |
| Bliss, is that you? |
Anyone you knows anything about me knows that I am a Mainer, a Maineiac, a native of the north – and am darn proud of it. I consider myself extremely fortunate to have grown up there, between the mountains and the sea, and I find almost any excuse to bring it up in conversation. That’s easier to do here in New York than you might think; I am constantly running into people who summer in Maine or went to summer camp there as kids, and for those people Maine holds a very special place in their hearts.
As for the others, those who haven’t been so fortunate as to experience the Pine Tree State? Not so much. I get a lot of “Wow, you’re a long way from home” (not true – it may be psychologically worlds away, but in actuality is only a 50-minute flight up the coast). Or, more often than not, a blank look followed by: “What’s up there, exactly?”
As my opening quote says, "what's up there" is no secret if you’ve ever lived there. But if you haven’t, I hope that this blog will give you a glimpse into the wonderful world of ME…and me.

How many flannel shirts can one girl own?
ReplyDelete