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  1. #1
    Join Date
    3rd November 06
    Location
    Anchorage, Alaska, USA
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    New Member From Alaska

    I've enjoyed reading XMarks for several months now and thought I'd join the forum so I could ask a question every now and then. I started wearing kilts in June, 2006, and from what I've read, I've started in a manner that has progressed backwards from most. Lest I be misunderstood, I didn't start out wearing my kilt backwards!

    I'm an air traffic controller, and I work in a building with a lot of radar scopes, no windows, and where the only people that see us are coworkers and the very occasional visitor who stops by for a tour. About May this year, my employer announced that they intended to implement a new dress code in September. Up until then, our dress code was pretty lenient. Especially since we aren’t generally visible to the public, the requirement was to dress in a neat, clean manner which would not erode public confidence in our professionalism. Added to that is the traditionally casual atmosphere of Alaska. Here, a clean pair of jeans, a casual shirt, and the insulated boots you wear to avoid frostbite will get you into our best restaurants or the theatre.

    While my employer’s old dress code certainly allowed kilts, the new dress code appeared it would allow kilts too. When I checked with my employer, they agreed – albeit in a vague and noncommittal way – that kilts would be allowed after September. Several years prior, I'd seen Patrick Norton wear a Utilikilt on TechTV and thought that it looked pretty sharp. At the time, though, I couldn't imagine where I'd feel comfortable wearing one. Here was my excuse to wear a kilt! I ordered a couple of Utilikilt Mockers (their casual dress version) and started wearing them to work several times a week.

    The atmosphere at work was one of dread and lament as my coworkers contemplated having to change how they’d dressed after nearly 20 years of no dress code at all. (Our workforce consists largely of long-time employees like myself, most with nearly 20 years of service.) By wearing a kilt, I was able to inject a little fun into the impending change. Although it was fun, I was primarily motivated by a desire to take the edge off of being told how to dress. For me, I was sort of saying, “I’ll dress your way, but it’s still my way!”

    I started wearing my kilt three to five times a week. I’ve never been much of a conformist, so nobody was too surprised. I always wore a nice dress shirt and tie, some Doc Martin-style boots and scrunched-down socks, and one of my ever-present Scottish wool sweaters. I received plenty of positive comments (mainly from women). I figured if I could establish my kilt as something classy under the more lenient dress code, I’d have a better chance of the kilt being allowed under the new “business casual” dress code that was coming in a few months.

    I’m told that I was a topic of discussion at the national level of our organization (I work for the government) just before the new dress code was implemented in September. When the dress code went into effect, the briefing to all employees started with “Yes, kilts are allowed.” I was quite happy with that result and interested to see if anyone else would wear a kilt. Several other people had mentioned they were going to “protest the dress code" by wearing a kilt too. I don’t think they understood that I wasn’t trying to somehow punish my employer for changing the dress code, but that I wanted to preserve a bit of who I was.

    I don’t know if I’ve properly explained my exact motivations for wearing a kilt for the first time, but it turns out that whatever those reasons were, they didn’t really matter. By this accident, I discovered that I really like wearing a kilt. It’s a good fit with how I feel about myself. That’s the good part . . . a minor distraction follows.

    Once the dress code was actually implemented, a lot of people became angry (and there were many other issues for which they had cause to be angry). A few people started wearing clothes intended to irk their employer. Nationally, probably a half-dozen men decided to wear dresses to work, stemming from their mistaken belief that separate dress codes could not legally be applied to men and women. Although I know of several people at other facilities who wore the kilt in a neat and respectful manner, there were also a few people who rented cheap costumes that caricatured kilts. Finally, out of frustration with improper behavior, my employer banned all sorts of garments including togas, sarongs, wraps, men in dresses . . . and kilts.

    Up until this point, I had been wearing kilts only to work, still getting comfortable with wearing something unique in public. For a moment, I wondered what was I going to do with my kilts. But I quickly decided I wasn’t going to stop wearing kilts just because the dress code had changed. So I started wearing kilts wherever my wife and I went. I’ve seen the entire gamut of reactions at shops and restaurants, most of them neutral or positive, just like the reception of my coworkers. And, as it turns out, our new dress code and the prohibition of kilts is suspended during midnight shifts. So I still wear a kilt to work once a week late at night.

    I’ve got a great box-pleated kilt on order from Matt Newsome in 16 ounce Brodie Hunting Weathered (it should be only a couple of weeks away), and a really sharp-looking Freelander sporran coming from over the pole. I’m still working on selecting some good hose, but I really look forward to having a more traditional kilt and accessories in my wardrobe very soon.

    Abax

  2. #2
    Join Date
    20th February 06
    Location
    San Francisco Bay Area
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    Welcome from California. And thanks for a great and interesting first post.

    The old 'Patrick Norton" excuse, eh? That's what got me started, too. Just don't bring a sledge hammer to work.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    27th March 06
    Location
    Ferintosh, Dumfries, Scotland
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    walcome tae the rabble


    guid oan ya fur fin'in us...

    slainte mhath




  4. #4
    Join Date
    6th July 06
    Location
    Oxfordshire, England
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    Welcome from a Scot in England.

    Very interesting first post. I do hope you are going to argue through the case that wearing a kilt in no way compromises the professionalism expected of you by the public and that you can wear one on any shift.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    6th November 05
    Location
    The Hague, The Netherlands
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    Welcome!


  6. #6
    Join Date
    27th September 04
    Location
    Amelia County, Virginia, USA
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    Welcome to the kilted maddness, from one of the kilted Virginians here.
    "A day spent in the fields and woods, or on the water should not count as a day off our allotted number upon this earth."
    Jerry, Kilted Old Fart.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    9th June 06
    Location
    Midland, TX
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    Welcome from Southeastern New Mexico! That was a great first post. You do realize you've set the bar high for yourself now, right? Remember some piccies when you get that box pleat from Matt around your bum. I have a box pleat on order from him as well. But, mine is probably still a couple of months away.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    16th July 06
    Location
    Sierra Vista, Arizona, USA
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    Welcome from SE Arizona, but born and raised in Alaska. My Uncle was ATC at Merrill way back. I've got a tank waiting for my Brother when he comes to visit from AK this year, I thought that 8 yards of wool might convert him. O'Neille

  9. #9
    Join Date
    14th December 05
    Location
    Coeur d Alene, ID
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    Welcome to the rabble from the hills and streams of northern Idaho!

  10. #10
    Join Date
    27th October 05
    Location
    Queensland, Australia
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    Abax, A fine introduction.
    You're not alone in the rebel stance around here; there's often that thread of anti conformity with kilt wearers (in another time would we be logging on to suitsme.com?)(not bloddylikely).
    It's a funny sort of irony since the kilt is a traditional garment! Well it's an irony I enjoy all the same and you're very welcome to XMarks from me. And all the better that it's lead you to wear the Kilt.
    Erin.

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