Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t get it either. Doesn’t bother me but I wouldn’t do it. I would change out of leggings into jeans and a top. I have a pair of flared yoga pants that can pass as pants so that might be the exception .! Dh wears his vionic flip flops almost everywhere because (he claims) they are the only comfortable shoes for his plants facsitisn, but he would pair with jeans. However we are in our early 50s so not up on the trend of 150$ Lycra pants.
I would be way more grossed out by his gnarly bare feet w/jeans than by OP's neighbors in sweats. Get your DH some manners and closed shoes. Nobody wants to see that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like a lot of the posts on dcum lately all fall into the category of people not realizing how massively unimportant and uninteresting they are to most other ppl. This one and the post by the person who said 'do people not retain things they are told anymore' in off topic. Like - NO! Most people are not thinking about you or wanting to impress you or caring what you think. I am at peace with that and think it's super weird that others are all like 'DONT THEY KNOW WHO I AM?'. No one cares who you are! They have other sh*t going on. Get TF over it.
Then why accept a dinner invitation, if your general feeling towards someone is "f8k you!" Like I'd really rather not clean the house and cook for you if there's other stuff you'd rather be doing. You know, rearranging your sweatpants drawer or the like.
we have answered this for you many many times.
if your neighbor invites you over you basically have no choice but to say yes. anything else is super awkward.
I really dont invite my neighbors over for this reason - just creates obligation. but if i did and they came i would give zero fs what they wore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly don't know many adult women who wear sweatpants out of the house, and certainly not to any social event. So just an FYI--if you are invited to someone's home for dinner in NYC, do not wear sweatpants. You will stand out, and not in a good way.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t get it either. Doesn’t bother me but I wouldn’t do it. I would change out of leggings into jeans and a top. I have a pair of flared yoga pants that can pass as pants so that might be the exception .! Dh wears his vionic flip flops almost everywhere because (he claims) they are the only comfortable shoes for his plants facsitisn, but he would pair with jeans. However we are in our early 50s so not up on the trend of 150$ Lycra pants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm baffled by the people who think it doesn't matter. Surely there is some baseline. Showering? Brushing your teeth or hair? Or is it totally reasonable to show up in whatever slovenly state you want?
As with all such things, it is a way to show you care, are making an effort, etc. Showing up in sweats to a dinner party is trashy and rude. If you wouldn't show up like that to meet a client, a potential client, etc., then don't show up like to a friend whose invited you over, cleaned the house, cooked a meal, etc.
It wasn’t a dinner party or a client meeting, it was a casual dinner with neighbor friends. I can’t imagine inviting a friend over for something casual and then clutching my pearls that they wore joggers, let alone complaining on DCUM about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCUM is so confusing.
On the one hand you bash someone who expects guests to wear actual clothes, not pajamas, as "judgmental". On the other hand you all never stop gushing over how much better other countries are, especially your beloved Europe. Do you not think Europeans would be insulted by someone wearing sweats as an invited guest in their house? They would of course expect clean, fitted clothing. Are they judgmental as well? A functioning society has standards.
I'm european.
- there is not such thing as 'european'. Different countries within europe have different societal expectations. Romania vs belgium? V different.
- If there is any commonality as it pertains to this stuff, it's that they generally all think that Americans have no manners and are overall lacking in class. Class to europeans is less about what clothes you wear than your curiosity, understanding of the world around you, appreciation of good food, wine, health etc. Those are standards in which america is sorely lacking and which are overall more important to a functioning society than what type of pants you have on.

Anonymous wrote:I'm baffled by the people who think it doesn't matter. Surely there is some baseline. Showering? Brushing your teeth or hair? Or is it totally reasonable to show up in whatever slovenly state you want?
As with all such things, it is a way to show you care, are making an effort, etc. Showing up in sweats to a dinner party is trashy and rude. If you wouldn't show up like that to meet a client, a potential client, etc., then don't show up like to a friend whose invited you over, cleaned the house, cooked a meal, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly don't know many adult women who wear sweatpants out of the house, and certainly not to any social event. So just an FYI--if you are invited to someone's home for dinner in NYC, do not wear sweatpants. You will stand out, and not in a good way.
Yeah...I wouldn't use a woman who had the poor judgment to marry a mentally ill anti-Semite as my role model, but carry on.
no one said she was their role model. But her $1.7 billion dollar net worth suggests that it is indeed socially acceptable to wear joggers out of the house.
Don't be daft. OP isn't talking about "wearing joggers out of the house." She isn't criticizing her friend to wearing them to the grocery store. She is talking about wearing them to a small dinner party. And I would not rely on KK for guidance on manners.
Anonymous wrote:Let me guess: Chevy Chase, is that you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly don't know many adult women who wear sweatpants out of the house, and certainly not to any social event. So just an FYI--if you are invited to someone's home for dinner in NYC, do not wear sweatpants. You will stand out, and not in a good way.
Yeah...I wouldn't use a woman who had the poor judgment to marry a mentally ill anti-Semite as my role model, but carry on.
no one said she was their role model. But her $1.7 billion dollar net worth suggests that it is indeed socially acceptable to wear joggers out of the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OMG. Is that an argument against sweats? I sure hope so. Looks like she's carrying around a dump in her pants.
If I invited someone to my home for dinner and they came dressed like that, I would think they'd lost their tiny mind.