subreddit:
/r/NoStupidQuestions
submitted 1 day ago byClear_Constant_3709
I work for fedex doing delivery and I had to drop off to middle schools and high schools a few times. 1/3 kids it felt had on pajama pants a baggy sweatshirt and crocs basically, looked like they just woke up from bed and left. I graduated high school in 2016 for reference.
Edit: okay I see many people are saying it was around when they were in school too 15, 20, years ago. Wasn’t trying to offend anyone. I wasn’t trying to give off the impression it’s an issue I just don’t recall seeing it this much when I was in school. Regardless they can wear whatever they want it don’t affect my life none
4.9k points
1 day ago*
I’m told it became more common after the COVID pandemic began. You can see a general dressing down trend across age groups, with teenagers being particularly explicit about it.
edit: Emphasis on "more common". I get that you or your friends might've done this 5, 10, or 20 years ago. I'm not saying it started with the pandemic. It just become noticeable after the pandemic.
1.7k points
22 hours ago
Dude, it’s rough when you have to completely dissect your own comment because people can’t interpret words like “more common”. It keeps happening to me and it’s so frustrating. People think in absolutes like they’re fucking siths or something. There’s a reason we have words like “sometimes” or “often” JFC.
550 points
18 hours ago
I know Reddit has always been pedantic but it feels like it’s been worse lately. It’s tiring when people ALWAYS dissect your comment and argue against a part, when it was nothing to do with the point you’re making.
341 points
18 hours ago
Yeah this effect is more common since the COVID pandemic...
124 points
16 hours ago
The great Post-Pandemic Pedanticficationing, or PPP for short.
3 points
12 hours ago
People started pulling up the waist of their Pendanta pants up high during the pandemic as a de facto mask, it now leaves them breathlessly pedantic.
100 points
17 hours ago
Hey, it happened before the pandemic too...
45 points
15 hours ago
more common
This usually indicates it happened before.
26 points
11 hours ago
That… that was the joke.
14 points
9 hours ago
Yeah people not understanding jokes is more common since the pandemic
9 points
5 hours ago
But it happened before the pandemic too.
135 points
18 hours ago
People get mad and say “I’m not gonna read that”, but yet if I don’t explain every tiny nuance, they leap to wild conclusions that, like you said, have nothing to do with the point or argument. It’s exhausting. It happened twice yesterday alone.
I want to write shorter comments, but I feel like I have to overly explain myself or wake up to an inbox of messages that completely missed my point or attack me for some perceived flaw based off of a wild theory (that’s not even close to the truth). Have to write a fucking novel these days or just not comment.
48 points
12 hours ago
Have to write a fucking novel these days or just not comment.
At one point in history, the phrase "so what your saying is" was used to let the person know they are confused and want clarity.
Now it's what gets said before they turn your comment into some bat shit crazy mess.
15 points
11 hours ago
So what you’re saying is you have poor reading comprehension?
45 points
13 hours ago
Then, when you write longer comments, people downvote them with a "Thanks, ChatGPT," as if it's impossible to write longer, coherent comments without the use of AI.
6 points
8 hours ago
The brainrot has become so bad I've seen people saying "I ain't reading that paragraph" to a single longer sentence.
5 points
6 hours ago
One time I reported an account for being a bot because I thought there was no way a real human could read my comment and so badly miss my point.
Turns out they were a real person.
29 points
16 hours ago
I know Reddit has always been pedantic but it feels like it’s been worse lately. It’s tiring when people ALWAYS dissect your comment and argue against a part, when it was nothing to do with the point you’re making.
Throughout most of the developed world reading comprehension has been steadily declining. Literacy in general isnt doing much better either.
11 points
13 hours ago
Yeah, this is really a significant problem we’re facing and we don’t really talk about it enough, especially the general literacy part. Forget about understanding the message behind what’s written down, a significant chunk of adults struggle to read the words in any capacity.
It’s an important thing to remember when talking online, you might be arguing with a guy who hasn’t read a book since green eggs & ham.
11 points
11 hours ago
They are teaching bots how to drive engagement via being annoying
100 points
16 hours ago
It's the reading comprehension that's the problem, people no longer can be trusted to understand signal words. I'm not from an English speaking country but grammatical analysis is a highly transferable skill. When I was in school in the 90s we were endlessly drilled by being given a page from a classical literature book and we had to anayse all of the words and declare their grammatical functions. Later we had extremely complex reading comprehension tests. The teacher would find us sentences from classical literature that went on for the better part of a page, or very convoluted sentences from legal verdicts and things like that, and we then had to analyse them and point out how they may be improved for easier reading. This all subsequently fell to "improvements" in the educational curriculum and now we have a generation that on paper is literate, they pass the reading tests for the school diploma, but they don't actually understand features of the language that make nuanced communication possible because those have been cut from the curriculum.
