Fashion is weird like that. For some people, getting dressed feels almost emotional, like choosing an outfit is choosing a version of yourself for the day. For others, it’s stressful, annoying, sometimes even panic-inducing. Same clothes, same stores, same Instagram reels… totally different feelings. I’ve always found that gap kind of fascinating, and honestly a little confusing.
I’m somewhere in the middle. Some days fashion feels fun and expressive, other days I’m staring at my wardrobe thinking, why do I own all this and still have nothing to wear. That alone probably explains half the problem.
When Clothes Start Feeling Like Identity
For people who love fashion, clothes are not just clothes. They’re mood, memory, personality. I once knew someone who said they could tell how their week was going just by looking at their outfit choices. Bright colors meant life was okay. All black meant don’t ask questions. That sounds dramatic, but also… kind of accurate?
Fashion becomes personal when it feels like a language. You don’t need to speak, your hoodie, shoes, or ripped jeans already said something. Social media definitely made this stronger. On Instagram or Pinterest, outfits are not just outfits anymore, they’re “aesthetic.” Cottagecore, clean girl, old money, streetwear, soft boy, hot girl. Half of these didn’t exist a few years ago, or at least we didn’t name them like this.
When you see thousands of people online dressing a certain way, and it clicks with you, it feels like finding your tribe. Like oh, these are my people. That connection makes fashion feel personal, almost comforting.
There’s also control involved. You can’t control your boss, traffic, inflation, or your relatives asking uncomfortable questions. But you can control what you wear. That’s powerful in a small but real way.
Why the Same Thing Feels Stressful to Others
Now flip the coin. For some people, fashion doesn’t feel like freedom at all. It feels like pressure. Too many choices, too many trends, too many rules that keep changing without notice.
One week skinny jeans are dead, the next week people say they never really died. Try keeping up with that if you already don’t care much about clothes. It’s like being forced to play a game you didn’t sign up for, and everyone else somehow knows the rules.
Money plays a big role too, even if people don’t like admitting it. Fashion can get expensive fast. When trends change every few months, it feels like your bank account is constantly being judged. Fast fashion made clothes cheaper, yes, but it also made trends move at an insane speed. There’s a quiet stress in knowing your outfit might look “outdated” just because TikTok decided so.
I remember scrolling through comments on a viral fashion video where someone said, “I’m tired, I just want one pair of jeans that stays acceptable for five years.” That comment had more likes than the video itself. That tells you something.
The Confidence Gap Nobody Talks About
Here’s a slightly uncomfortable truth. Fashion is easier when you already feel confident. If you’re insecure about your body, your height, your skin, your weight, clothes can feel like enemies instead of tools.
A lot of people who say they “don’t care about fashion” actually care a lot, but feel excluded from it. Stores rarely fit everyone properly. Mirrors in trial rooms are brutal for no reason. Online shopping shows clothes on models who look nothing like most humans I see outside.
So fashion becomes stressful not because of clothes, but because of how it reflects insecurities back at you. Like a bad friend who keeps pointing things out.
There’s even data floating around online that people who struggle with body image spend more time choosing outfits but enjoy it less. I don’t remember the exact source (classic me), but the idea makes sense. More thinking, less joy.
Social Media Made It Louder
Before social media, you mostly dressed for people around you. School, office, family events. Now you’re also dressing for an invisible audience. Even if you don’t post, you still consume.
You see “Get Ready With Me” videos where someone casually wears a ₹20,000 outfit and calls it everyday wear. You see comments judging strangers for wearing the wrong shoes with the wrong jeans. Over time, that noise gets into your head.
Some people absorb it and turn it into inspiration. Others absorb it and feel anxious. Neither is wrong, but the difference matters.
Personally, I’ve caught myself changing outfits just because I imagined how it would look in a photo, not how it feels in real life. That’s when fashion stops being personal and starts being performative.
Why Simplicity Feels Like Relief
Notice how many people are moving toward “basic” wardrobes now. Neutral colors, repeated outfits, minimal choices. It’s not boring, it’s relief. Like mental decluttering, but with clothes.
When fashion stops demanding constant attention, it becomes calmer. That’s why some people feel better wearing the same style every day. It reduces decision fatigue. Mark Zuckerberg did it, but so did your school uniform, in a way.
For people who already find fashion stressful, simplicity feels like breathing space. For people who love fashion, simplicity can still be personal, just quieter.
It’s Not About Fashion, It’s About Feeling Seen
At the end of the day, fashion isn’t really the problem. Or the solution. It’s just a mirror. If you feel secure, clothes feel fun. If you feel judged, clothes feel heavy.
Some people use fashion to say, “This is me.” Others feel fashion is asking, “Why aren’t you better?” Same system, different experience.
I think that’s why debates around fashion get emotional so fast online. It’s not fabric people are defending. It’s identity, comfort, and sometimes old wounds disguised as outfit opinions.
And maybe the healthiest place to be is knowing when to care, and when to not give a damn at all. Easier said than done, obviously. I’m still figuring that part out, standing in front of my wardrobe, late, overthinking a t-shirt.