Posted by Medusa on December 24, 2003, at 8:14:02
In reply to Re: Therapist fashion disasters, posted by Karen_kay on December 23, 2003, at 14:16:12
> But, he does wear glasses and they reflect. That annoys me.
>The scratch-resistant anti-reflective coatings would add less than the cost of one therapy session to the price of his glasses. Good lord, since eye contact is SO important, why is he saving money on this end?
Right now I'm wearing my kick-around glasses, and even THEY have the highest-quality version of this coating. (In case I have to drive in them, esp at night.) And nobody much looks at my beady eyes, never mind however many patients a day he has. So I have no sympathy on the reflecting-glasses front
> Also, sometimes his shoes are scuffed up a little.
>Bad bad bad! Scuffed dress shoes is a sign of so many qualities I don't appreciate.
I had a woman therapist who wore scuffed frumpy dress shoes. With tights and these pleated skirts that were absolutely the wrong length on her.
> I still think I dress better than he does anyway :)
>What do you wear to therapy these days?
> His socks are always lovely!!! And I always comment. They are never too short. And his pants are never too short either. Just right.
>Ooooooooooh! Where's he get his socks?
I met one of my sisters in Vienna once, and after breakfast I got her to go up to a tourist and tell him, in a funny accent, that his pants were too short. They really were. And he was wearing white athletic socks with them, and black sneakers. He probably thinks that Vienna has fashion police.
> His shoes always match his belt. (GOOD, GREAT!!)Color, or pattern and finish too? I haven't ever thought this far. Thanks for the tip, one more thing to put on my list.
> I wonder what his coat looks like.what if he doesn't wear one?
poster:Medusa
thread:292809
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/social/20031217/msgs/293078.html