anything goes with emma chamberlain - outfit repeating [video]
Episode Date: May 28, 2023[video available on Spotify] i think all of us can look at the concept of outfit repeating and say, why is this even a topic of conversation? but what's wild to me is how common it is for people to be... concerned about repeating the same outfit more than once. not only have i experienced this pressure to not repeat outfits, but i've also seen it in the world. when you go through any influencer's page on instagram, you will probably not see them wear the same thing twice. and then there are lots of people who can't be concerned with the concept of outfit repeating because they don't have that luxury. outfit repeating is absolutely a luxury. and i sort of don't even want to talk about it because by talking about it, i'm giving it more legitimacy than it deserves. but at the same time, i do want to discuss it because i think it's something a lot of people experience, whether they're fortunate enough to actually take it seriously as a concern, or if they wish that they could think of it as a concern. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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To some people, repeating the same outfit twice is as normal as brushing teeth in the morning.
It's just a part of routine that never gets thought about.
It's so normal that it's not even a topic of conversation.
And for some people, outfit repeating is somewhat of a nightmare.
Wearing the same dress to two different weddings, unthinkable.
Wearing the same outfit on social media more than once, not going to happen.
Wearing the same outfit to two different parties, not going to happen.
There are some people who are so concerned about repeating the same outfit twice
that they'd rather not go to a party, to an event, to a whatever, than wear the same outfit twice.
I've known people like this that have literally wanted to come up with an excuse
to not go to a wedding because they didn't want to wear the same dress
that they had worn to another wedding in the past, but they didn't have time
to find a new dress. This happens.
Okay. And then there are some people who can't be concerned
with the concept of outfit repeating
because they don't have that luxury.
You know, being concerned about being seen
in the same outfit twice is absolutely a luxury.
It goes without saying that there are people
that would do anything for that luxury.
I think all of us can look at the concept
of outfit repeating and say, why is this even
a topic of conversation?
This is ridiculous.
This is rooted in the most shallow values of humanity.
This is ridiculous.
This is stupid.
No one should be concerned about this.
They're a bigger fish to fry in this world.
There are people with way worse problems, obviously.
Why is this even a topic of conversation?
It's easy to say that from a bird's eye view.
But what's wild to me is how common it is for people to be concerned about repeating
the same outfit more than once.
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your appointment today. Not only have I experienced this pressure to not repeat outfits,
but I've watched people in my life stress out over this. And on social media, I've seen other people who I don't even know stress out about this.
And I've also sort of seen it in the world.
You know, when you go through any influencers page on Instagram, you will probably not see
them wear the same thing twice.
It's even rare to find an influencer or a celebrity wearing the same piece of clothing
twice, like, yeah, maybe sometimes, but not often.
So whether it's being discussed or not, we're seeing this stigma around outfit repeating
inaction with celebrities, influencers, and even our friends and family sometimes. You know, people always showing up to Thanksgiving
in a new outfit or always showing up to a wedding
in a new outfit.
And I don't even want to talk about it
because by talking about it, I'm giving it some sort of legitimacy
or some sort of value more than it deserves
and I don't want to do that.
But at the same time, don't want to do that.
But at the same time, I do want to discuss it because I think it's something a lot of people
experience, whether they're fortunate enough to actually take it seriously as a concern,
or if they wish that they could think of it as a concern.
It affects everybody in some way, not everybody,
but it affects a lot of people in some way
or it's something that you feel everyone else
is concerned about.
I remember when I was in elementary school,
I wore clothes in the most logical, rational,
normal type of way that you could imagine.
It was like every year I would go to the shoe store and I'd buy a pair of shoes,
throw my old ones away if they were destroyed, maybe get some hand me downs for my older cousins,
maybe buy a few new things, probably not, probably just take the hand me downs for my cousins,
and that's what I would wear all year. I would rotate between, I don't know, three tops, three pairs of pants, one to two jackets,
that's it. It was like, I would wear the same thing over and over and over and over again,
until I'll get dirty and then I'd wash it. And I never changed my shoes. I wore the same shoes
every day. Maybe I had a different sort of shoe for summer. But it was like, you wear what you got
until it wears out and then you go get a new one. That was sort of the concept summer, but it was like, you wear what you got until it wears out and then you
go get a new one. That was sort of the concept. And then there were a few backups for if things got dirty.
