So my sister is a religious sister: she wears the same thing every day (habit and veil). When you see her and you know "Catholic code", you immediately know her community, her discipline and probably something about the type of work she does. Pretty much everyone can read "religious woman set apart" which deeply changes how people intera…
So my sister is a religious sister: she wears the same thing every day (habit and veil). When you see her and you know "Catholic code", you immediately know her community, her discipline and probably something about the type of work she does. Pretty much everyone can read "religious woman set apart" which deeply changes how people interact with her. Is this presentation virtuous simplicity or self righteous?
I guess it matters to me what you are presenting and why. Presentation is incredibly powerful, and the lack of awareness of how we present baffles me.
Lots of people are obsessed with how they present, as Regan documented.
If you're wondering how someone could not care...it's kind of tiring to have to do it all the time, especially if you're not the sort of person who rapidly intuits subtle shifts or can afford certain looks. Look at all the different concentric levels and tradeoffs she documented. One of the few remaining advantages of being male is having to devote much less attention to this--I took one look at the whole fashion complex, figured "this is the inverse of calculus that plays to their strengths instead of mine and I will never learn this", and decided "I'll just be unfashionable then."
So my sister is a religious sister: she wears the same thing every day (habit and veil). When you see her and you know "Catholic code", you immediately know her community, her discipline and probably something about the type of work she does. Pretty much everyone can read "religious woman set apart" which deeply changes how people interact with her. Is this presentation virtuous simplicity or self righteous?
I guess it matters to me what you are presenting and why. Presentation is incredibly powerful, and the lack of awareness of how we present baffles me.
Lots of people are obsessed with how they present, as Regan documented.
If you're wondering how someone could not care...it's kind of tiring to have to do it all the time, especially if you're not the sort of person who rapidly intuits subtle shifts or can afford certain looks. Look at all the different concentric levels and tradeoffs she documented. One of the few remaining advantages of being male is having to devote much less attention to this--I took one look at the whole fashion complex, figured "this is the inverse of calculus that plays to their strengths instead of mine and I will never learn this", and decided "I'll just be unfashionable then."