As it is up this way. There are certain professions where I can see it not being a problem, such as liberal book stores, perhaps some shops that would be located in malls, maybe a very select few corporate settings, but generally, skirts are still a no go for men in the work place in the "land of the free".dillon wrote: That may be so in the UK, but not at all in my locality or avocation. There are no stated rules against my wearing a skirt or kilt to work, but I know my client base very well; very rural, very traditional, and very religiously fundamentalist. It would destroy my credibility and professional functionality to go before these people dressed in a way that surprised them or drew attention from my mission or the problems I am there to address. Plus I really don't care to explain myself to everyone; 90% of these folks just wouldn't understand. Please don't try to tell me that I don't yet know that. I have twenty years of experience with them. They are good people, but I don't intend to be a skirt ambassador for people whose perceptions just can't handle it. What I wear on my own time is my business, however, and our social paths seldom cross.
What you describe also echoes my own thoughts as I become more and more accustomed to wearing a skirt in my own time. While I obviously don't wear them while on the clock, I have been known to wear them in the stores on my own time while shopping. So far I've worn the skirts in my home store at Damascus many times, Abingdon once or twice, and I also stopped at one of our Bristol VA stores with a skirt on to grab a few things. It hasn't happened yet, but eventually another corporate employee, a district manager, or someone who otherwise has some clout with the company is going to see me in them, if not in the stores then certainly out and about (as we all live in the same region). And I've often wondered what the company reaction to this would be, even though I only do this in my own time.
Granted, I don't expect a termination from my present job, as I'm good at what I do, and I'm pretty sure they wouldn't let me go for something so minor that I only do in my free time, however I've often wondered how it might effect the possibility of my advancement in the company. They say I'm being groomed to take over for my boss when he retires.... however.... they... don't know that I wear skirts in my off time. And ... they... are known to be quite traditional.
Never the less, I continue to wear my skirt. Because my free time is just that FREE time!
But never the less, this is the primary reason why I avoid using my legal name and the name of my company in the same sentence online as I don't want it to become searchable that A____ works at F____. I don't mind if someone connects the dots, I just don't want google doing it!
The meat dept managers often wear neck ties, and I wonder how it would "go down" (pardon the pun) if one those things got sucked into a meat cuber. Better hope it's a clip on! And for those who don't know, a motorized commercial meat cuber (tenderizer) is a WICKED looking machine with two rotating drums with hundreds of little surgical stainless knives rotating inward. It is the LAST place you want to get something caught in. Just ask the poor associate who last year got his hand caught in one. He'll probably never have the use of that particular hand again!crfriend wrote:Hilariously, the dress-code for the place that I worked at in the 1980s (which had all of the above hazards and then some) dictated a neck-tie -- when even the operators' manuals discouraged the wearing of such things around some of this kit even if the covers were all on the machines! Go figure. (Most of us wore our ties tucked in; if I knew it was going to be a filthy day, I'd wear a black shirt and a bow-tie.