When Did A Skirt Become A Sign Of Weakness?
“We get nothing. We get a generation of women raised by their parents with no idea how to cook, how to dress and how to keep up your half of the arrangement.”
Such was the language of a recent post on the Brazen Careerist site that has, at the time of this blog post, over 150 comments. The post, entitled “What Happened to Femininity” by Tyler Hurst was inflammatory to say the least. Tyler bemoaned the lack of girls in their summer clothes (sundresses and pony tails) perhaps a little less eloquently than The Boss. His continued responses with little substance probably didn’t help.
While I was quite offended by the delivery Tyler’s message, I couldn’t help but partially see where he was coming from. Especially as I began reading over 150 responses. Many of these women (rightfully irked by a guy trying to tell us essentially throw on a pretty dress, tie your hair in ribbon and get into the kitchen to make him some pie) retaliated in their comments by telling him essentially that dresses and heels and long hair are just a way of men trying to keep women in their place and that no woman actually enjoys those things.
I then began to feel assaulted from all sides, both men and women. Its a difficult tight rope to walk as woman. See, I feel empowered and feminine and…well…pretty. Yes, I said it. When I look pretty I feel empowered. This
isn’t to say that I don’t spend a majority of my time in jeans and a t-shirt/sweater (hey, I live in Maine, it isn’t always t-shirt weather!) but when it comes to business clothes I tend to defer to the “girlie.” Whether it is right or wrong, my “girlie” clothes get many more compliments (from both sides of the gender fence) than my pants suits or Mary Jane flats.
Somehow, in the “progress” of taking women from the kitchen to the board room we’ve gotten it into our mind that we aren’t allowed to be “feminine” to feel as powerful. Please note I don’t refer to this as “feminism” because I still adhere to that crazy notion that feminism simply means that women want to be treated equally.
As we’ve “progressed” our way along, though, the idea of being feminine seems to have gotten lost in translation. Now, women are supposed to buy into a “long-held history” that uses skirts to cripple and impede their advancement and bring down their gender. My longer hair is shunned, and has led to dangerous situations involving “assault by ponytail.” A woman is no longer supposed to be nurturing or compassionate, that is no longer part of her inherent nature but a way society has kept her in the home and out of the working force by imposing a gender role on her.
Unfortunately, I know many women who are the exact OPPOSITE of all these ideals. I wear the skirt and heels and eyelet lace top and can be one of the biggest bitches to deal with in the workplace. I have very little tolerance for ignorance or lack of initiative and get very vocal about it. One of the sweetest, most caring and benevolent women I know wore her first suit ever today and it was a pants suit. Otherwise she wears khakis and trousers to work and owns only one skirt that she bought for a wedding.
Furthermore, what are we as women saying about our sisters who make the decision to stay at home and raise their kids. I don’t have kids myself, but I can tell you I’ve NEVER met a Mom who wasn’t working. Should they feel less accomplished because they DO know how to cook and clean?
Why does one thing need to lead to the other? Why can someone who is feminine not be a successful and shrewd business woman? And why is it believed that the short haired, black pant suit woman cannot be nurturing? Why does it always have to be about the “label” that we associate with one style or another.
And most importantly to me, before I step into my next executive management-level meeting as the successful business woman that I have worked very hard become (because I obviously want to make sure I portray the right impression) – when did a skirt become a sign of weakness?
![]()
Did you know I have a private newsletter that goes out ONLY to subscribers? It offers stories of travel adventures, writing brilliance, links to great content around the internet and other crazy shaningans.










