Shao Feng-Li wrote:Well there are girls pants and men's pants. Well Hotikiri's isssue isn't whether or not he looks like a woman... so... Heh.
Even the other day, my litte sister was saying that she always gets scared when she's walking around in the mall and group of gothic guys pass by her.
Suggestion: I'd say, go for more of an elegantHitokiri wrote:Ok
I have been wondering about this the entire weekend and I have been praying about it but nothing so far.
Friday at school, I got in the discussion about Christians being quote on quote "gothic". I wrote a very Christian paper in English class on how the Ressurection is true and suppoting scientific and historical (without the Bible) logic and reasoning to prove it's truth.
Apparently, my readers didn't buy not only the "story" but that fact I was not a Christian cause at the time I was wearing all black with a As I Lay Dying t-shirt (here's the logo which is on it skull logo )as well as eye-liner and black fingernail polish. I tried to support that I am a Christian but I choose to dress this way but they didn't believe it cause they assorted anything that resembles "goth" as a spawn of Satan.
So which got me thinking. Despite I feel comfortable dressing this way and that I don't choose to dress this way to look cool but just for fun....should I not dress that way to further the glory of God's kingdom? I mean...by dressing "goth" does that hurt my witness cause of the sterotype that they associate myself with automatically links me with how that steriotype is and in this instance that Goth is linked to Satanism, pagansim, and other wierd stuff. I myself don't believe that but I don't want to hurt my witness by not appearing as a Christian.
Get what I am saying?
And for the record, I don't consider myself quote on quote a Goth cause mor e importantly, I am a Christian who follows Christ but I choose to dress a certain way.
# GOTHIC-
1. Of or relating to the Goths or their language.
2. Germanic; Teutonic.
# Of or relating to the Middle Ages; medieval.
#
1. Of or relating to an architectural style prevalent in western Europe from the 12th through the 15th century and characterized by pointed arches, rib vaulting, and a developing emphasis on verticality and the impression of height.
2. Of or relating to an architectural style derived from medieval Gothic.
# Of or relating to painting, sculpture, or other art forms prevalent in northern Europe from the 12th through the 15th century.
Impact Alberto wrote:I'm not getting this topic...
GhostontheNet wrote:gothic
adj 1: characteristic of the style of type commonly used for printing German [syn: Gothic] 2: of or relating to the language of the ancient Goths] 3: of or relating to the Goths; "Gothic migrations" [syn: Gothic] 4: as if belonging to the Middle Ages; old-fashioned and unenlightened; "a medieval attitude toward dating" [syn: medieval, mediaeval] 5: characterized by gloom and mystery and the grotesque; "gothic novels like `Frankenstein'" n 1: extinct East Germanic language of the ancient Goths; the only surviving record being fragments of a 4th-century translation of the Bible by Bishop Ulfilas [syn: Gothic] 2: a heavy typeface in use from 15th to 18th centuries [syn: Gothic, black letter] 3: a style of architecture developed in northern France that spread throughout Europe between the 12th and 16th centuries; characterized by slender vertical piers and counterbalancing buttresses and by vaulting and pointed arches [syn: Gothic, Gothic architecture]
Source: WordNet ® 2.0, © 2003 Princeton Universit
Shao Feng-Li wrote:I don't blame her for being scared. It does look evil i most cases. Where do you draw the line between goth and not goth? Is person goth when they ware a black out fit? What about eyeliner? Like if I thought a guy looked goth for only wareing a black t shirt and my firend thought that a guy only looked goth when he went all out. There's not much of a standard.
Maybe so, but all kinds of civilizations look for ways to short-circuit fully getting to know someone and what they're all about well, as that is not always practical. Within our own, that is partially accomplished in the way someone dresses, and it would be foolish to completely ignore this. I guess the question is, although Hitokiri is at full liberty to dress in this fashion, is he willing to pay the price in the perceptions of others? And also, is there some sort of middle ground he could fall back to, as I had said?Angel37 wrote:Since when does the clothing make the man? What you wear isn't half as important as how you behave and treat others. I'm "gothic" and yet I'm Christian. Clothes won't get you to heaven or out of heaven.
<3 Angel
Hitokiri wrote:....should I not dress that way to further the glory of God's kingdom? I mean...by dressing "goth" does that hurt my witness cause of the sterotype that they associate myself with automatically links me with how that steriotype is and in this instance that Goth is linked to Satanism, pagansim, and other wierd stuff.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 155 guests