Well, we know that...crfriend wrote:Save for the brave.Grok wrote:And as skirts are associated almost entirely with females, surely no straight/cisgender male would risk trying one on.
[Cue struttin' music]
Well, we know that...crfriend wrote:Save for the brave.Grok wrote:And as skirts are associated almost entirely with females, surely no straight/cisgender male would risk trying one on.
I think that rounds it up; the negatives are a small minority and when we realise that, it is easy.Mike wrote:What I mean to say is that the world accepts men wearing skirts. We just have to accept it in our own heads. Once that happens, it's very easy.
Yes, exactly.Mike wrote:?..the world accepts men wearing skirts. We just have to accept it in our own heads...
I wore a rather femme ensemble to work last Friday - nylons, heels, skirt - thinking that my day would consist of sitting quietly in my office marking papers. So of course first thing in the morning I meet a mother escorting her wide-eyed prospective first-year student to visit Uni.?..the world accepts men wearing skirts. We just have to accept it in our own heads...
Actually, some may care -- and in a good way. A common theme that emerges from this thread is that we are remembered more often by others after we began wearing skirts than from before. This usually indicates positivity -- and I've not picked up on any mention of sustained negativity on the part of the general populace around, save for the seemingly-universal problem with those closest to us.oldsalt1 wrote:They don't care.
Yes, and I've never had anyone remember me for my pants.oldsalt1 wrote:Its true they do remember you for wearing a skirt. Fortunately I have heard only positive comments. When I have been some place like the bank or the post office and a person makes a comment to the clerk who has seen me before their response to them have always been a positive comment