GHT
I'll Lock Up
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V.C.Brunswick, you are almost right, it's the jeans, or pants, for the life of me I cannot call them trousers, that you missed out on:
Edward got it right when he said:
I so empathise with this observation. in my youth, it was the Mod look. But that look was fashion orientated. The song by The Kinks: "Dedicated Follower of Fashion," was so true. One week he's in polka dots, the next week he's in stripes................... That really was the way we conformed. But it didn't excuse, if that's the right word, tribalism. The peer pressure was probably of my own making, seriously, who cares if what one wears is 'right or wrong?'
It comes from within, we feel a need to belong, or perhaps, we feel a need not to be excluded. The only annoyance that I felt about those two young guys, was the sense of threat. My initial judgement was that this is confrontation, am I going to get a kicking for looking different? But once their attitude had mellowed, it was easy to talk. I'm glad that in my youth it was important to look good, but those two did teach me, along with Edward's eloquent take on the scene, that belonging is important for every generation, no matter how that manifests itself.
Edward got it right when he said:
It's a sharp look. You're bang on re herd instinct.... oddly, it seems to only have increased these days. Tribalism is something I can well understand. When I was younger, you were a punk or a goth or a grunger or whatever, part of a tribe, common interests, tastes, values - the tribal dressing was an emphasis of that. For those of us in various subcultures, it was both a statement of belonging to our own tribe, and also very strongly one of rejection of "the norm". These days, I'm not sure (aside from rare exceptions and the hipster thing) that many kids, at least here in the UK, are into an identifiable subculture thing to anything like the extent there used to be. ...
I so empathise with this observation. in my youth, it was the Mod look. But that look was fashion orientated. The song by The Kinks: "Dedicated Follower of Fashion," was so true. One week he's in polka dots, the next week he's in stripes................... That really was the way we conformed. But it didn't excuse, if that's the right word, tribalism. The peer pressure was probably of my own making, seriously, who cares if what one wears is 'right or wrong?'
It comes from within, we feel a need to belong, or perhaps, we feel a need not to be excluded. The only annoyance that I felt about those two young guys, was the sense of threat. My initial judgement was that this is confrontation, am I going to get a kicking for looking different? But once their attitude had mellowed, it was easy to talk. I'm glad that in my youth it was important to look good, but those two did teach me, along with Edward's eloquent take on the scene, that belonging is important for every generation, no matter how that manifests itself.
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