![]() |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
When I'm at the store with my kids, yes its because of my kids that I'm not noticing other people. It IS different if on the rare occasion I get to the store alone. However I am not saying that childless people just float through life judging everyone around them because they are over whelmed with free time. |
Quote:
|
Grocery store meltdowns are the worst. In other situations, you can more easily just leave. Since we need food to live, grocery shopping is a must. And for some reason, the grocery store is one of the most triggery places for my son. The older he got, the worse the outright judgment from other people got. People are downright rude about it. I've cried in my car before driving home from the grocery store so many times. Thankfully he can handle short trips these days. I'm also not above plopping all almost 5 ft of him in the basket of one cart, giving him the iPad and some headphones, and letting my daughter push a second cart for the food.
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
I don't get the hate on yoga pants. I'm wearing mine right now and I've received nothing but compliments on these pants plus they are comfortable as heck. Now these aren't the super tight yoga pants- they're a looser straight legged version, and I have loved them from the first day I had them. They're my favorite walking pants and up until reading this thread it never occurred to me that someone was looking at me and thinking I needed to go put some "real pants" on.
I need to stop reading these threads. They make me insecure. |
Quote:
I had PPD after my first son. I never asked for help and in retrospect, I wish I had. My situation a was not ideal so it really made it worse. Yes PPD is so consuming that nothing around you really matters. I wouldn't wish it on anyone. Secondly I agree with the rest of your post. Especially on a board about weightloss, that we should not assume those that don't dress up are lazy or have no self respect. Because that's what many people think about over weight people. Which I know was part of the OP, the factor of weight. |
Quote:
|
I can't believe this thread is still open! :)
|
Quote:
Maybe I mistake my busy-ness or my age for the fact that as *I've* gotten older that I've become less concerned with what people are wearing, but seems some people concern themselves with others regardless of age. I used to harshly judge people that dressed up as having no confidence(please refer to one of my earlier replies for details) but as I've gotten older, I've learned to at least not put this on others. It still is a part of the reason *I* don't dress up (because I get uncomfortable feeling like that's the statement I'm making), but I make a point to not assume everyone else that dresses up does so because they lack self confidence. Some people do it out of habit, some do it because they enjoy it, some do it as an expression of how they DO feel good about themselves. I DO still judge about other things in life, we all judge something but I'm just not super judgy on appearance. (My big one is education, or lack there of, and to be honest, and I'm working on that) I wrote another reply to another post about my journey with moving away from judgement. (Feel free to fo find it). But its just not in me to care that much about what people are wearing, and I've chalked that up to age and being too busy to care. Maybe its not. Maybe I just really don't get annoyed at what people wear, because I tend to judge people on what they've accomplished or how hard they work in life to better themselves. (Not that this is any better, just different.) Basically, I'll probably never be too busy to think a not nice thought about someone based on their education (not going into specifics, so I don't upset anyone) but appearance just fell off the list quickly because its not important to me. Its apparently important to you how people dress. Sounds like you could be the busiest women alive and it would still matter to you. What does that say? What do we as a society think (judge?) about people who are very concerned with appearance? Does it matter if they are concerned with their own vs concern about other peoples? Does that change how we describe them? |
Quote:
Its gotten harder as he gets older because he "looks" like he should not act that way. Sometimes his ticks get really bad too, if he's stressed so its just hard enough to help him and handle the situation without people thinking they have it all figured out. |
Quote:
I sometimes use single to mean without kids. :p I'm not the only one in my circle of friends, I kind of forgot that it would have meant single single to you! No you didn't quote my post, but you posted a quote responding to mine, on the topic that I brought up (the kids thing)...I didn't realize that did seem like an obvious reason to respond. You said you find it condescending XYZ the kids thing...this is where it was going, people that are insecure are assuming I'm saying people without kids have nothing to do. Jesus H Christ, I picked kids as as example. I coud have said "I wonder if people that have all that free time are umemployed" ...I also used the example of the grocery store. I don't care how many hours someone works, bringing kids to the grocery store is a different situation than going without kids. And most of our judging we are talking about is while we are out at the store, my POINT WAS if you HAVE KIDS you are very preoccupied at the store keeping them from running a muck, fighting eachother, getting lost, knocking over displays etc... And if one is a baby?? Keeping them from crying while you whip through the store trying to get the heck out. I don't care how many hours a week someone works, when you have kids with you at the store, especially young ones, IT DISTRACTS YOU from noticing others. To those that kept saying having kids doesn't mean you can't be aware of what's going on around you, I don't consider thinking "what's with the lazy chick wearing PJ bottoms" as being aware of what going on around me. I consider it something I can't be bothered doing when I ahve my kds with me. When I'm alone? Yes, I notice more of those details that don't matter. Also, children's ages matter. Much easier to have a 10 year old with you than a toddler. And special needs as was already mentioned, means less focusing on who's wearing what in the check out line. This has nothing to do with who's more busy in their day to day life. (The end of my reply is for everyone, not just you) |
Quote:
|
re:
God help me, I'm replying to this...
Some people can be incredibly busy at the store with children and still notice things. (I also have an ASD child who was on oxygen for some time that I'd have to drag into the store with me.) Despite that, I know I still made judgements about people's appearance. What does that say about me? What does that say about the state of our society when appearance and being overweight stand out that much to us? I'd hope it doesn't me a bad parent or a bad person. It just makes me human. As I said earlier, I try to catch myself when it happens and remind myself I can't know everything about a person in one fleeting moment in time. As to how to stop those judgements from popping into my head, I don't know. |
| All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:21 AM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.