![]() ![]() We need to become more aware about how clothes affect our mood, and vice versa – about how our mood is affected by our dressing!įinal words: while your clothes surely DON'T define you, they can still be a great feel-good factor and a way of self-expression. This is also sensed by people we come into contact with. Our clothes intensify our emotional and mental energy. While this isn't a definitive judgement on dressing and emotional state, evidence and experience make it an undeniable fact that what we wear regularly is linked to our minds. Also, it seems that every mood change often gets put in a bp symptom category instead of a general human mood category. The amount of people that claim to be rapid cyclers seem way too common for how rare it actually is. A simple observation is that while these stars prefer a tuxedo nearly everyday, they indulge in a diverse variety of textures, patterns, cuts and accessories in their suits, so there's no monotony. I think a lot of people think they are rapid cyclers and in fact are misinformed/self-diagnosed. You could raise questions about icons like Tom Ford and Karl Lagerfeld, the suit-men. Steve Jobs has spoken outrightly about his emotional pain, while Zuckerberg has been diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome. but the hard pill to swallow is that while these titans were super successful, and we have much to learn from them, they also held a lot of mental trauma. Research indicates that repetitive style of clothing can be an indication of unwillingness to open up to new experiences and new people – an unwillingness to open up to the colours and joys of life! This particularly strikes a chord because head honchos like Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg cultivated the trend of similar dressing every day. By switching their dressing, the same people were able to improve their mental states for the day. While people diagnosed with anxiety were found to do the opposite – they were obsessed about attire to unhealthy degrees. For example, people under clinical depression were found to incline towards ill-fitting clothes almost all the time. ![]() Green - healing, soothing (overuse of certain shades of green may signify envy)īrown - grounded, reliable (overuse may mean inferiority complex)īlack - power (constant overuse may signify low energy or bad moods)Īlso, happier people were found to care about dressing well, while people in trauma, understandably, were found to under-play their clothing. Red - excitement, sensuality (overuse may be a sign of seeking external validation)ĭark Blue - consistency, dependability (overuse may also signify depressed moods) White- clean emotional state, freshness, purity, focus
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