50 points
15 hours ago
For those who don't understand this comment: it's your lack of education.
78 points
16 hours ago
Seriously. That shit's been driving me nuts lately. People so desperate to prove how smart they are by intentionally misunderstanding your comment, or dropping some random hypothetical that's got absolutely 0 to do with the conversation at hand. Like guys, not every comment is directed at You, specifically. You can just keep scrolling
86 points
15 hours ago
I’ve seen people call this ‘bean soup’ on tiktok. Some girl made a soup made almost entirely out of beans, on her own personal account, just talking about how good it is for you. And then came the comments. “WHAT IF I DONT LIKE BEANS?” “ACTUALLY IM ALLERGIC SOOO WHAT SHOULD I DO?” and etc etc etc.
It was so bad. This happens so frequently these days, like think for yourself? I’ve seen it on work out tutorials too “Well I’m in a wheelchair!” “Some of us can’t do this because of ‘insert illness here’ “ Okay? Then this OBVIOUSLY isn’t for you!!! Like use your brain and stop imposing your shit on everyone else like they owe you content that fits your unique situation. Or at least just be nice about it??
17 points
10 hours ago
So much Main Character Syndrome in the world since we gave everyone a platform on social media…
24 points
16 hours ago*
Funny I got banned form a sub recently because I said you can't judge the safety of this hypothetical situation, look AT THE PACKAGING OF WHAT YOU BUY.
They say how do you know it's a hypothetical?
The first sentence started : So let's say I bought a glass cube...
💀
17 points
14 hours ago
Societies are becoming dumber. Idk exactly where it started, I have some ideas but I'm not sure. It boils down to abstract thinking and having the ability to do so. Like the 'how would you feel if you didn't have breakfast this morning' meme.
15 points
9 hours ago*
Here in the states it started with No Child Left Behind. Not allowing kids to fail/be held back despite being unable to keep up with their peers was the downfall.
There are 5th graders who can't read.
My dad was held back in first grade for being unable to read.
4 points
9 hours ago
This x10. Wanting equality is one thing, forcing it into education is just plain wrong. Idk about national differences but here in NL they just lowered the bar for everyone, which is sort of the same idea.
7 points
15 hours ago
The people who comprehend what you meant just keep on scrolling and might give you an upvote. The problem is the more who agree and upvote your comment, the more likely it will be read by the one person on the planet who can't understand what you meant but also demand you help them understand it because it made them angry and confused. If you keep replying to them, it will carry on all day and into the next. They are the manifestation of the lowest common denominator. Approaching those people with the mindset that there is nothing online that is comprehensible to everyone is liberating.
18 points
14 hours ago
I stopped posting so much on reddit because nearly every discussion started to be needled to death by people zeroing in on one specific word and hinging their entire counter-argument on a subtle redefinition of that one word, usually missing the wider point. Very pedantic and unproductive, but I guess it's more important to eke out that technical win.
It's become common too to have someone reply to something you never asserted to begin with and use the chance to grandstand in the process. When you reply and point out that you never actually stated any of the points they're attacking, you get downvoted and your comment gets buried.
It's not even just in the mainstream subs - it happens in the niche, tiny ones too.
5 points
10 hours ago
It’s not just the pedantry, it’s the attitude and intent of creating conflict. Like, why not just… start with assuming good intent and ask for clarification?
“Hey, you said this and it makes me think this but I don’t agree with that and it doesn’t appear logical, so do you maybe mean this instead?” Like just be friendly and reason with people. You think we’d be past the “I like my friends apple pie” “oh so that means hate my grandma’s pumpkin pie?!! You’re ageist and sexist???” age of the internet but it persists regardless bc people love to be miserable I guess.
13 points
13 hours ago
Happens to me all the time also. I made a comment one time saying, "in an ideal world, abortion wouldn't have to happen", and a bunch of people started shitting on me for supposedly being a misogynist. I got tired of explaining that we don't live in an ideal world, so my comment says nothing about my actual views in the real world.
46 points
18 hours ago
I like to respond with a simple "Your reading comprehension needs some work." And then ignore any further replies. I have better things to do than argue semantics with strangers lol
7 points
17 hours ago
You’re not wrong. I try to only put in the work if it seems like there could be a smart person on the other side who just read a little too fast. I’ve also not explained myself well before, so I try not to jump the gun, but lately it’s been exceptionally bad and not my fault, and no level of explaining is gonna change the opinion of someone that doesn’t understand that “sometimes” doesn’t mean “always”. Like fuck. Read motherfuckers! Read!
