Posted on 03/29/2006 12:39:50 PM PST by NYer
LINCOLN, March 29, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) The Family Life Office of the Catholic diocese of Lincoln, Nebraska, has endorsed a lay-led effort to make more feminine and modest clothing available to women by retailers.
Project Mothers Day 2006: a Call to Catholic Action, is an undertaking of the lay apostolate, The Leaven that promotes the family and feminine values. The event, says its organizers, is in honour of the spiritual maternity inherent to the unique, feminine nature and vocation of women.
Project Mothers Day will feature the popular writer and broadcaster, Colleen Hammond, a radio & television talk show host, comedienne, and mother and author of the book Dressing With Dignity. Hammond is a frequent speaker on the preservation of the family and feminine values. A review of her book says, Gone are the days when women dressed with beauty and charm that accentuated their femininity.
The review says, Much of what passes for womens fashions today appeals to the baser senses of men and women, making it increasingly difficult to maintain the respect that women deserve.
Juliana Davis, co-founder of The Leaven and organizer of the Lincoln event, says that secular sexuality vis a vis immodest fashions, contraception, and abortion make a mockery of women.
Though I always knew that immodest fashions were insulting, it wasnt until I read Colleens book that I realized immodest fashions are tied to a multi-faceted affront to our sacred dignity," Davis says.
Project Mothers Day organizers say they hope the event will help empower women to petition area merchants to provide tasteful, modest fashions in keeping with womens sacred dignity.
I really hope other grassroots groups will follow suit to begin similar Mothers Day initiatives, says Davis
Hammond, who is becoming a one-woman crusader for feminine values, is collecting signatures for a petition to clothing manufacturers to make more tasteful and feminine clothes available through retail outlets. Hammond operates two blogs and a personal website to support her efforts.
Sign the petition:
http://www.colleenhammond.com/petition.html
Visit Colleen Hammonds Blogs:
Colleen Hammond
http://colleenhammond.blogspot.com/
Dressing With Dignity
http://dressingwithdignity.blogspot.com/
OK, then. I tried. I confess to not understanding women's clothing very well at all. Too many sizes. Too many other things. My wife knows that I will never buy clothes for her. Her size list is so complicated, I'd have to get another college degree just to comprehend it.
Good luck to ya, short stuff! [grin]
I don't like lookin' like to hogs fightin' in a croaker sack. Don't think the clothes will fix that though ;)
"I don't like lookin' like to hogs fightin' in a croaker sack. Don't think the clothes will fix that though ;)"
Oh, my! I'm not touching that. No way.....
Some croaker sacks are meant to be left alone.
>>Save your nonsense for threads that actually involve the subject of sexual abuse by clergy, OK?<<
Thank you for that post! Funny how Catholics receive so much hatred from our fellow "Christians," huh?
Oh okay. Brazilian I do know about (think it's weird & doubtless excruciating) - I thought you meant braids or extensions!
Pick anything you like that fits the way you want and search for another just like it on ebay. Email the seller with the tag codes inside what you have & ask if they're the same. Styles from the same company will probably fit the same, i.e., a Land's End size 6 will fit differently than a Maggie London size 6. If Maggie London size 6 is what fits you, search on that specific designer.
I am ALL for more modest dresses. But, Hammond doesn't want women wearing pants AT ALL.
She says crazy things like pant are designed by men to bring men's eyes down to the women's crotch. Check this out and read the comments.
She may do a greater diservice to the "modest dress movement".
The Gap?
I don't think many of the Gap's clothing as being particularly immodest.
Nor I. My favorite stores include: Chico's, Petite Sophisticate, Kohls, Geoffrey Beene, Van Heusen, Coldwater Creek, etc...
One key to modesty is understanding how clothes fit on your body. A flattering, modest sillhouette on one person would be inappropriate on another woman with different proportions.
The article seems to be critical of immodest fads because there truly is no shortage of modest clothes (even for youts). Chasing fads is rarely worthwhile but they can be fun to work into a basic wardobe of well-fitting, modest pieces. For example, just yesterday I saw a pretty, lacy tank top in a store. The mannequin was shown wearing it with a skirt. Yuck. I would wear it under a blouse with a nice blazer.
As you say, it's not hard - it just takes some thought.
I googled " pubic hair styles" and got quite a list.
AB, please remind me again of the specifics of Godwin's Law. I keep mixing it up with Protoplasmic Dynamism's Fourth Lemma. Many thanks! I know it is a "goodun" as they say in PA.
Francis Seamus
My wife has no problem finding modest clothing at ordinary retailers like J. Jill, Coldwater Creek, Ann Taylor, Talbot's, and Macy's. You just have to look for it.
If many women really wanted modest clothing, the stores would sell it only. They are there to make money, and if they weren't making money from immodesty, they wouldn't carry the clothes, because they would go bankrupt. Unfortunately, far too many women are all too eager for tight pants, two-piece bathing suits, low cut one-piece bathing suits, shirts exposing cleavage and bellies, low rider pants, and mini-skirts. Just like the trend of some women using "Victoria's Secret" shopping bags as handbags to take things to work.
40 years ago, the vast majority of people would have treated women such as this as the trollops, sluts, and wannabe street-walkers they clearly yearn to be recognized as, and the shame would have forced a change. People are far to accepting of immodesty in others, just like they are far too accepting of divorce and remarriage, shacking up, adultery, etc.
Does anyone remember the social principals of old where decent people refused to socialize with the immodest and immoral? Where remarriage meant and end to all prior social contacts in the neighborhood? You only lower yourself to their level by admitting they are presenting themselves as someone worthy of your company. If a store only sells immodest clothing, by all means, register a complaint with management, and inform them of where you will be shopping instead, and how much you will spend, and who else you will tell to avoid it. Then shake the dust from your feet and move on.
What I could never figure out is what the heck happened between 1992 and 1995 to teenage fashion and parental common sense. In High School, I don't recall there being low cut shirts, mid-rif exposure, etc. There was no pressure to be a slut. Then one day in 1995, I went out to get Pizza with a buddy, and went to the first teenage hangout I'd been in about 3-4 years. What a shock! Every girl in there looked like a little hooker! I turned to my friend and asked him WTF happened that girls are suddenly dressing like that?
Most styles of women's pants are too tight and thus immodest.
In general, women shouldn't wear pants apart from exercising, manual labor, etc. The regular wearing of pants by women is defeminizing.
When will you start sending out patrols to enforce proper dress codes and behavior?
Will they carry canes to switch the offenders?
As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches one.
The Taliban Corrolary states that if the discussion involves sexual morality or modesty, the Taliban replaces the Nazis.
But as a parent, why would you let your child give in to peer pressure? Today it's clothing, tomorrow it's experimenting with sex and/or drugs. But, Dad, Mom, all the kids are doing it! I don't want to be different!
Count me in on her crusade.
The big thing is getting women to dress more femininely. It's not going to be easy.
True. This is what happens when clothing designers are gay men. They design clothing for what appeals to them.
It's easier to find clothes than people might think. It just takes a little effort.
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