It's a thing, a rag-in-waiting, a curiosity. It's not lasting happiness, not love, not liberation. Failing to see that leads to suffering.
My pledge for Responsible Consumption Month was not to buy any new clothes (or to not buy new clothes ... to refrain from acquiring new clothes).
But this week I did. I bought a shirt.
However, I bought this shirt because it will be a Useful Thing, as Pooh says. It is the spring version of my favorite winter shirt, a plaid boy-style shirt in bright colors, not the muted winter ones that now seem too drab. I've actually been looking for some incarnation of this shirt for months, watching the online sale section of this particular store, waiting for a brighter version of this shirt. I've also checked second-hand stores and eBay. Nothing.
So this is to some degree a reasoned, intelligent, responsible clothing purchase. It is functional and fun. I feel good about it, not guilty. It is not particularly responsible in terms of content or construction, but I'm not beating myself up about that. One step at a time.

My mother-in-law was a fashion designer.
(Did you gasp? Can you feel the weight of that concept? It was a Big Deal.)
She was a woman who knew clothes, style, fashion. I was, the first time we met, a 19-year-old who wore boys jeans and button-down shirts, who had gone to a private, all-girls high school where I wore a grey skirt and navy blazer throughout adolescence and never developed a grasp on fashion.
I was far more concerned about that than she was. She was kind and affirming. Sometimes she made clothes for me or gave me samples from her workroom. There was no pressure to wear them and no sense of obligation.
"It's a thing," she would say. "It's a rag, that's all. A piece of fabric."
She wasn't being self-deprecating. This was her view: No matter what it looked like, it was, at its core, a rag. It reminds of the story about Ajahn Chah and his favorite mug; when challenged by his students about his preference for a particular mug, he explained that while he appreciated it, he knew it was already broken. Everything is subject to impermanence, and nothing -- not clothes, not mugs, not people -- goes on forever or is unchanged.
Helen, who would have been 97 on April 4, taught me that clothes should be fun, should make you feel good, should express your view.
What does this have to do with responsible consumption and my pledge to buy no new clothes for this month? As I've pondered my reasons for buying clothes, even looked through websites for pictures of clothes for blog posts, I find my mantra is: "It's a thing."
It's a thing, a rag-in-waiting, a curiosity. It's not lasting happiness, not love, not liberation. Failing to see that leads to suffering.
And hammer pants.

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Comments
Week 2 of No New Clothes
I don't know much about the fashion and style. I only like to wear my formal official shirt. It's my wife who always shop for the whole family. She knows much better about the trend then me.
http://www.modz.fr
Great thoughts!I'll prefer to
Great thoughts!I'll prefer to share your thoughts with my friends too. I'll keep in your touch till your next updates. Keep it up.
designer clothes for men
so great Nancy!
I not only wore Hammer pants, I made them for other people. Mine were gold lame fake sssnake-sssskin with a matching shoulder padded siut jacket. OMG
Actually,
these are an ancient garb of the Middle east called Sherwal pants.
and theyare terribly comfortable.
many thanks for the laughter!!!
Joren
I knew someone
would write in defense of hammer pants. I thought it might be Patrick. I own my aversion to hammer pants -- it's more bafflement than aversion, actually.
LOVE the description of your outfit.
Nancy
Bwahaha
I love the Hammer pants.
What a lovely portrait of your mother-in-law's wisdom.
Lovely
Nancy, It is interesting how great creators can see the ephemeral nature of their work. Sounds like she did. Fashion when utilized to express our fullness...maybe is a great thing.
Meredith