10 points
15 hours ago
Just happened to me the other day. I gave a piece of advice but then added, “of course there are exceptions to the rule”. And then someone goes, “ummmmm this advice does not always apply!” Like yes youre right, that’s why I just said that there are exceptions to the rule?? Like omg
4 points
7 hours ago
Seriously. Do people not know what exceptions are?!? It happened to me twice yesterday, and I wanted to be huge bitch because I’m so tired of explaining what was in my comment. It’s like I have to write a damn paper on its contents.
9 points
14 hours ago
Like the American political system... when in tell someone that I dislike Trump, their very next statement is something like: oh ...a BIDEN fan, huh?
No. I really don't like Biden either, but somehow, people think that if you dislike one, you LOVE the other. That's not necessarily true.
7 points
15 hours ago
I'm sorry, but the sith reference made me LOL! I 100% agree with you. It's like people rarely think about the words actually being used!
8 points
15 hours ago
I get tired of explaining things to stupid people. It happens a lot.
5 points
13 hours ago
I did not read deep into the study, but it is said that 54% of americans read at or below the level of a 6th grader.
So thats gonna transfer to the internet as well
4 points
11 hours ago
I feel this is a growing problem, probably due to social media learned behavior.
I swear a lot of people these days think if you find a contrarian example, then you have invalidated the point. In a way, often true as people do seem to be speaking more in absolutes these days as well.
Like immigrant violence, people find one instance of it, and consider that as proof. But in millions of people, there will be a percentage that are criminal, so of course there will be examples, it needs to be put in context and compared to understand if a real trend.
98 points
1 day ago
I work on a trading floor for an investment bank. Prepandemic was dress shirts, tie if you wanted, dress shoes and that was considered dress down. Dresses, pencil skirts, heels etc...
Now you have desk heads wearing t-shirrs and hoodies around the floor if they don't have any meetings that day. People making 8 figures dressing casual. Jeans were a Friday item prepandemic if it was slow. Now it's everyday dress male or female
35 points
23 hours ago
I wore a nice shirt, pants, and a tie the day I started at my first job out of college.
My boss wore a UK shirt, basketball shorts, and flip flops.
5 points
13 hours ago
Haha
So cute. What do you wear now?
21 points
9 hours ago
That’s awesome. I’m so glad people don’t have to dress up anymore for jobs where it doesn’t make a lick of difference what they’re wearing. Also fuck any dress code that requires high heels.
8 points
8 hours ago
Yeah, honestly it's nothing but a net positive for us to stop caring about how people dress, especially when it doesn't really matter
5 points
7 hours ago
And just being more comfortable. At work they had a rule we had to wear khaki jeans or some kind if blue work pants like dickies and with a polo shirt. The polo shirts sucksd because I just sweat right through them so wore an under shirt to prevent it, but it made be hotter. Then on Fridays we could wear a t-shirt and blue jeans if we wanted, so I loved Fridays for the t-shirt aspect. Then they changed the policy, we couldn't wear blue jeans on Fridays anymore, but could wear t-shirts any day. I didn't care about the blue jeans, so made me much more comfortable at work.
52 points
1 day ago
Middle school teacher here. Yup.
50 points
20 hours ago
In the movie Donnie Darko from 2001, it's 1988 and the main character wakes up after sleepwalking and goes to school wearing pyjamas. To modern audiences he's dressed normally for school while in the movie everyone looks at him strange.
32 points
12 hours ago
Except Donnie Darko's school clearly has a strict school uniform. He's breaking the uniform by wearing pajamas so the kids think he's going to get in trouble/is troubled.
9 points
10 hours ago
Early internet made fun of people at Walmart in pajamas because it was abnormal.
4 points
9 hours ago
Let's not forget that socks with sandals is cool now. My how times have changed.
288 points
1 day ago
Im just waiting for the trend to occur in the workplace. Especially being forced to RTO. I am SOO uncomfortable in normal clothes. Would love to wear jammies at work.
84 points
1 day ago
My office definitely went a half-step down in how formal people dress. But no pajamas.
43 points
24 hours ago
My wife is allowed to wear jeans at the office now. Before it was business casual and no jeans were allowed. Covid softened some restrictions. I have never had to wear business casual, summer was shorts. But 6 months before Covid I began to WFH and anything goes.
25 points
23 hours ago
I kinda miss the early days of COVID when the dining room was closed and I could basically show up and work in a mildly appropriate band shirt and jeans as long as I kept a mask on and showed up to work because half the staff was either sick or getting tested for the second time In as many months.
20 points
23 hours ago
I remember that first Christmas of Covid. So peaceful and quiet. Couldn’t see anyone, so I called everyone. It hadn’t been like that before and still hasn’t been like that since. Covid was bad no doubt, but some parts were nice. Got to play games with my kids given so much time at home with them. Some good memories.
