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Fashion Sense--Not!!
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<blockquote data-quote="trinityroyal" data-source="post: 280578" data-attributes="member: 3907"><p>Well, given that I don't wear flat shoes...yes, they were heels. Thankfully, wedge heeled slip-ons with a fairly thick platform in the front, but still...CLEARLY women's shoes. </p><p></p><p>difficult child used to "borrow" his sister's shoes and nana's galoshes all the time too. Fortunately, Step-D goes in for more industrial-looking footwear than I do so it wasn't so obvious difficult child was wearing girls' shoes. And galoshes, well they're galoshes. When the weather's that bad, I think people stop caring...</p><p></p><p>Daisy and Step, as for the winter/summer thing...</p><p>A lot of people with Sensory Integration issues have trouble interpreting the brain's signals for hot and cold, and it's pretty easy to get them mixed up or reversed entirely.</p><p></p><p>I suffer from this to a degree, and usually check the weather report in the morning to know what kind of clothes I should be wearing based on the temperature, rather than how I feel.</p><p></p><p>As a teen, I used to live in shorts with tights or long-johns under them during most of the winter. I also used to wear my school uniform kilt with the knee socks rather than those unbearable woolly stockings they had for us. Ick! My bare legs always felt boiling hot in the winter. Might be worth exploring Sensory Integration Disorder (Sensory Integration Disorder (SID)). There are lots of resources available to help with this.</p><p></p><p>Trinity</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="trinityroyal, post: 280578, member: 3907"] Well, given that I don't wear flat shoes...yes, they were heels. Thankfully, wedge heeled slip-ons with a fairly thick platform in the front, but still...CLEARLY women's shoes. difficult child used to "borrow" his sister's shoes and nana's galoshes all the time too. Fortunately, Step-D goes in for more industrial-looking footwear than I do so it wasn't so obvious difficult child was wearing girls' shoes. And galoshes, well they're galoshes. When the weather's that bad, I think people stop caring... Daisy and Step, as for the winter/summer thing... A lot of people with Sensory Integration issues have trouble interpreting the brain's signals for hot and cold, and it's pretty easy to get them mixed up or reversed entirely. I suffer from this to a degree, and usually check the weather report in the morning to know what kind of clothes I should be wearing based on the temperature, rather than how I feel. As a teen, I used to live in shorts with tights or long-johns under them during most of the winter. I also used to wear my school uniform kilt with the knee socks rather than those unbearable woolly stockings they had for us. Ick! My bare legs always felt boiling hot in the winter. Might be worth exploring Sensory Integration Disorder (Sensory Integration Disorder (SID)). There are lots of resources available to help with this. Trinity [/QUOTE]
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