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This is a great post, LittleYellowOne. Thank you for weighing in on this topic.
That being said, young people need to understand that there's a way you portray yourself around your friends/peers and a way to portray yourself to "adults" and others. LittleYellowOne says "part of the arrangement is knowing time and place." I fault schools for not making that distinction more plain (in the absence of parents who will - but we all know the old 'take the stuff to school in your bookbag' trick, don't we?). Teens might just as soon learn it because you'll eventually dress/ one way on the job and then the way you dress/behave the rest of the time. For some it'll be close. For some, not so much.
I actually like the Amish approach - the rumspringa. Teens are allowed to dress non-Amish (though most save that for outside their homes) and even get cell phones and gussy up the buggy (or get a car). A time comes when a decision must be made - to adopt the standards of their community or to go out into the English world. I imagine Amish families come up against the situation the that the original post described, though.
This is a great post, LittleYellowOne. Thank you for weighing in on this topic.
That being said, young people need to understand that there's a way you portray yourself around your friends/peers and a way to portray yourself to "adults" and others. LittleYellowOne says "part of the arrangement is knowing time and place." I fault schools for not making that distinction more plain (in the absence of parents who will - but we all know the old 'take the stuff to school in your bookbag' trick, don't we?). Teens might just as soon learn it because you'll eventually dress/ one way on the job and then the way you dress/behave the rest of the time. For some it'll be close. For some, not so much.
I actually like the Amish approach - the rumspringa. Teens are allowed to dress non-Amish (though most save that for outside their homes) and even get cell phones and gussy up the buggy (or get a car). A time comes when a decision must be made - to adopt the standards of their community or to go out into the English world. I imagine Amish families come up against the situation the that the original post described, though.