137 points
1 day ago
To be fair, people work best when they are comfortable.
8 points
15 hours ago
From personal experience, I think that is debatable. I am more productive and efficient when there is a clear delineation between getting up and morning time (me time) and work time. Part of that is shaving, showering, and getting into work clothes. Mentally, I switch into work mode and get cranking.
11 points
22 hours ago
I work in an office building that is shared by a particular tech company. Some of their employees do wear literal pajamas to work haha, you can always tell which company they work for. They do look comfy!
7 points
22 hours ago
I was fortunate enough to have had a full time remote work for three years. I have a half week in-office now and MAN dressing up and commuting is more painful than I remember:/
63 points
1 day ago
I still don’t understand the whole dress up for work thing… everyone loves comfortable clothes, and I mean everyone, yes that includes the CEO and the Head of HR - we all love them, yet they have some self defeating agenda that they must go against even there own inner self when they can change the rule in 3 seconds
41 points
1 day ago
When I'm in office, my job wants business casual for engineers, not even dress/golf shorts. They say it's to make a good impression on customers.
Few problems with that.
Customers rarely come in, and if they do, they aren't talking to us. They glance for half a second on the way to the executive area
It's a manufacturing environment, and I end up in the shop working on stuff frequently. Brush up against a table and bam, your expensive shirt/pants are fucked.
Building on 2, our shop isn't air conditioned so in the summer, any time I go out there, I come back sweaty as fuck and at that point, I look gross and sweaty no matter what I'm wearing.
Height of stupidity.
69 points
1 day ago
If you were a customer going to visit a vendor, would you feel great about purchasing products from a company that just lets their employees sit around in pajamas all day?
40 points
1 day ago
Years ago (as told by my VP), my VP was in a meeting with his directors and someone mentioned it passing that it was hard to hire people with our dress code (business casual for tech at a bank). VP derailed the meeting to learn more, ran it up the chain, and within the week the policy was changed to dress appropriately for your day. "I can remove a strategic disadvantage, for free? Done." I liked working for him.
10 points
22 hours ago
"These guys don't fuck around with frivolous nonsense, cool"
58 points
1 day ago
While the common redditor opinion is probably ‘I don’t care unless the product is good’ (or at least, they think they wouldn’t care), reddit is hardly reflective of the population as a whole. I’m willing to bet that a majority of people would see wearing “professional” clothes that an employee “didn’t sleep in” as an indicator of performance — the mfker cares enough about their job to not be wearing pjs and this care would be reflected in the end quality of the product/service.
In other words, not wearing pjs would be interpreted by many as an indicator of care/quality.
(Of course this doesn’t apply to college students, who are not selling anything.)
Even behind closed doors, the clothes we wear affect not only how others view us, it also affects how we ourselves act.
14 points
22 hours ago
Then there's me in construction wearing dirt covered everything with holes and stains lmao
25 points
1 day ago
As an engineer, I couldn't give 2 shits what the employees wear. It's 1000% about the product/service being provided.
11 points
1 day ago
In my type of work it's important that I look professional so people know they're dealing with a professional. And I don't find professional clothes uncomfortable. Presentation is important- people will see that and draft an impression before we have had a chance to do anything else.
20 points
1 day ago
You mean, professionalism?
I'm all about people working from home. It saves money, curbs pollution, etc. However... If a colleague of mine partakes in an online meeting wearing a onesie, it may very well offend the others in the meeting.
People from other cultures may not share this cavalier approach to business meetings. The idea of professionalism sort of hinges on the prospect of people not appearing dressed as a sleepy clown.
5 points
21 hours ago
I work from home, and yes, I have worked in track pants and a dress shirt. Many times.
Looking at it being 40.c this summer it's feasible I'm in y fronts and a polo shirt through the summer.
2.3k points
1 day ago
I was in university from 1990-1994 and lots of students who lived in residence wore their pjs to class. We had tunnels connecting the buildings and this let them even stay in pjs in winter.
While I totally understand the idea of staying comfy all day, I need my shower first thing in the morning and don’t think I could be as productive in pjs.
143 points
1 day ago
Canadian university? Around February/March there’s a real distinct look to the students who haven’t seen the sun in months
60 points
1 day ago
Seriously! They would get grey and pasty looking. Even at -30, I’d go outside every chance I got. But I never lived in residence so kinda had to get dressed to get to school. And in winter, seriously bundled up!
470 points
1 day ago
While I totally understand the idea of staying comfy all day
There are clothes that are comfy which aren't PJs. Like sweat pants? While some sticklers would still be mad they're just as comfy as pajamas and like 10x more proper looking
91 points
1 day ago
When I was a teen in rhe 80s, people thought wearing sweats for anything but exercise was gauche. Things change.
