luvsJack
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2007
- Messages
- 20,362
I was really surprised by your response. Though I don't think your boys look terrible per-say. I do volunteer work with youth and know for a fact that many young women find this style to be very offensive. I'm glad its becoming less popular but I don't think that takes away from it being inappropriate and if children don't learn what is appropriate attire from their parents who are they supposed to learn it from? I think there are many many ways to allow children to express themselves even through their clothing that need not be offensive to others. Honestly the picture I saw doesn't show their pants as low as I see the kids wearing them here in the city and sadly its not just the kids you see many grown men wearing them and I find it very tasteless. Not fashionable at all.
The fact of it being tasteless or fashionable is in your opinion. In the opinion of CR's boys and many other kids across the country, it is fashionable. For the youth YOU work with, maybe the young women don't like it; but that is not the way it is here.
Every generation has had something that was "tasteless" and "offensive to others" and every generation had a way of finding their own fashion and their own style. And most usually grow out of it. I mean, how many 60 year old hippies do you know? Or 50 year olds wearing mini skirts? Or 70 year olds with duck tails and Elvis side burns? Or even 30 year olds that wear all black and shave their heads?

My kids came up through the sagging pants, Goth style, wide leg jeans (we are talking 40" legs holes in jeans--try walking in THAT!

The part about picking battles? Let me tell you my experience, I thought dh would bust a blood vessel when younger ds came home with an ear pierced. So they argued, ds was grounded. Went to school, came back with BOTH ears pierced. They argued, more grounding. Went to school, came back and had two holes in one ear. So dh was down to either locking him in his room forever, not letting him go back to school or having a discussion. They had a long reasonable talk. Ds presented his case very well and they agreed on one ear, one piercing. DS didn't wear another earring until he got out of high school. All he wanted was to know he had that small amount of freedom to express himself. Once the freedom was there, it wasn't a big deal. If dh would have sat down and talked to him instead of fighting with him, there would have never been an issue in the first place. So, from that point on we learned to pick our battles. And to really think hard about what things we wanted to make non-negotiable. Clothing and hair styles were two things that just didn't make sense to battle over.
Kids have expressed themselves through clothing since the beginning of clothing (and now piercings). As long as mom and dad aren't dressing in the latest teen fads, they will learn what is appropriate by observation which is how kids learn anyway.