When I stopped dressing to express identity and signaling, I hit a mental loop:
“If I’m choosing quiet, muted clothing so people don’t notice me… isn’t that still signaling?”
It sounds like a gotcha. And for a while, it kept me tangled up.
The difference is between outcome and intention. Yes, everything visible can be interpreted.
People might read my clothes as:
- reserved
- serious
- polished
- understated
- boring
That’s interpretation. It happens whether I try or not. But signaling, in the way style language uses it, is about intentional communication. It’s choosing clothing in order to produce a meaning in others.
What I’m doing is different. The social read is a side effect, not the goal.
The clothing-as-language model assumes: If meaning exists then communication must be happening. But meaning can be assigned without a message being sent.
Still, my style brain was restless. My next thought was: “Well, if I can never escape interpretation, then I might as well manage it.”
That dragged me right back into symbolic dressing for minute.
The reality is I don’t need to manage every possible reading. That’s infinite. People project constantly.
My responsibility stops at:
Does this reduce internal effort?
Does this avoid unnecessary disruption in the setting?
That’s about function.
I’m not trying to say nothing. I’m just not trying to say something.
One is a communicative act. The other is simply existing in clothing.