There's something I seriously don't get.
You know how several societies tend to require you to wear certain clothes for certain events or occasions? or even how some people seem to be very self-conscious about what they wear regardless of where they are or what they're doing?
Here's my question; why?
we live in a time where many of us have been almost constantly been exposed to stories and talks about how you shouldn't judge people by their appearances, yet from what I've been told, it seems like society is still doing it.
my family, while they're always friendly about, seem constantly heck-bent on making sure I'm not wearing any clothes with holes in them, which has only happened when my clothes started to wear off, and I've done my best to be fine with it, even though I never really understood why, consider that, as far as I was concerned, holes in clothes could mean anything.
Now here's where I'm going with this;
I just recently got money that I could use to buy collage clothes. And as an adult, I have full right to decide how to spend my money and my Dad even said as much. So I bought the clothes I needed and here's where the whole deal got sketchy on me, turns out I apparently bought some jeans that were slightly too long for me, I argued I could just roll-up the pant legs so it shouldn't matter. They rejected my idea and insisted I go back to refund the jeans and buy some that fit more closely my size despite how ones my size were difficult to find.
Since me and my family live in the U.S, I argued, "It took our country centuries to learn not to judge people my skin color, how much longer 'till we learn the same lesson involving clothes?"
My sister said that it's not a 'judging' matter and that society considers what clothes you wear as an indicator of what respect you have toward yourself and others, but all I could think was; 'Stills sounds like judging to me'. And I always thought respect was something gauged by behavior, not appearance, and that's assuming respect is something to be gauged at all.
But I don't know, speaking as someone with Asberger Syndrome (something I've put off mentioning because of how some people try to use it as an excuse to be rude online), there are certain social ques of which I can't understand the logic behind. And maybe it's something I'll never understand and just have to put up with anyway. But I hope some of you here can help me learn why this whole judge-by-clothing thing and why it's considered such a big deal despite how many of us were taught NOT to make any conclusions about people based on appearances.
What am I missing about all this?
You know how several societies tend to require you to wear certain clothes for certain events or occasions? or even how some people seem to be very self-conscious about what they wear regardless of where they are or what they're doing?
Here's my question; why?
we live in a time where many of us have been almost constantly been exposed to stories and talks about how you shouldn't judge people by their appearances, yet from what I've been told, it seems like society is still doing it.
my family, while they're always friendly about, seem constantly heck-bent on making sure I'm not wearing any clothes with holes in them, which has only happened when my clothes started to wear off, and I've done my best to be fine with it, even though I never really understood why, consider that, as far as I was concerned, holes in clothes could mean anything.
Now here's where I'm going with this;
I just recently got money that I could use to buy collage clothes. And as an adult, I have full right to decide how to spend my money and my Dad even said as much. So I bought the clothes I needed and here's where the whole deal got sketchy on me, turns out I apparently bought some jeans that were slightly too long for me, I argued I could just roll-up the pant legs so it shouldn't matter. They rejected my idea and insisted I go back to refund the jeans and buy some that fit more closely my size despite how ones my size were difficult to find.
Since me and my family live in the U.S, I argued, "It took our country centuries to learn not to judge people my skin color, how much longer 'till we learn the same lesson involving clothes?"
My sister said that it's not a 'judging' matter and that society considers what clothes you wear as an indicator of what respect you have toward yourself and others, but all I could think was; 'Stills sounds like judging to me'. And I always thought respect was something gauged by behavior, not appearance, and that's assuming respect is something to be gauged at all.
But I don't know, speaking as someone with Asberger Syndrome (something I've put off mentioning because of how some people try to use it as an excuse to be rude online), there are certain social ques of which I can't understand the logic behind. And maybe it's something I'll never understand and just have to put up with anyway. But I hope some of you here can help me learn why this whole judge-by-clothing thing and why it's considered such a big deal despite how many of us were taught NOT to make any conclusions about people based on appearances.
What am I missing about all this?