And I mean, obviously, when you're in elementary school, you're not really too concerned about expressing
yourself. I mean, I remember enjoying getting dressed up into Halloween costumes even when it wasn't Halloween
and getting into my ballet outfit even when I was not ballet class and wearing cheap plastic
jewelry that I don't know maybe I got from my teacher or something like I remember being excited
about getting dressed up. But when it came to day-to-day life, the way that I wore clothes
was very utilitarian and straight to the point.
It was like we're just wearing clothes to wear clothes.
That's it, you know what I'm saying?
There was no stigma when I was an elementary school kid
around wearing the same outfit twice, okay?
That was not a thing.
All the kids in my school were wearing the same outfit
over and over and over again because that was normal as it should All the kids in my school were wearing the same outfit over and over
and over again because that was normal as it should be, by the way. Like that period
of my life, I think taught me how you're supposed to wear clothes. You know what I'm saying?
You buy it and you wear it until it wears out and then you get a new one if you can. You
know what I'm saying? Now, it's even ridiculous to talk about it because I was actually between ages five and
nine.
Okay.
Did I even have a brain? I don't know.
It's questionable.
In middle school, I feel like things changed a little bit.
I remember going to middle school and I was so used to wearing the same thing every day.
You know, three days in a row, we're the same thing,
until it got dirty, right?
And I remember going to middle school
and realizing, oh wait, this is not what's going on here, okay?
We have people showing up every day in a different outfit,
and we have people showing up every day in like a cute outfit.
And I feel like prior to middle school,
I was just so used to, I don't know, wearing
just kind of comfortable, normal stuff to school everyday. Jeans and like a sweatshirt,
you know, my jeans didn't fit perfectly and my sweatshirt didn't really fit perfectly.
It was like nothing was really cute about it. It was just, it was just clothes. That's
it. It was like survival, you know what I'm saying? We're just putting on clothes to go to school.
I saw a shift in middle school, whereas like, wait, people are kind of expressing themselves
in a different way.
And all the cool kids seem to be wearing this, and they're all kind of matching, and they're
all sort of wearing the Hollister shirts and the Abercrombie jeans and the Ugg boots and
the leggings and the juicy zip-ups
and that like I started to notice people were being stylish at school and on top of that
they were wearing something different every day and I was like oh so we're not wearing the
same thing to school every day anymore okay got it got it, because I didn't know that.
I will also say though, what's interesting is,
I moved towns for middle school.
So I went to a new school with a completely new group of kids.
And this school financially,
it was in maybe a slightly wealthier area.
So I wonder if that had something to do with it.
You know, maybe if I would have stayed in the town that I grew up in, I wouldn't have seen this sort of shift
in priorities as early, or maybe it's just something that happens in middle school. You know,
kids are growing up and they start to value these things more. I don't know. Obviously, in middle
school, kids weren't wearing a completely
new outfit every day. Like, it was still normal. Kids were wearing the same one or two pairs of shoes,
the same jacket, you know, but the shirt was changing and the pants were changing and the hair
accessories were changing. Although I do think changing your shirt every day when
you start to go through puberty makes sense because now you smell like shit, okay? You
didn't smell like shit in elementary school, you could get away with wearing the same shirt
a hundred days in the row because you never smelled. But in middle school you start to smell
like shit. So it kind of makes sense that around this time,
it became less cool to be wearing the same outfit every day
because not only do kids priorities start to shift,
but also kids start worrying about cleanliness
because they kinda have to.
Because for the first time, they're having body odor.
I hate the term B-O, like instead of saying body odor,
B-O, body odor, as a phrase, does not bother me.
Okay, nope, no problem.
B.O.
