@Michael the mental gymnastics are wild, indeed. Kilts are by definition, a type of skirt, and any man who says otherwise is letting his insecurities show.
I write this on one of the Kilt Forums on FB a while ago. This seems like a good place to also share it.
On Kilts, Skirts and Dresses:
I find the mental gymnastics some guys go through to justify our choice to wear skirts in public while they are still being hampered by the concept of gendered clothing enough to rule out a DRESS to be an interesting (and troubling) phenomenon.
Eddie Izzard was once quoted about her fashion sense (before she came out as Trans) as saying something like āWomen wear whatever they want, so do I.ā Thatās BRILLIANT.
These daily kilted guys are HALFWWAY to actual liberationā¦but itās still deeply ingrained in their heads: āwomensā clothing is shameful. A Dress or a Skirt is āFeminineā in their minds. To be associated with anything āfeminineā endangers their fragile notion of what it means to be a āman.ā Skirts are āfeminineā too, but NOT āKilts.ā
āOh no! Those are purely masculine! BRAVEHEART! (Though the real William Wallace was dead 300 years before anyone in Scotland wore anything resembling a kilt!) Kilts ā Skirts! Kilts cannae be skirts because they were the clothing of Highland Warriors not their weakling women!ā (LOL)
By definition, this crap thinking is toxic masculinity and itās mostly keeping MEN back from fully enjoying life because theyāre all so worried that everyone else may think they are āwoman-like.ā
Donāt get me wrongā¦I suffer from this to some extent as well. While Iām not much worried that Iāll be considered āwoman-likeā or feminineā¦ I donāt wear skirts or dresses daily in public, mostly because I donāt want the hassle of having to defend (letās face it, ultimately physically) my choice from other men who would somehow feel threatened by what IāM wearing. The only difference is that Iāll always be honest and call a skirt a skirt and not pretend that there is ANY real difference at all between a kilt and a skirt or a dressā¦beyond the semantics. (Proving that the entire notion of āthese clothes are for THOSE people, not USā is entirely BS.)
This came up in our weekly drop-in, with responses from global warming to language shifts. What do you think it will take? Serious and "frivolous" suggestions welcome š
This came up in our weekly drop-in, with responses from global warming to language shifts. What do you think it will take? Serious and "frivolous" suggestions welcome š
This reason is inspired by one of our spotlights, Andy, when talking about skirts: I like the fact that wearing one brings your whole body more into contact with Air...
This reason is inspired by one of our spotlights, Andy, when talking about skirts: I like the fact that wearing one brings your whole body more into contact with Air...
Why style words matter and how to find yours (with examples). Plus, browse our 150+ adjective Style Word Bankāthe most comprehensive one out there, curated with men in mind.
Why style words matter and how to find yours (with examples). Plus, browse our 150+ adjective Style Word Bankāthe most comprehensive one out there, curated with men in mind.
3 comments
@Michael the mental gymnastics are wild, indeed. Kilts are by definition, a type of skirt, and any man who says otherwise is letting his insecurities show.
I see a fair bit of āpunching downā from men who wear skirts, complaining that other men are wearing them in ways that are too āfeminineā, risquĆ©, or weird. Itās not helping anything, and it goes back to the quote āA personās judgment says more about them than about you.ā Skirted men might feel judgment from others, and then pass that judgment onto others who are further into challenging norms.
I write this on one of the Kilt Forums on FB a while ago. This seems like a good place to also share it.
On Kilts, Skirts and Dresses:
I find the mental gymnastics some guys go through to justify our choice to wear skirts in public while they are still being hampered by the concept of gendered clothing enough to rule out a DRESS to be an interesting (and troubling) phenomenon.
Eddie Izzard was once quoted about her fashion sense (before she came out as Trans) as saying something like āWomen wear whatever they want, so do I.ā Thatās BRILLIANT.
These daily kilted guys are HALFWWAY to actual liberationā¦but itās still deeply ingrained in their heads: āwomensā clothing is shameful. A Dress or a Skirt is āFeminineā in their minds. To be associated with anything āfeminineā endangers their fragile notion of what it means to be a āman.ā Skirts are āfeminineā too, but NOT āKilts.ā
āOh no! Those are purely masculine! BRAVEHEART! (Though the real William Wallace was dead 300 years before anyone in Scotland wore anything resembling a kilt!) Kilts ā Skirts! Kilts cannae be skirts because they were the clothing of Highland Warriors not their weakling women!ā (LOL)
By definition, this crap thinking is toxic masculinity and itās mostly keeping MEN back from fully enjoying life because theyāre all so worried that everyone else may think they are āwoman-like.ā
Donāt get me wrongā¦I suffer from this to some extent as well. While Iām not much worried that Iāll be considered āwoman-likeā or feminineā¦ I donāt wear skirts or dresses daily in public, mostly because I donāt want the hassle of having to defend (letās face it, ultimately physically) my choice from other men who would somehow feel threatened by what IāM wearing. The only difference is that Iāll always be honest and call a skirt a skirt and not pretend that there is ANY real difference at all between a kilt and a skirt or a dressā¦beyond the semantics. (Proving that the entire notion of āthese clothes are for THOSE people, not USā is entirely BS.)
Brilliant and funny!