Personal Reflection Essay

Throughout my life, I never gave much attention to what I wore. Coming from a small school and small town, I never needed to stand out and so comfort and practicality was my number one priority. However, looking back on my life with this chapter in mind, I can see ways in which my dress reflected my personal values. In high school and even in college, I only wear t-shirts, except for in formal occasions. I never wore polos or any other kind of casual collared shirt. If I was not wearing basketball sweats or shorts, I wore jeans or cargo shorts. Mostly, this was because they were comfortable and practical. In addition, I took pride in wearing my tennis shoes until they literally started falling apart. My only clothing decision that was particularly individual was that I wore knee-high socks every day of high school and until my sophomore year of college. On one hand, I liked the way the socks fit around my shins, but there was another side of me that enjoyed having something that was completely unique. I started wearing them for basketball games and it became a habit.

All of my clothing choices are representative of my frugality and my belief that money should be spent on qualitative improvements and not superficial ones. In fact, I vividly remember going shoe shopping and looking for the most cheaply priced shoe. When people I knew spent a ridiculous amount of money on clothes, part of me would actually get angry. Friend would buy $100 shoes and I would think that the only explanation was vanity. My dress also represented my desire not to be linked it with any clique. I was an athlete with athlete friends, but I wore Monty Python t-shirts and dressed a little bit like a dork. I was equal parts athlete, academic, activist, and artist and I never wanted to dress in a way that gave one of my many sides did not take precedence. Once I came to college, I was no longer known like I was in my small hometown, where being an athlete and musician gave me big fish status. However, my dress has not changed much, and if anything has become even more casual and straight-laced. Even more, I do not stand out because I do not necessarily want attention. In fact, even as a singer, I have yet to do anything on stage to stand out. I do not like tattoos or piercings, and I like dressing haphazardly: throwing on a shirt, some pants, putting on my old shoes and going out. As C.R. Sanders says in his first sentence, “A person’s physical appearance affects his or her self-definition, identity, and interaction with others” (1), and for me, I dressed the way I did so that my clothes would take a backseat to other things I thought I could offer.

I still am not sure how my dress was derived from my background. In ways, it can be attributed to where I grew up. Burns is two hours from the nearest shopping mall or clothes store so options were limited. My parents instilled in me a strong sense of responsibility and, even though they encouraged individuality, they made sure I knew at a young age the difference between standing out and actually expressing myself. As cliché as it is, they stressed the importance of inner personality and it never seemed important to have to show off whom I was through my clothes. I was good enough at expressing myself in other ways. My mother disliked tattoos and excessive piercings, and I think we shared opinions that having to rely on those kinds of things was an easy way out of having to develop an interesting personality. Now that I am older, there are tattoos and piercings that I like, and I think I am able to judge each individually for what they stand for. No one in my immediate family dresses differently than I do. Of course, my sister is more fashionable, but even for her, practicality and frugality or more important than appearing to stand out.

As a creative writer, I have often joked that to be a good writer, you must wear a sweater, horned-rimmed glasses, a scarf, and either a fedora or a beret. For some reason, this is a look that my peers associate with thoughtfulness, deep thinking, and intelligence. It is the common day “hipster” look, but it isn’t trying to be ironic as much as it seems to be to fit the part of a writer. I guess I do not think a person can dress intelligently or thoughtfully, but the appeal to other cultures and the colorless garb seems to represent the seriousness and worldliness that a writer is supposed to have.

All in all, I do not think I have ever used my dress to fit in with my peer groups or to assimilate to outside pressures. Still, even in dressing in a way so that my clothes do not define me, it shows off my values. I want to be undefinable and so my clothes are mismatched and put on without much thought, yet they still are clothes I like to wear and that I buy purposefully. So, in the end, my clothes give room for my personality to stand out.

Personal Adornment People Watching

The first person works behind the counter at a pizza place. She is wearing a low-cut black t-shirt and her chest is tattooed with dark flowery patterns. Both of her ears are pierced and she wears black spiral earrings with scorpion-like stingers at the end of the spiral. Her hair is black but she wears it up in a bun at the back. She has on jeans and a thick, silver studded belt. There appears to be brass knuckles hanging off of her back belt loop. I think she is trying to draw attention to herself and I feel like her style is trying to be anti-establishment.  I believe she is trying to distance herself from what she deems as societal norms so that she can stand out as an individual. Mostly, I think her dress makes me stereotype her as angry. Not necessarily that she is hard to get along with but that she clashes with authority and is angry in a universal sense. Her adornment shows me that I am maybe too skeptical of people’s motives. Immediately, I was a bit judgmental because I see her dress as a fad that a lot of people use to stand out, but if it is common, then it really is not individualistic. However, her dress is not necessarily a statement, but could be what she likes to wear.

The next girl is eating a few tables from me. She has curly dirty-blonde hair that is browner in certain areas and actually looks tangled. She has a green hooded sweatshirt and wears horn-rimmed glasses with wide yellow earpieces and thick lenses. Her sweatshirt is tucked into her maroon jeans in the back but I don’t know if that is on purpose. I see her as kind of geeky. Her outfit could be ironic, which is popular with some people, but I don’t think it is. She is not necessarily pretty and her disheveled look seems natural more than forced. I think she is socially awkward but not self-conscious. I think she values close personal friendships more than the approval of the majority of her peers.  I think she prefers not standing out and I feel like she is introverted. Most of this is because she sits in the corner with one friend and they have not paid particular attention on looking “pretty” according to society. This tells me that I subscribe to some societal ideas on attractiveness. I have been influenced to deem outward appearance with self-confidence and happiness.

The first thing I notice about the last man is he is wearing a Portland Trail Blazers hat, and because I also like the Blazers, I realize I am already thinking of this man favorably. He has facial hair, but it isn’t wild and he wears a t-shirt and jeans. He has silver studs for earrings, and I think that they look okay. His hair is short, brown, and kind of fuzzy and curly. I think he is comfortable with his individuality and I am less skeptical of his individualism than I was with the first girl mostly because of the Blazers hat. I believe he is not just showing his individuality for the sake of standing out because he openly identifies with a mass of people in a mainstream activity. Now that I write this, I am not sure how that is different than the first girl identifying with a mass of people. I think I judge them differently because this man likes something that I like. That tells me that I hold my values and beliefs higher than I hold other people’s.