12 responses to “Interview: Living the Virtue of Modesty Through Dress and Thought”

  1. Colleen, your book is very insightful, and I just showed my 11-year-old daughter the wedding gowns in the post below (they’re stunning!). Thanks for helping me to be more mindful of the issue of appropriate dress. It is important.

    I wish I had more time in Texas! It would be great to meet you as well.

    God bless and keep up the great work!

    1. Roxane, if you have any sons, let’s hope they fall for females with your views on modesty.

  2. “Men are so appreciative of the fact that somebody has taken their side. They feel so attacked.”

    So true. It is always made out to be the guy’s problem. That we are the ones objectifying women. But it’s hard not to when 90% of the work is done for us. Custody of the eyes is a real challenge these days. At a high school football game it requires a white cane, a German Sheppard, and welder’s goggles, if you get my meaning.

    However, if I bring it up to my lady friends I am accused of being either sexist, old-fashioned, over sensitive (which is them saying lecherous in a nice way), mean, or any number of other things. The girls have to be dressed pretty bad before they will say anything, and even then I have to bring it up.

    I wish women would realize their power over men. Not just the obvious seductive powers, but the power to lift us up to be more than just base creatures. A knight will be as gallant as his lady-fair requires of him, so to speak.

  3. Baron I agree with you 100%. So many of my young women friends acuse me of being perverted when I mention the way they dress. “Why are you looking at me that way, anyway?” they ask.
    They flaunt all their assets as if it was still sight unseen and then get mad if they attract the wrong attentions from the wrong people.
    I’ve already been asked if my mother hadn’t taught me to “not look at anything below the chin” when everything below the chin is just about in plain view anyway!
    It makes it so hard on the men in society to keep faithful and committed when women don’t dress with modesty in public.

    1. Robert, you made a too-good-to-be-dismissed point in your second paragraph. Worse, these gals act like they’re, for lack of a better term, “prizes” that a male has to “deserve”(like they’re “all that”, as folks say), but the more modestly dressed are, in these same gals’ eyes, LESS desirable. Robert, you give us gents a good name; if only more males will wake up and stay away from the bimbos.

  4. [...] Fonte: Colleen Hammond [...]

  5. Robert and Baron, I know how it feels to try to speak out in favor of modesty and femininity these days. If you dare try to tell a female to dress right, no matter how subtle or open you are about it, you will want to tune her out, and that’s if she’s in a good mood. And Colleen, yes you have made us men feel appreciated when we try to get females to dress right. In fact, as much as I talk about my hopes to find the right woman to settle down with, you conduct yourself in ways in which I want my future wife to(Dennis is a lucky man). Keep up the good work. However, I have to disagree with Maria Everding when she says it’s okay for females to wear pants away from Church. It’s the same as a male wearing skirts and dresses, and both violate God’s word. Dt. 22:5 proves that.

  6. Jennifer, you wrote a superb article! Good job.

  7. If what Iread on Jennifer Brinker’s blog on the St. Louis Review means anything, I will write to Saint Louis Archbishop Carlson to recommend a dress code(the fact that I live in Los Angeles, and most of the Missourians in my family live in Kansas City is not enough to stop me).

  8. It is interesting that Blessed John Paul II is brought up. If what I read in “Dressing with Dignity” means anything, women’s pants hit Paris runways the year he was born. The next year, Pope Benedict XV came down hard on people trying to embrace immoral fashions.

  9. Almost a half-decade ago, I read an article, or a letter to the editor, in “The Remnant”, and its author said SHE wished more males would speak out against her sex wearing pants(she indicated that it would carry more weight coming from a guy than from another gal). I too wish more members of my sex would tell females pants are for males; however, I don’t agree that it would carry more weight from us than from other gals; if anything, many gals are likelier to listen to each other than to males when it comes to this topic(even if the gals are wrong and the guys are right).

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