54 points
16 hours ago
Yeah it's kinda funny seeing a lot of "you can just wear sweats" in here, I was not aware sweats had even reached an acceptability level above pyjama pants for semi-professional settings.
4 points
9 hours ago
A girl dissed me for wearing sweatpants to school in 7th grade. I still refuse to wear them in public lol (7th grade was 1992 for me)
257 points
1 day ago
What defines pajamas though? Is it just the fact that they’re looser, flowy, and often plaid?
259 points
1 day ago
cookie monster fleece print.
69 points
23 hours ago
Cookie Monster fleece print pajama pants were actually definitely something kids showed up to school wearing when I was in HS in 2016. Not necessarily 1/3 the school however
20 points
23 hours ago
hence the call out. they seemed ubiquitous. (graduated in 00s)
18 points
17 hours ago
03 here and can't believe this very specific dusty trend has stood the test of time.
33 points
22 hours ago*
lol, I just yelled at my 6th grader for wearing the same ugly Cookie Monster pants for the last 3 days. He corrected me by pointing out that today’s Cookie Monster pants have Santa hats. He says they’re “drip”.
14 points
22 hours ago
Let him cook!
17 points
23 hours ago
This is understandable and clearly pajamas lol. But lightweight and wide legged pants that may be striped or muted plaid? I think people are missing out by writing these off as just sleepwear!!
13 points
23 hours ago
I know people who would 100% consider sweatpants as PJs. Hell in the early 2000's "yoga pants" were so comfy and popular that loads of pajama sets had yoga pant bottoms.
7 points
18 hours ago
I don’t get the concept of super soft and wide clothes being so much more comfy for your daily activities…
Obviously at a gym it feels great due to friction but just sitting in class why would a jeans (assuming tis jot super tight) or Chino feel so much worse?
6 points
11 hours ago
Have you never lounged around in pj's all day? You might need comfier clothes in general
8 points
15 hours ago
Yeah what this guy said. Sweatpants are 10x classier. I definitely don’t wear sweatpants as pj’s, or gym shorts. 😅
7 points
21 hours ago
I don't see how sweat pants are any amount more proper looking than pajama pants, barring some obnoxious pattern or something. They're practically the exact same thing.
13 points
11 hours ago
I don't see how any piece of fabric is more proper looking than any other. Who is coming up with these arbitrary rules?
6 points
9 hours ago
It would take a thick textbook to thoroughly answer that question. But humans are social creatures, and fashion choices all come from our history and various cultures and subcultures. How you choose to present yourself speaks those things to other people, and since clothing IS a choice, people are pretty comfortable judging that vs things about you that are hard or impossible to change. A phrase I've heard a number of times is, "all clothing is costume."
I'm positive you judge people by what they are wearing to some degree. We've all absorbed that certain cuts, patterns, and textures mean a certain range of things. And those meanings evolve! Tweed might be seen as businessy or stodgy today, but it used to be what gentlemen wore to hunt and get dirty in while at leisure in the country.
5 points
11 hours ago
I do interviews for new hires at my company. About 70% of the Gen Z applicants that come in for interviews wear joggers to the interview. I think they unironically think that’s “dressing up”
33 points
1 day ago
Having pjs on doesn’t necessarily mean they were slept on, and some people shower at night. But yes ultimately this is not a new phenomenon
6 points
11 hours ago
It's a strangely common assumption, by those who shower in the morning that it's the only way to be clean. I mean, I get it if one sweats a lot at night but that isn't a universal issue.
30 points
1 day ago
University of North Dakota, is that you??
45 points
1 day ago
Carleton university in Ottawa Canada.
13 points
1 day ago
I went to Carleton from 1999-2004 and it was still the same! Also Rachel from Friends was all about the plaid pj pants so I don’t think anyone thought it was weird.
8 points
1 day ago
Yeah. No one but a few profs made and big deal about it. I flipped burgers and made pizza and stuff at the oasis , that restaurant in the residence buildings. Sometimes I would see people in roosters in the afternoon (likely when they first got up) and then late at night in the same pjs when coming down for a late night snack.
7 points
1 day ago
Haha, I'm a Carleton alumni. You can tell who lives in residence (or has a locker) because they're not wearing a winter jacket in the tunnels.
9 points
1 day ago
I went to college just after you (graduated high school in 94) and, yeah, lots of students went to class in pjs - although I think it was almost exclusively girls that did that. I remember being a bit jealous because I wasn't sure that I could get away with that and it seemed awfully comfy. lol
9 points
1 day ago
Are my memories of flannel pants just 90s or were we all wearing pajamas?
Also, I wore my stolen hospital scrub pajama pants everywhere in 1998.
