The 'wrist' seems almost completely replaced by the 'twitch the bottom of your 
tshirt down' gesture to avoid baring the midriff, but I digress.

These gestures change over time, 

Like men might pass a hand over their hair, or glance down to see if their fly 
isn't accidentally open.

These have become instinctive, somehow


------Original Message------
From: Divya Manian
Sender: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
ReplyTo: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [silk] Gender on Silk
Sent: Oct 4, 2009 11:53

On 10/3/09 10:18 PM, "ss" <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> To be fair Indian women too are often guilty of this - a least in my personal
> experience. I have found friends and collegues beginning to imagine that I am
> about to express lewd thoughs or tell a dirty joke when nothing of the sort
> is likely. And of course the ubiquitous and unconscious so called "wrist"
> sign" where the woman brings her hand up to her face in an ostensibly
> needless gesture that is actually intended to cover a bare neck and imaginary
> cleavage from prying eyes. But here Indian women have a pallu/dupatta that
> they pull across the area when they feel that the pink elephant has squares
> on his mind. 
> 

I am guilty of this as well. I do the pallu/hand cover/other methods since
any (un)intentional display of the cleavage is considered "slutty" and a
desperate measure to seduce a male within 4 feet perimeter.





-- 
srs (blackberry)

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