Wednesday 15 July 2015

Dont judge people by dress code


“Dressing addresses you!” That’s what my friend Ishmael  Dawcter, known as Taku, will always tell me if she sees me wearing  this other small dress of mine with my leggings inside. According to Taku, “If you see a soldier, police officer, nurse and or a prostitute, you already know who they are because of their dress code. 

For Taku, outside the obvious there is nothing.

To justify that Taku always gives me a list of quotations of which most were informed by the Chinese proverb.  Abroad we Judge the dress, at home we judge the man. He also quoted  Susan Sommers, the author of 'Italian Chic and French Chic' and "Although they are only a snapshot of who you are, you have a very small window to get it right," who posited that We are judged on first impressions. These images are imprinted in the brain,"  

For Taku “First impressions can be lasting, and for employees heading into a new culture, a successful transition can mean 'head to toe”  He stated that in business overdressing is bad, pointing to Sommers quotation that  "If you are in competition for the position, the expat who can fit into the new culture well will be the one to triumph.”
 
However, while agree with some of the arguments he brought up, I did differ with his opinions, particularly the idea that people are judged or addressed by how they are dressed. I feel dressing can never be used to justify one’s identity, especially in this and day and age where fashion can be a form of escapism.

It is common among our families, societies, churches, schools and many other institutions that spear head socialisation to judge others based on how they are dressed without knowing anything or much about them. They only judge them according to their physical appearance.  But what of those people who hide their reality by dressing in certain styles.

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