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4th October 05, 09:46 AM
#21
 Originally Posted by Shay
I think it's a battle for equality, and we're making all the offensive moves, while you play defense...
Spot-on, girlfriend!!!
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4th October 05, 10:04 AM
#22
Alan I learned a long time a go thet peoples opinions are just that-opinions, If wearing the Kilt makes you feel good (which is only proper!!) then wear one some people feel good snowboarding and some people feel good jumping out of planes, What does it matter what others think. You will encounter small mindedness wherever you travel. People like to pidgeon hole, "hes wearing a kilts so" is he Scottish? and piper? cross dresser? crazy?. what does it matter and what does it have to do with them anyway?
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4th October 05, 11:13 AM
#23
Quite a few good posts touching on different facets of self-esteem.
Daz is right, it doesn't really matter what others think. You can tell your wife, Alan, it's just semantics. Your self-esteem is fine, & you like wearing kilts for a variety of reasons which you have probably already expressed to her.
Kilt on!
Sherry
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4th October 05, 12:21 PM
#24
Wow, talk about a timely thread! My wife this morning got upset with me because I came downstairs dressed for work in a kilt again (for those keeping track, this is day 3!). She has been a little cool to the idea, but until today did not really say anything. She said she does not care if I wear one on the weekends, but is afraid that it might hurt my career at work and thereby hurt our personal financial situation and so affects here and our daughters. She brought this up as I was leaving to take the girls to school so I did not respond as I thought it would be a longer conversation we had time for. Got to work to see a fairly strong email from her that I will not share, but hurt me because it was pretty specific on what she would do if I continued to wear a kilt to work. I am basically floored. I knew from reading others posts that the lovely women in our lives usually are the most resistant to us wearing kilts, but I thought I was not going to have that issue since she had not brought it up before now. I responded back to her that I would not do anything detrimental to my career (I really like my job!) and that I had insured before hand that it would be accepted in the office by my boss and HR.
I guess I really don't have much to add to this thread, just sharing really, but I would echo that wearing a kilt for me is fun. Do I get some more attention? Yes, but nowhere near the attention that my wife and I receive when out with our 2 darling adopted daughters. They are so cute that nobody cares about us or what we are wearing.
Sigh, sitting here kilted at work and depressed, which doesn't seem right somehow.
RJI
The kilt concealed a blaster strapped to his thigh. Lazarus Long
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4th October 05, 12:33 PM
#25
KCW,
That is hitting below the belt on the part of your wife. The best advice I ever got to deflect nasty attacks from those who we think are supporting us was in a book called 'The Gentle Art of Verbal Self-Defense'.
As my TKD instructor keeps telling me, 'be the wind, if you don't fight, it is hard for someone else to fight with you'.
Now if I could just remember that advice when the ceiling falls in! Best of luck.
macG
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4th October 05, 12:37 PM
#26
I think that all these women are just afraid we men will be able to dress ourselves well without their input.;)
We're fools whether we dance or not, so we might as well dance. - Japanese Proverb
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4th October 05, 12:50 PM
#27
 Originally Posted by macgreggor
KCW,
... The best advice I ever got to deflect nasty attacks from those who we think are supporting us was in a book called 'The Gentle Art of Verbal Self-Defense'.
...
macG
That is a very helpful book.
It looks like your wife is reacting out of fear, & she may not be aware of all the trouble you went to make sure kilting at the office would be OK. You might show her the thread where you delineated to us all that you did to get clearance. OTOH, she may fear that while it is OK for you to wear the kilt to work, those who could promote you may not be so keen on it (the kilt that is) & therefore not so keen on promoting you.
You two will have to have a good talk; & tho' it's too late for this one, next time you feel you must walk away because there is no time for a lengthy discussion, let her know that you do want to talk it out with her but you want to do it when you both have the time the issue deserves, or that she deserves, whichever is fitting.
Sherry
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4th October 05, 01:30 PM
#28
 Originally Posted by KiltedCodeWarrior
Sigh, sitting here kilted at work and depressed, which doesn't seem right somehow.
RJI
These are tough issues, and when you love someone, there aren't easy answers. The old "I'll do what I want and everyone else can just EAT it." attitude doesn't work so well, when the objections are from your spouse and you love them.
I'd say this... make sure that she knows the lengths to which you went to get the OK at work. Talk to her, kindly and wisely and LISTEN. LISTEN, and listen hard and try to understand what she is saying. Listen to see if she is understanding what you are saying. Consider the option of compromise, as in, what if you wear a kilt to work one-two days a week instead of every day? Is that workable?
Here's an insight that might help. I'm an enthusiastic sort of fellow. If you don't like me, you could substitute the word "erratic" for "ethusiastic". Some peole do. I tend to get interested in things for a few months or a year or two and then move on. I'm not like that regarding *everything*, I've been sailing for fifteen years for example, but I do it a lot. My wife sees these activites that I have for 6 - 24 months as "hobbies".
She is concerned that I'm indulging a "hobby" ....kilts....which I will have for a year, at most two. She's afraid that I'll move on in a year or so and not be so interested in them, but that in the process of wearing them to work, I'll have torpedo'ed part of my career.
I have to be honest with myself...she has a point, in terms of my "enthusiasm".. We don't have kids so it's not so much of a big deal, but she does have a point.
Are you in the same boat? Think it over. I will also be honest with you and tell you that I wonder. You have only been on XMarks for a few weeks, and yet you've put up a couple hundred posts, and have undertaken a major assault on the world....wearing a kilt to work in a very conservative financial institution. It's not like you've been wearing kilts for years, eh? Are you like me...the enthusiastic sort, that sometimes people see, as much as they love us, as a little bit erratic?
Be fair, be honest with yourself and with her, and think it over. What if you wore a kilt to work only one day a week for three months. You know, "casual friday"? How would that go over? Offer compromises?? Slow down a bit?? If she cannot offer compromises back, if her stance is "my way or the highway...lose the kilts or I'm leaving" then you have to do some serious thinking.
You love her...is she worth the kilts? Kilts...wife, I know which one wins out in my book. I like kilts, but I love my wife. It's no contest, and the kilts stay on the hanger an donly come down for Highland Games and Celtic music events....but wait..
Does she love you? If she did, would she give you no options, dictate her way and give you no alternatives? Is that love? What kind of love? Have you ever dictated anything like that to her? Is she IN FACT, doing that?
Tough questions, mate, and I bet you won't have answers tomorrow. It's going to take a while, and the answers you'll find are worth more than a closet full of custom-made worsted wool tanks.
Good luck.
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4th October 05, 02:12 PM
#29
 Originally Posted by Alan H
"Feeling special" should come from INSIDE a person, not from other people."
No man lives in a vaccuum.
No man is an island.
The clothes make the man.
Hey, I'm not makin' this stuff up. It has to come from experience.
You are not alone.
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4th October 05, 02:34 PM
#30
Nothing is worth your marriage. Its give and take.
Hey if you want to wear the kilt to work do so. But maybe mark it down
on a calender for several times a month and agree with your wife these
are the days.
Remember the old saying- "drop a frog in boiling water and it will jump out, put it in cool water and gently heat it up and it will stay"
Take it slow, you've already worn you kilt to work and its not even Oct. 31,
mission done.
dave
Clan Lamont!
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