Like that offends me for some reason.
Okay, so I will say I started to feel this sort of stigma
against outfit repeating in middle school.
But it wasn't really discussed yet
and it wasn't that extreme.
It wasn't on my radar in a way that was impossible to ignore.
It was like in my peripheral.
You know, it was starting to enter my mind.
And subconsciously, I started to feel this pressure
to wear new fresh things every day. But it wasn't
at the forefront of my mind, I feel like. It was almost like I just started doing it and
I didn't really know why. Like it was just as a means to fit in, right? Now in high school,
outfit repeating really became a part of the conversation. What's funny about it is I went to a school
that required us to wear uniforms every day.
So I wore the same khaki skirt and polo shirt every single day.
So it wasn't really a conversation at school,
but when it came to football games or school dances
or even just going to hang out with friends,
there kind of was a real pressure to wear something fresh and new every time.
And I especially noticed it in my friend group.
Like I noticed my friends felt this intense pressure to constantly wear something new.
And you know, we had a big group chat and I remember how much stress went into picking out the perfect
outfit for the football game.
And I remember some of my friends feeling like they had nothing to wear, even though they
definitely had a lot to wear.
You know what I'm saying?
I remember this starting to become an issue, like a serious issue that was being talked
about.
Like, oh, I already wore that.
Oh, but I've already worn that too many times to football games.
I can't wear that again.
Like, I felt like it started to become
more of a conversation that was happening out loud.
Although, I will say, it wasn't a concern for everyone.
There were some of my friends
that just could not have cared less, did not give a fuck.
And then there were some of my friends
that were incredibly concerned about it.
So it sort of depended on them person
in what their priorities were.
And I remember I started to feel this pressure really heavily as well, trying to accumulate
as many options as I could for the least amount of money possible. And that meant me digging
around on weird websites that sold clothes for really cheap, trying to find clothes that I could afford.
This is kind of how I discovered thrifting.
I didn't have my own money to go and buy
the type of options that I wanted from normal stores.
So I was like, I'm going to go thrift shopping
and find things for one 50th of the price.
So I can just have options.
So I don't find myself running into this
outfit repeating stress as often.
I think the outfit repeating stigma
really became obvious for me in a big way
that impacted me.
Once I became a public figure on the internet, particularly on Instagram, I noticed immediately
that in order to fit in with the other public figures on the internet, there are some rules,
you know, not outfit repeating, being one of those rules.
Now I was a rebel when I first started hosting on the internet
for more than just my friends and family.
I did not give a fuck about all of the rules
that come with being a public figure.
Like, you know, outfit repeating isn't cool
or when you posted an Instagram photo,
it has to be perfect or blah, blah, blah.
Like I did not care about that.
I did not listen to that.
Like I knew about this stigma.
I could feel it, but I didn't care at first.
It was almost like in middle school and high school,
I cared a little bit,
but I couldn't necessarily participate fully
because I didn't make my own money.
I didn't have the ability to go and buy a bunch of options whenever I wanted. So,
I was somewhat aware of this stigma, and I'd participate as much as I could, but I couldn't
really care about it that much because I just didn't make my own money. And my parents provided
me with so much. I'm so grateful, but they didn't provide me with this sort of wardrobe that it would
require to not outfit repeat and to not get bored of what's in my closet constantly.
You know what I'm saying?
It's not a reasonable ask from your parents, okay?
And so it weirdly was a concern, but it also kind of couldn't really be a concern.
And then when I left middle school and high school, I just ditched that whole thing altogether.
And I was like, I don't give a fuck.
I do not give a fuck.
Almost as a form of rejection against what it meant
to be a public figure, always wearing something new and fresh,
always wearing something bougie, always looking good,
always doing this, always doing that.
I was like, fuck all that.
It was never something that was actually deliberately discussed,
but it was always this unspoken thing among public figures. You know, it was like but it was always this unspoken thing
among public figures.
It was just this unspoken thing.
Now, I don't know at what point this happened.
Now, eventually I did cave to this mentality,
which I'm not proud of admitting.
