Unbothered
ELEVATING to HIGHER LEVELS with POSITIVE VIBES ✨
Surprisingly, women are actually more understanding and less harsh when it comes to being frugal about name-brand clothes and sneakers, at least when it comes to themselves.
There's a woman I know on Facebook who posts about these Avia sneaks she buys from Walmart, and nobody clowns her for it either but gives props for choosing comfort over branded/luxury sneakers; with that said, she does wear Nike and Jordans, too, but makes it clear she's not afraid of wearing cheap sneakers.
Women can wear cheap/off-brand clothes, sneakers, etc, shopping in discount stores, and nobody, men or women, would care as long as it looks good on them but men have to be dressed in quality clothing or else be clowned into affinity; it doesn't have to be luxury, but, y'know, typical branded clothing.
My girlfriend is an avid Rainbow shopper; she goes there so much that the workers know her by name; one time, she joked to me how they should pay her to model their clothes since she shops weekly, and sometimes every other day, she loves herself some Rainbow.
Personally, I don't care how somebody dresses as long as the clothes are clean and odorless. I was always taught to pride myself on my clothes being clean, presentable, and well-fitted; prioritizing brands was secondary. People are more likely to judge you for wearing clothing that is dirty, smelly, and ill-fitting (sloppy), among other things, rather than whether it's branded.
There's a woman I know on Facebook who posts about these Avia sneaks she buys from Walmart, and nobody clowns her for it either but gives props for choosing comfort over branded/luxury sneakers; with that said, she does wear Nike and Jordans, too, but makes it clear she's not afraid of wearing cheap sneakers.
Women can wear cheap/off-brand clothes, sneakers, etc, shopping in discount stores, and nobody, men or women, would care as long as it looks good on them but men have to be dressed in quality clothing or else be clowned into affinity; it doesn't have to be luxury, but, y'know, typical branded clothing.
My girlfriend is an avid Rainbow shopper; she goes there so much that the workers know her by name; one time, she joked to me how they should pay her to model their clothes since she shops weekly, and sometimes every other day, she loves herself some Rainbow.
Personally, I don't care how somebody dresses as long as the clothes are clean and odorless. I was always taught to pride myself on my clothes being clean, presentable, and well-fitted; prioritizing brands was secondary. People are more likely to judge you for wearing clothing that is dirty, smelly, and ill-fitting (sloppy), among other things, rather than whether it's branded.
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