But how many people see us in our open garments?
A long time ago, our friend Carl wrote that every time we are seen in public we are an advertisement for fashion freedom and an encouragement to other men who might feel tempted to try a skirt.
While I was living and working in Grenoble, my routines were such that my skirts and kilts were probably not seen be vast numbers. I walked or cycled along the same stretches of un-crowded streets, shopped at the same supermarket, took the same crowded bus/tram where my clothes were mostly hidden from view by the other travelers.
Now, however, I am in a holiday town where thousands of visitors pour in every week. The town is quite compact, so everyone walks to the shops, library, railway station, etc, and there are always great numbers of people on the streets. People sit on café terraces and watch the world go by. I'm sure I am seen and noticed by several hundred people every time I go out, even if it's only on a short errand, and, because it's a holiday town, that will be hundreds of different people each week, who go back home and -- perhaps -- tell their friends that there's a funny man in Torremolinos who doesn't wear trousers!
As far as I know, no-one has ever followed my example, but it would be nice to find out -- probably an impossibility -- whether anyone has been set to thinking by the sight of me -- by the sight of any of us who go out and about without the hindrance of leg-tubes.
Martin