Actually, I'm embarrassed to admit this.
I would prefer to not,
but for the sake of this conversation, I will admit that I did eventually cave fully
to this whole stigma around alpha repeating.
And it wasn't like a deliberate choice on my end.
It wasn't like starting today.
Now this means something to me.
It was sort of a slow burn and it happened slowly over time where I just started to care
more and more about wearing the same thing, whether it was posting on social media or going
to a party or whatever.
I slowly but surely started to care about outfit repeating and it became something that was
floating around my mind when I was getting dressed in the morning. I wish I could pinpoint why or how I got to that point, but I can't.
I don't know what happened.
Because I was doing so good in the beginning.
I was like, I don't give a fuck.
Fuck these bad morals that come with being a public figure where you give
a fuck about this stupid stuff, not me.
And then, you know, and it kind of did become me.
You know what I'm saying?
It didn't harm anyone around me or anything, but it harmed me in a way, because it was
something that stressed me out.
Like I would put on an outfit that I really liked, and then I'd be like, but I wear these
pants too much, or but I wear this top too much,
or I've already worn this dress to an event.
And it made me stressed out and unhappy,
as dumb as that sounds.
I would get stressed out if someone would take a photo of me,
and I was like, ooh, that's a cool photo,
but I already wore that shirt in an Instagram photo.
Like, that mattered to me at a point, okay?
I would say probably when I was 18 or 19, no,
I don't know actually, I can't put a finger on the,
on the age, but I did subconsciously and somewhat consciously,
but mainly subconsciously start to care about this.
Now, around this time, I was able to support myself financially
where I could sort of support this mindset.
I made my own money and paid for everything for myself,
for the first time in my life,
and I didn't know how to use discipline with myself yet.
I didn't know I needed to.
So I sort of enabled myself in
a way to shop and buy new things on a consistent basis so that I never had to feel like I was
repeating outfits. This was a priority for me. And for a few years, I was consistently buying
clothes, buying clothes, buying clothes, buying clothes, subconsciously
stressing out about wearing the same thing twice.
And I also found myself getting really bored of clothes after I'd wear them, especially
on social media.
Like if I'd post a photo in something, I'd feel like, I don't like it anymore.
It was crazy.
Like I don't know how I got to this point because it's something that I'm so not proud of like it's a terrible way
To look at close
It's a terrible way to look at your belongings and
It's just a moral blip for me and the funniest part about it is that
Throughout those years of me giving a fuck about outfit repeating, I never once paid attention
enough to what someone else wears to notice if they repeated an outfit or were the same pair
of jeans every time they went out to dinner.
I never ever noticed that.
Ever.
Yet I cared about it.
Now, before we discuss how I got over that phase,
I wanna discuss a little bit more
how I've seen this stigma in the world around me.
Because part of me wonders if my sudden shift
from not caring about outfit repeating at all
to suddenly caring more than I wish to admit,
part of me wonders if that's as a result of
the culture shifting too and it becoming even more stigmatized in society. I don't know.
Now, I know I'm not the only one who has possibly lost control of their values
and has put priority on this in their life. I know I'm not the only one.
But for all of you out there listening, whether this is something you care about or don't care about,
let's just remind ourselves why this stigma around outfit repeating is fucking ridiculous.
Regardless of where we stand on the topic. Number one, repeating your outfit doesn't mean that you don't have style.
I feel like some people feel pressure to wear something new and fresh every time
to display that they're fashionable, but that doesn't really make sense because
that they're fashionable. But that doesn't really make sense
because being fashionable has nothing to do with
how frequently you have a cool new outfit.
It just has to do with how cool the outfit
you're wearing in the present moment is.
Whether you do or don't outfit repeat
has nothing to do with whether or not you're fashionable
and it has everything to do with what your priorities are in life,
and what your resources are in life.
Overall, this stigma is rooted in terrible values.
It's basically quantity over quality to a T.
I can't think of one occasion where quantity is more favorable than quality.