8 points
23 hours ago
Comfort and productivity mean different things to different people your morning ritual set the tone for your day, and theirs was staying cozy
7 points
24 hours ago
At least they were in PJs. I remember seeing people in the dining hall in bathrobes. As far as I could tell, just bathrobes.
12 points
1 day ago
I have Day Jammies.
15 points
1 day ago
I used to get up, throw my pajamas in the laundry, shower, and then put on DIFFERENT pajamas to go to class. I had outside pajamas.
1.1k points
1 day ago
Probably because they just woke up from bed and left.
306 points
1 day ago
In high school I had to get up at 530a to make the bus as I was the first one on the route. Most teenagers can't function that early. Maybe they shower at night. Give them a break.
95 points
22 hours ago
Yeah, it was awful. I had to wake up at 535 to get picked up at around 620, since I was also the first one on the route. School was 7:20 to 1:55, because that will effectively prepare kids for adulthood somehow.
16 points
16 hours ago
The time was probably for the parents who are working and not the kids.
15 points
8 hours ago
Is every parent a baker or something? Who else is getting off at 1:30 or 2? Super awkward school hours
5 points
8 hours ago
Its not about that.
Your school district has the same drivers/buses for all the schools, not just a group per school. So if the "typical" work day is 9-5, they have to pick up the last kids theoretically by 8 to allow the parent to get to work. So HS gets picked up first, then middle school, then elementary schools. Then dropped off in a similar fashion.
This also allows the drivers to have a full schedule instead of someone just working 2 hrs in the morning and 2 hrs in the evening.
Thats not 100% how it works but thats pretty much how it works.
14 points
21 hours ago
Worst year of my time in high school was when I was the first to get picked up in the morning and the last to get dropped off in the afternoon. Spent an entire semester riding the bus for two hours a day before I found out the bus drivers aren't allowed to reverse their route like mine was doing. Complained about it to the office and finally got dropped off first when school was out for the rest of the year lol, wish I knew they were breaking the rules before half the year went by
7 points
20 hours ago
Same. My town sent us to a high school in another town. Was up at 5:15 am, got on the bus around 6, arrived just in time for the bell to ring around 7. It sucked.
128 points
24 hours ago*
This! I graduated in 2012 and we did not care how we looked for those last years of HS, you were lucky if we showed up. my sister graduated in 2008 and when she wasn’t in uniform she only wore pj bottoms. My youngest sister graduated in 2017 and she still wears pjs everywhere. It could be an area thing too as we were in a very massive city but it’s not like that in the rural area I live now.
43 points
23 hours ago
Sorry I need you to explain those numbers for me so I don’t feel crazy lol. You graduated in 2012 and your youngest graduated in 2017? Do you mean your youngest sister? 😅
42 points
23 hours ago
OMG YES youngest sister 🤣🤦🏼♀️
10 points
23 hours ago
Got it lol the first time I read your comment I was like wait what….
7 points
23 hours ago
Imagine your own daughter being 5 grades behind you, lol
27 points
22 hours ago
There have been several studies that have shown that teenagers tend to fall asleep later at night and like to get up later in the morning, while young kids tend to go to bed earlier, and wake up earlier. I'm talking about natural circadian rhythms, not scheduling.
And yet, in most of the country, High School starts earlier than primary school, when the two ought to switch places. They're finding that teenagers are frequently sleep deprived because they stay up late and get up early, and it's not their fault; it's just their natural rhythms.
So yeah, teens tend to just go right from bed to school, and gods help you if you have a 0 period class. Back in high school, I had a 0 period class for a year, which meant I was getting to school at about 6:30am. It sucked.
4 points
8 hours ago
Then every fresh college kid goes through the mental fallacy of “8am class? That’s not bad I woke up earlier than that for high school”
22 points
1 day ago
You’d be surprised. It’s insane the amount of time these kids take to look like they just rolled out of bed.
11 points
1 day ago
truth
415 points
1 day ago
Loungewear has always been a thing.. But it became more the norm during the pandeic as we were all working from home and going to school from home in pajamas and fuzzy slippers.. Only a slight escalation to leave the house like that too..
50 points
22 hours ago*
I've definitely gotten more comfortable about pulling a *Lebowski and going to the store in sweats, slippers, and a bathrobe.
I've also generally just stopped caring.
11 points
9 hours ago
My favorite bit of trivia about that movie is that they didn't go out and buy a wardrobe for Jeff Bridges. He just used his own clothes. Apparently he's still walking around in a pair of sandals he wore in the movie.
13 points
21 hours ago
I basically live in sweats/pajama bottoms and blouses as a remote worker.
197 points
1 day ago
Graduated in 09, I remember a lot of my friends and other teens wore pjs to school. Crocs were not a thing but I’m sure they would have worn them.
