In Praise of Vessels: A Love Letter to Our Feminine Obsession with Containers

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If I were more financially well-off, Iโ€™d be two clicks away from buying a bag, a cup, or a water bottle I absolutely do not need โ€” but feel, on some primal level, that I must have โ€” at any given moment.

Right now, itโ€™s the Cuyana Classic Easy Zippered Tote. (Soft leather. Roomy but not too roomy. A zipper.)

A pink Stanley cup also whispers to me from TikTok, even though I already own a perfectly good Larq bottle, objectively superior by almost every metric.

Itโ€™s not about need. Itโ€™s about containment. Itโ€™s about possibility.

The dream of holding my life โ€” all of it โ€” in one beautiful, sturdy, personal receptacle.

If youโ€™ve ever caught yourself pausing mid-scroll to admire a woman effortlessly breezing through an airport, Stanley cup in hand, designer tote slung casually over her shoulder like a badge of effortless womanhood, you know exactly what I mean.

Our obsession with containers โ€” the right purse, the right travel mug, the right anything โ€” isn’t just about aesthetics. It’s about autonomy. Identity. Control. Itโ€™s about building a portable world we can survive in. Thereโ€™s always the hope that if we can just find the perfect vessel, maybe we can carry everything life throws at us, too.

Like many others, Iโ€™ve lost hours to the TikTok vortex of โ€œwhatโ€™s in my bagโ€ videos โ€” the ones where women methodically unpack their lives: passports, protein bars, lip gloss, portable chargers, miniature pepper spray cans, even collapsible water bowls for their dogsโ€” and while Iโ€™m not proud of it, Iโ€™m not exactly sorry, either.

Itโ€™s mesmerizing, and not just because Iโ€™m nosy (though, okay, a little). Each video feels like a blueprint for survival. A glimpse into how other women armor themselves against the world. The bag isnโ€™t just an accessory. Itโ€™s a tactical unit. Itโ€™s a plan. Itโ€™s a small, beautiful rebellion against chaos.

Lately, my own plan revolves around a dream: someday owning a Birkin 35 โ€” caramel, pink, or slate gray โ€” in soft Togo leather.

Not because I want to flex it on Instagram.

Because I want to throw it under a cafรฉ table, overfill it with books and groceries, treat it like the battered, beloved tool it was originally designed to be, ร  la the one and only Jane Birkin.
To me, a Birkin isnโ€™t a precious jewel destined to sit behind glass. Itโ€™s freedom in a bag.

Capitalism taps into our primal need to consume, but the need exists with or without capitalism. Letโ€™s not forget that Moscowโ€™s famous shopping mall, the ะ“ะปะฐะฒะฝั‹ะน ะฃะฝะธะฒะตั€ัะฐะปัŒะฝั‹ะน ะœะฐะณะฐะทะธะฝ โ€” GUM, or โ€œMain Universal Storeโ€ โ€” thrived even at the heights of Soviet communism.

Hunger isnโ€™t just for food; it can be for conversation, sex, safety โ€” and yes, for beautiful, useful objects. Even in scarcity, we yearn to possess, to hold, to prepare. Today, in a United States increasingly shadowed by scarcity, that hunger feels sharper than ever.

But maybe it’s not just about wanting things. Maybe it’s about wanting to hold things โ€” to gather safety, autonomy, and a little beauty into a world that often feels unsafe, uncontrollable, and ugly.

For women especially, containers have always meant more than convenience.
Theyโ€™ve been survival kits, toolboxes, medicine cabinets, and hope chests โ€” a way to carry not just what we need, but who we are.


What Iโ€™d Pack in My Dream Bag

(Because if youโ€™re carrying your life, you might as well carry it in style.)

  • Portable charger: Because nothing says โ€œmodern survivalโ€ like a phone at 2% on the subway.
  • Wallet: Leather, in โ€œcognacโ€ โ€” slightly worn, stuffed with six months of ATM receipts.
  • Multiple reusable bags: For grocery runs, bookstore hauls, and bad decisions at Sephora.
  • Snack: Maybe one of those underdog strawberry Elevation bars from Aldi. Or maybe chocolate.
  • A novel: Thriller or romance, depending on whether I need adrenaline or affection.
  • Perfume vial: A tiny glass bottle of courage, gifted by my friend Jeannine.
  • Hair essentials: Scrunchie, clip, and enough bobby pins to build a fortress. (Don’t ask.)
  • Cash: Because when WiFi fails, cash still works.
  • Business card holder: Olive green pleather โ€” because Iโ€™m faking it until I make it.
  • Massive pink keychain: Puffball, kitty cat knuckles, card wallet, seatbelt cutter, window breaker, key knife, kawaii wristlet, Kubotan, brass whistle, and pepper spray โ€” with lingering annoyance that the State of New York wonโ€™t let me order basic self-defense tools online like a sane person.
  • Datebook: Yes, a paper one. Yes, I actually use it.
  • Cosmetic bag: Lip balm, two lipsticks (neutral blush and power red), tiny mascara, hand cream, tampons, alcohol wipes, flossers, eye drops โ€” and a few tiny mysteries I rediscover every time I clean it out.

(Because if youโ€™re carrying your life, you might as well carry it in style.)

In other words:
Everything I need to survive a blackout, a date, a spontaneous overnight trip, a bad meeting, a good bookstore, and the entire emotional rollercoaster of modern womanhood.


Why We Carry

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Women have always been vessels in the most literal sense โ€” bearers of life, caretakers, carriers of style and culture. And while I donโ€™t romanticize the expectation that women must carry and nurture, I also canโ€™t deny how deeply the image runs. Thereโ€™s something almost archetypal about it: the idea that to be ready is to be safe. To be self-contained is to be powerful.

Having essentials at your fingertips makes the world feel slightly less overwhelming. Knowing that there’s cash, keys, or a stun gun tucked safely inside your bag can be the difference between feeling prepared and feeling powerless. Physical protection isnโ€™t theoretical โ€” it’s real. Ask any woman who’s ever navigated a dark parking garage or a deserted subway platform at 1:00 in the morning.

While a pink teddy bear-shaped personal alarm or a gold key knife might seem silly to some, these aren’t just trinkets. Theyโ€™re the modern tools of autonomy โ€” everyday spells of protection and preparation.

Itโ€™s Not Just Stuff

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In the end, a Birkin isnโ€™t about luxury.
Itโ€™s about permission: to carry my life proudly โ€” messy, glamorous, real.

Weโ€™re not obsessed with containers because weโ€™re frivolous. Weโ€™re obsessed because they give shape to everything we carry: dreams, fears, lipsticks, seatbelt cutters, love notes, tampons, prayers, receipts.

A bag isnโ€™t just a place to put things.
Itโ€™s a place to be โ€” messy, prepared, alive.
Itโ€™s a world we build for ourselves, one vessel at a time.


Whatโ€™s in your dream bag?
Tell me โ€” Iโ€™d love to know what essentials you canโ€™t live without. ๐Ÿ‘œโœจ

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