I mean, like even with money, let's say you have a lot of money, but it's all illegal.
You made it all illegally, so you're constantly hiding it.
Would you rather have that quantity, or would you rather have quality, you know, less money,
but you earned it.
I don't know. I mean, maybe maybe some would prefer the illegal money.
And that's fair to, but when it comes to quality of life,
I think on most occasions, it's quality over quantity.
But this concept of outfit repeating, it puts the priority on quantity of outfits
instead of the quality of one or a few really good outfits.
And that just misses the point of fashion because fashion is about expressing yourself just
as much as it's about being comfortable in what you're wearing and appreciating what
you're wearing and appreciating what you're wearing. And when you're so concerned
about quantity, you're much less concerned about those key values that make fashion so exciting.
Fashion is not about quantity, despite what you may believe. It is truly about quality. Like,
I think it's so much cooler to see someone wear two different outfits in rotation that are really cool and really them.
I think it's so much cooler to see that than to see somebody who's constantly in a new outfit, but their closet is a mess and they have a bunch of stuff that's falling apart because maybe they bought a bunch of fast fashion sort of things just to fill their closet. I don't know. I just I think it's more exciting to see
someone really enjoying appreciate the pieces that they do have. One amazing pair of pants
that fit you amazing that are comfortable, that are your style, are worth so much more in your heart
than 10 pairs of shitty pants that cost the same amount as that one pair of pants.
I think the stigma really does push you to want to buy more rather than better, you know?
And that's just not right.
Listen, am I saying it's wrong to buy something new here and there and enjoy it? No.
Am I saying that we all need to be
minimalist and have two outfits in our closet that we wear every day? No. I'm not
saying that. There's this healthy balance, I think, that we can find that's
somewhere in between. I think the key is just removing the stigma around
outfit repeating because without that stigma, without that pressure,
it's so much easier to shop in a way that's responsible.
It's so much easier to appreciate
the pieces of clothing that you do have.
It's still okay to go shopping,
still okay to buy something new for a wedding if you want to,
but I think the true test to see how much you really care
is to ask yourself how you'd feel
wearing the same dress to two different weddings, you know, to ask yourself how you'd feel
wearing the same outfit to two separate parties, two nights in a row, you know?
And I think once you get to a point where your answer is I don't really care.
Then naturally the way that you shop and the way that you live and the way that you appreciate your belongings will shift.
If you're somebody who particularly struggles with this and you have a really hard time
repeating outfits, I'll tell you how I sort of unlearned the whole thing and restructured
that part of my brain.
The first thing I did was look at myself in the face
and say, your priorities are all out of whack.
And you let this dumb idea tiptoe into your mind
and make a home.
And the lease is up and it's time for that dumb idea
to move the fuck out.
You know, it's your fault for falling for this, you know?
And I think the first step is to realize how dumb the ideology is.
And then to look at yourself in the face and say, this is like kind of a mistake that
you made a little bit, caring about this.
But it's okay because it's up to you to change your mind.
Until that little idea in your brain that it's time to move to change your mind and tell that little idea in your brain
that it's time to move out.
You have control over that.
So that's the good news.
It's almost like playing bad cop with yourself
and being a little bit mean to yourself about it.
I don't know.
I don't think being mean to yourself
is the right way to put it,
but taking accountability for letting yourself get to a point where that matters to you.
I think taking accountability for that
sort of makes you feel a little embarrassed,
a little uncomfortable inside,
to a point where it shakes you a little bit.
And it inspires you to want to be better
about the way that you look at things
because you're like, I'm not really actually proud of that. But if you don't take accountability and look at yourself
in the mirror and say, that was kind of not cool when you cared about that, then you might not
shake yourself up enough to change it. And maybe this is just the way that I handle things and the
way that works for me, but that really worked for me. I also think the second step that goes hand in hand with that first step is to look at
the bigger picture.
And if you're somebody who is lucky enough to even have this be a concern, really sit in
that and feel uncomfortable with that.