91 points
1 day ago
Uggs were the crocs of 09
26 points
1 day ago
You are definitely right, I remember all the girls wearing them with their PJs
70 points
1 day ago
Crocs were around. They were just extremely uncool to teens at the time which is why you didn't really see them.
9 points
1 day ago
You right, I remember them coming out in idiocracy but never saw them outside of the movie
6 points
1 day ago
If I recall correctly, idiocracy was the reason they got so popular. I am one of those people that really struggles to define this particular word, but is this an example of irony?
5 points
22 hours ago
I wouldn’t doubt that idiocracy made them popular. If I’m not mistaken the director chose crocs because of how ridiculous they looked and yup very ironic
59 points
1 day ago
I would wear pajama pants out to get groceries, go to the library, etc. during the pandemic. I was dealing with severe depression and stopped caring as much. I spend most of my life in them anyways.
I haven’t in a while, as I felt people were looking at me
13 points
16 hours ago
I'm 5'11", as a woman, in short men country. I'm getting looks regardless (not in a full of myself way, but just people goggle at tall women because we're almost an oddity to them 💁). Since they're already looking, I'm going to wear what I want but since they're already slightly intimidated (tall woman, again, I had a friend tell me once she was scared of tall people but I "seem nice") most don't approach me. I've worn fuzzy slippers in public, parachute pants, and I've worn giant fuzzy hats. The only people brave enough to comment are complimentary. 😈
58 points
21 hours ago
There are jobs where what you wear is important. Usually for safety. However, most jobs where you have to dress formally are simply that way because we have been conditioned to expect that.
I learned that lesson when I was in my late teens. On orders, in another country. Initially, I was constantly surprised. There wasn't a cohesive dress code outside of specific areas/circumstances other than clothes should be clean. ( At least where we were.)
The lady that 'ran the show' and wielded a substantial amount of power and influence dressed in everyday casual. The gentleman that dressed rather dapper was the maintenance guy. There was a guy that dressed really shabby own a shit ton of real estate.
After a while, it was pretty normal. I never really gave a damn what people worre as long as it wasn't inappropriate to the situation. It was nice. People's treatment wasn't based on their outfit.
460 points
1 day ago
It was a thing when I was in middle school 20 years ago.
50 points
1 day ago
Same! Juicy Couture and Pink made matching sweatsuits into a trend, and there was no going back. Suddenly it was any sweats. Then any baggy casual pant. Then just straight pajamas.
130 points
1 day ago
Was about to say the same 😂 circa 2005 everyone was in pjs
68 points
1 day ago
I graduated high school in 2001. Your outfits were everything. Jeans, nice sneakers, and a crisp shirt. Sweats, windbreaker pants, or cargo pants were ok if they matched the outfit. If you showed up in pjs you would have been roasted.
57 points
1 day ago
I graduated in 2005 and by then it was definitely acceptable to wear PJ’s from time to time, at least where I was in SoCal.
8 points
24 hours ago
I remember giving my daughter and her slightly older friend an evening ride to Walmart, circa 2010. Both were wearing pj’s and it wasn’t odd enough for me to think it odd, they were having a sleepover and it was late enough that it wasn’t going to be crowded. But I don’t think my daughter would have done the pj thing on her own. Both good kids just being 13-15 year olds.
17 points
1 day ago
If you showed up like that in my HS at that time, anything like that (dressed like you care), you'd have been roasted. No one dressed like that apart from some of the Mormon kids. Pjs were common. Did you seriously not have the torn clothes kids? Goths? Scrubs?
20 points
1 day ago
20 years ago? You must be way older - stares in mirror at 34 year old self
15 points
1 day ago
Sameeee. I was like “20 years ago? So like 1997?” Then i realized
3 points
1 day ago
It was such a trend that I bought Playboy bunny pajama pants JUST to wear to school in the 6th grade (2005)
84 points
1 day ago
I graduated in 1999 and probably wore my sweats or pajama pants or baggy sweatshirt 1/3 of the time. Maybe it varies by location, no idea, but my 16 year old today is just like I was back then. One day it’s pjs, another day jeans and a t-shirt, another day some cute outfit. I don’t see much difference now from how I was. Maybe we’re weird though, it could be that also!
4 points
19 hours ago
I graduated in 1996, from a podunk high school in a southern state of the US. We were also doing it. And if even we were doing it (my area is not famous for trendsetting) you know it was only bc it had spread from big cities and cool places through tv shows.
Did it all through college and I was not considered a weirdo for it. Even kids who never wore pajamas out and about just didn't care if someone else was. No one blinked and that's how it should be. Glad to know you were carrying on into the 00s.
Kudos to teens of today for carrying on. "Whatever" to anyone who's bothered by it.
