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- Apr 3, 2004
- Messages
- 33,852
Dancing Fire|1304971344|2916534 said:i mean...why give a "F" on how they feel?
i shouldn't sport a honker Ering if they don't?..i shouldn't drive a $100k car if most of them are driving a $20k car?...
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Circe|1304971940|2916549 said:Why wear a suit to work? Why don shoes to go shopping? Why bother brushing your hair before you hit a nice restaurant?
Because human beings are social animals, and social animals follow social codes.
I don't follow them too, too closely, but I tend to be known as an eccentric. So ... I'll happily wear my big bling most places, but maybe not to faculty meetings if it makes me look out-of-place, and I'll rock my platform boots and my crinoline down to the Village, but maybe not to my husband's business dinner, no matter how pretty they make me feel.
Time and place, dude. What's the saying - you must know the rules in order to break them? You must know them in order to know when to break them, too. Time. And. Place. If it's worth it to you for the bling or the car or the whatever, it's worth it: if you break too many, you may wind up needing to find a different circle. And, hey, sometimes that's worth it, in and of itself ....
MonkeyPie|1304972897|2916570 said:Circe|1304971940|2916549 said:Why wear a suit to work? Why don shoes to go shopping? Why bother brushing your hair before you hit a nice restaurant?
Because human beings are social animals, and social animals follow social codes.
I don't follow them too, too closely, but I tend to be known as an eccentric. So ... I'll happily wear my big bling most places, but maybe not to faculty meetings if it makes me look out-of-place, and I'll rock my platform boots and my crinoline down to the Village, but maybe not to my husband's business dinner, no matter how pretty they make me feel.
Time and place, dude. What's the saying - you must know the rules in order to break them? You must know them in order to know when to break them, too. Time. And. Place. If it's worth it to you for the bling or the car or the whatever, it's worth it: if you break too many, you may wind up needing to find a different circle. And, hey, sometimes that's worth it, in and of itself ....
I think most of these examples are different - I took the original question to mean that you would buy a 1 carat round brilliant because that's what all your friends had, when what you REALLY wanted was a 3 carat pear.
Dancing Fire|1304971344|2916534 said:i mean...why give a "F" on how they feel?
i shouldn't sport a honker Ering if they don't?..i shouldn't drive a $100k car if most of them are driving a $20k car?...
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Kaleigh|1304976312|2916663 said:As Nanny would say, I don't shive a git what people think. I wear what I like...
jaysonsmom|1304975077|2916631 said:Dancing Fire|1304971344|2916534 said:i mean...why give a "F" on how they feel?
i shouldn't sport a honker Ering if they don't?..i shouldn't drive a $100k car if most of them are driving a $20k car?...
![]()
Basing the e-ring on the social circle is not about how others feel, but more about how "I" feel. I don't like to draw attention to myself, so I dress to conform to office standards, I drive a car that conforms to the ones seen in my neighborhood, and my e-ring is the biggest that I feel confortable wearing. I just like to be inconspicuous. Is that so wrong?
Circe|1304971940|2916549 said:Why wear a suit to work? Why don shoes to go shopping? Why bother brushing your hair before you hit a nice restaurant?
Because human beings are social animals, and social animals follow social codes.
I don't follow them too, too closely, but I tend to be known as an eccentric. So ... I'll happily wear my big bling most places, but maybe not to faculty meetings if it makes me look out-of-place, and I'll rock my platform boots and my crinoline down to the Village, but maybe not to my husband's business dinner, no matter how pretty they make me feel.
Time and place, dude. What's the saying - you must know the rules in order to break them? You must know them in order to know when to break them, too. Time. And. Place. If it's worth it to you for the bling or the car or the whatever, it's worth it: if you break too many, you may wind up needing to find a different circle. And, hey, sometimes that's worth it, in and of itself ....
jaysonsmom|1304975077|2916631 said:Dancing Fire|1304971344|2916534 said:i mean...why give a "F" on how they feel?
i shouldn't sport a honker Ering if they don't?..i shouldn't drive a $100k car if most of them are driving a $20k car?...
![]()
Basing the e-ring on the social circle is not about how others feel, but more about how "I" feel. I don't like to draw attention to myself, so I dress to conform to office standards, I drive a car that conforms to the ones seen in my neighborhood, and my e-ring is the biggest that I feel confortable wearing. I just like to be inconspicuous. Is that so wrong?
Circe|1304971940|2916549 said:Why wear a suit to work? Why don shoes to go shopping? Why bother brushing your hair before you hit a nice restaurant?
Because human beings are social animals, and social animals follow social codes.
I don't follow them too, too closely, but I tend to be known as an eccentric. So ... I'll happily wear my big bling most places, but maybe not to faculty meetings if it makes me look out-of-place, and I'll rock my platform boots and my crinoline down to the Village, but maybe not to my husband's business dinner, no matter how pretty they make me feel.
Time and place, dude. What's the saying - you must know the rules in order to break them? You must know them in order to know when to break them, too. Time. And. Place. If it's worth it to you for the bling or the car or the whatever, it's worth it: if you break too many, you may wind up needing to find a different circle. And, hey, sometimes that's worth it, in and of itself ....