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Um, yeah. Yoga pants are skin tight and leave nothing to the imagination.
News flash: mini skirts make men think lustful thoughts. Extreme cleavage makes men think lustful thoughts. Bikinis make men think lustful thoughts. Nobody's saying you can't wear them. But if you wear clothes that show off your body, don't be surprised if people look. Check out the explicit forum for an entire thread dedicated to yoga pants if you don't believe me. (Well, it derailed pretty quickly, but was originally dedicated entirely to male admiration of yoga pants). Signed, female (completely straight) who can't help checking out women's asses when I see yoga pants. They're just so.... Out there on display! |
Look, burkas exist for a reason. And the reason is that women have bodies, which are hard to disguise in clothing. If you are so worried about impure thoughts, I would recommend purchasing some Saudi-style garments tout suite. |
| Guy here: if she's showing, I'm looking. I do, however, try to be subtle about it. |
Where did I say that it bothers me? It doesn't bother me the slightest bit. I just find it amusing when people put on skin-tight clothing and then are shocked that people look, or that it gets men's imaginations going. I fully support women wearing whatever they want - but don't expect men to not notice or fantasize. |
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It depends on if you are hot. |
The bigger issue here is why are all these Percy guys creeping on the Beauty and Fashion board. Lord! Can't we discuss makeup and fashion in peace. Gays are always welcome
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Well, at least her ego is healthy. I wonder how she addresses the fact that her husband looks at other women wearing yoga pants or leggings? By her own logic he must be thinking lustful thoughts.. about other women. |
I don't find it flattering at all. Hey, you want to sneak a peak go for it, I am in public. But there is something about yoga pants, men can't just take a peak and look away... They linger too long. It obviously does not happen to you since you can't relate to the notion of being "f'd with their eyes" ... but it happens. I think most men will admit, the long stare is piggish. |
| I wear mine to the gym and home. I don't understand going out in public in them. I wear jeans when I want to be comfortable. |
But it really is about two things: the length of the stare and the creep of the guy. PP who gets checked out in a puffy coat: I used to get that (in what must have been another life and not five years ago... WTH happened?). You really can get checked out wearing any outfit by anyone. The worst is when you're young-ish and it's a 60 something man who's old enough to know better and young enough not to be able to pin it on dementia. Actually, the "worst" is when it's that guy and he's your boss. Yuck. |
| Pics please. |
I've always said the same. I'm going to break my rule and wear them for a long flight. I figure they'll be a step up from the pajama pants trend. |
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The fallacy is that women are responsible for men's thoughts and actions.
If a woman wears yoga pants and a man ogles or says something, the woman is not to blame. If a woman wears leggings and a man catcalls her, the woman is not to blame. If a woman is wearing a skirt on the metro and a man takes an upskirt photo, the woman is not to blame. If a woman is wearing a tight top and gets groped by a man on the bus, the woman is not to blame. If you're not comfortable wearing yoga pants in public, that's fine. I'm not going to judge you for that. And a man who says you should dress sexier is just as wrong as the one who catcalls a woman in leggings. You are not responsible for those reactions, nor do you need to tolerate them. |