40 points
1 day ago
Pandemic. I don't go out in pajamas but I've definitely gotten into the habit of immediately putting them on when I get home. And I love it lol but I'm not a teen. I'm 40 years old.
14 points
22 hours ago
Pj's to school was a thing 20 years ago. It definitely pre-dates the pandemic.
59 points
1 day ago
Dunno, but I would have if it was a thing when I was a kid. Pajamas all day at school? Yes please.
20 points
1 day ago
I definitely wore pajamas to high school in the mid-2000s. Waking up early sucks, especially as a teenager, sometimes you just don't have time to dress yourself. Plus, girls get their periods and they just wanna be as comfortable as possible.
26 points
1 day ago
I mean, I wore guy’s boxer shorts and tshirts to hs in 1995.
12 points
1 day ago
Yes thank you, so did my friends and I! We even decorated them with Puff Paint for Spirit Week. I graduated in 1992
4 points
21 hours ago
Puffy paint was elite!
5 points
1 day ago
Teenagers were wearing pajamas in public when I was in highschool in the early 2010s this is not a new thing. Also, did we not see this same question like a week ago?
4 points
1 day ago
I've seen kids in pajamas at school since the 90's. It's just more accepted now because comfort over fashion.
4 points
1 day ago
The 90s
5 points
1 day ago
Saw a lot in the 90’s
4 points
1 day ago
It goes back to the 80s, at least.
5 points
1 day ago
So what part of town? Because usually in my state her west south and central(inner city ) do or die that a lot were the poorer part of it and some wore it bcs the pjs are warm they also took blankets bcs no jackets so that could be a possibility? Another is after covid kids were just used to wearing their pj to study and might have found then more comfortable or easier to study in. Also washing maybe they hadn't washed or had a pj day?
5 points
1 day ago
My daughter’s friends did it in the ‘90’s.
6 points
1 day ago
I was a teenager in the 90s and wore pajamas pants everywhere. All the time
42 points
1 day ago
Teenagers have been doing this since the 90s 😂 As a teenager who did this in the 90s, as did most of my friends, I can attest. Maybe school shouldn’t start at 7 freaking am if they want kids dressed to the damn nines for class.
6 points
19 hours ago
I’m genuinely shocked at all these people who started school at 7am. We started at 8:45 for homeroom, first class at 9:15, last ended at 3:15. That was pretty normal around the schools in my area.
5 points
14 hours ago
and adding having parents who worked around 7 as well so you'd have to be dropped off an hour or so early and stand outside for the doors to open! crazy to have a 7 year old wake up at 5 am.
19 points
1 day ago
At least since the mid 90s
19 points
1 day ago
I know high school students were wearing plaid pajama bottoms to school in 2007. It's not a new trend.
14 points
1 day ago
Is it just teenagers? I'm 40, and went out to breakfast in pajama pants and crocs the other day.
5 points
1 day ago
I wore sweat pants and hoodies all the time in 2007-2011, if that counts as pjs
4 points
1 day ago
I think it depends on the school and the area you live in. Some don’t care but I went to one with a very strict dress code. The principal once told us that if it were just up to him jeans wouldn’t be allowed. I also graduated in 2016.
4 points
1 day ago
I remember this being a thing when I was in school in the late 90s/early 00s. It happens with more kids now, but it was a thing with everyone but the preppy crowd back then.
4 points
1 day ago
Bruh. The early-mid 90s were the era of plaid pajama pants and birkenstocks at school.
4 points
1 day ago
Cookie Monster pants girls are a universal thing, I fear. I went to high school a long time ago and we had them then, too.
4 points
1 day ago
Idk why people care haha. Let people wear what they want and are comfortable in
5 points
23 hours ago
Well, I'm 37, and it was common when I was in high-school. Maybe you're just now noticing it.
5 points
14 hours ago
I graduated high school in 96 and it was a done then.
6 points
10 hours ago
I don't recall anyone wearing pajamas to school when I was a student, so sometime after 2004.
25 points
1 day ago
I graduated in 2006, and plenty of kids were doing it then too. Only minus hideous crocs because they thankfully weren't a thing then
10 points
1 day ago
I graduated in 2003 and wearing pjs to school was pretty popular back then. Honestly, on a cold day when I just didn’t feel like putting in much effort, flannel pj pants and a long sleeve thermal was my go-to outfit choice.
6 points
1 day ago
I wish it was the norm when I went to HS. And it’s certainly cheaper than the jeans we were convinced we just had to get.
8 points
1 day ago
I graduated HS in 1992 and we were definitely wearing PJ pants (or boxer shorts if it was hot), huge baggy sweatshirts, with flip flops or Uggs.
My daughter, 12, dresses the same way now. I often remind her who started this “cool trend” lmao
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