Because that was something I had to sort of sit with
and feel uncomfortable with, like, that I cared about this.
This mattered to me.
This actually stressed me out at one point.
You know what I'm saying?
How ridiculous is that when there are truly so many more things
to be worried about?
Number one, I let myself sit in the fact
that I let myself buy into something
as materialistic and surface level as that,
and that that's kind of embarrassing to me.
Like, I forced myself to sit in that embarrassment,
and I forced myself to look at the bigger picture,
to look at what life is really about,
and then sort of zoom into this little tiny dumb thing
that I cared about,
and realize how tiny, small, and ridiculous that thing was.
I do this with my anxiety as well.
You know, when I get anxious about something that is mundane or inconsequential,
when I get too wrapped up in the weeds, you know, and I get anxious about something that
is really not that big of a deal. I'll do the same thing. I'll zoom out and I'll look
at the big picture. I'll look at the grand scheme of things and then I'll zoom back into
my tiny little thing and realize,
wait a minute, this doesn't matter. This is not something that actually warrants anxiety. This means nothing
in the bigger picture. And that's how I relieve my anxiety about the small stuff. But it's the same
thing with this. Taking a step back so you can truly see how dumb
that sort of ideology is.
And naturally that made me shop more mindfully,
made me appreciate what I have
and not constantly want more.
And it's inspired me to reinvent things in my closet
over and over and over and over again.
Instead of getting bored of something, I'm inspired to take something I've worn 50 times
and find a new way to wear it, find a way to make it feel new.
It's been so much more inspiring for me, actually, with getting dressed in the morning.
I really love the idea of only having things
in your closet that you really love and appreciate and finding new ways to reinvent those things
instead of constantly wanting the hot new thing. All of this to say, you know, I'm somewhat
embarrassed that I ever got to this point. Now listen, I don't really know when this started for me
I may never figure it out. There were some signs when I was younger
There have been a lot of signs in the world around me, but I can't quite pinpoint how or why it happened
But regardless, I'm glad to say that that is no longer something that I care about. I am now a proud outfit repeater.
And I really think outfit repeating is not only is it so obvious, not only is it so normal,
but I think it's fucking great. It's actually amazing. Like allowing yourself to wear the same thing
twice. Like I have a dress right now that I love,
that I wore to one wedding.
Next time there's a wedding on the calendar,
guess what I'm wearing, that dress.
What a relief.
I don't have to worry about buying a new dress and accept,
nope, what if there's a dinner party that comes up that's like,
you know, a little bit more dressy.
Guess what dress I'm gonna wear?
Probably that fucking dress.
I'm gonna wear that thing over and over again
until it really, it really needs to be retired.
Wearing the same sweatshirt in jeans every day
for a week when I'm on vacation,
what a blissful experience.
Really getting to just enjoy the environment
around me when I'm traveling.
What a blissful experience.
Wearing a cute outfit one night out to a party
and then being like, well, didn't really get that dirty,
I'm gonna wear it again this next night to a different party.
What a blissful experience.
It makes life better,
not to care about outfit repeating.
It genuinely makes life better.
And for those of you who have never thought twice
about outfit repeating, for whatever reason that may be,
this whole thing probably sounds fucking stupid to you.
And honestly, it should,
because this whole thing is stupid.
And the fact that it's even a conversation today
is gonna keep me up at night, okay?
But if you're out there right now,
and you're still concerned about outfit repeating,
let me tell you something.
Set yourself free.
Okay.
Set yourself free and look at the bigger picture.
I'm not judging you.
No one should be judging you.
Okay.
Even though it's kind of ridiculous, no one's judging you, but set yourself free from this.
I had to teach myself this.
Now it's your turn.
I don't know what it is about
me. I'm like really going through this phase where I'm really, I don't know, I'm just
having epiphanies about the way I live my life I guess and the weird little things that I've
abided by without really asking any questions.
This is one of those things.
So that's all I have for today.
Thank you for listening.
Thank you for hanging out.
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Thank you for listening.
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And I'll talk to you soon.
All right.
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