Ask Nubby #30: What Was Your Teenage Style Like?

ask nubby advice


What was your style like as a teenager? How did you dress and what kind of fashion were you into?


ask nubby advice

16 and Sleeping, 1997 — Photo by Auntie Nubs.


Ah, the teenage years! It’s very funny to think back to the not so distant late 90s, when I was in high school (I’m focusing on high school while answering this question because middle school was pretty blah). Back then (1996 to 2000 — I say that like it was ages ago), things really were more off-the-cuff and experimental. Fashion blogs hadn’t yet surfaced; I don’t think I even knew what a blog was at that time.

It’s interesting looking back now, noticing how much the times have changed – none of us had cell phones in high school. We weren’t connected to the internet 24/7 (or at least I wasn’t). In a way, I’m glad that I wasn’t granted immediate access to every little trend. I am afraid now that my style (and wallet) would be overly influenced. It’s bad enough being bombarded now at 28 (when I am much less impressionable)!


ask nubby advice

1996, With my friend Jesse (who I haven’t seen since high school)


During those years, it was much harder to track down a specific item – I found my wardrobe at a handful of places: Goodwill, Hot Topic, Nordstrom BP, Buffalo Exchange, Urban Outfitters and the Delia’s catalog (I wish I still had some of those 90s issues with the catchy themed phrases throughout!). There wasn’t a Forever 21 in every mall and the plethora of online indie boutiques hadn’t yet populated every corner of the internet.

In The Beginning


ask nubby advice

Age 15 in 1996, right after I met my best friend Erin. We had many classes together, but she always skipped, leaving me to finish projects!


When I started high school in 1996, my style was eclectic, colorful and grungy. I loved tons of colors at that point, surprisingly. It was cool in my suburban high school to wear baby tees, oversized cords or jeans, band shirts, vintage dresses, striped sweaters, cardigans and mismatched layers. I was still experimenting and figuring out my trademark style during this time.


ask nubby advice

Wearing a weird vintage polyester dress with Erin (check out her The Crow shirt!), 1996


Then, everything changed my sophomore year. Over the summer, I discovered Marilyn Manson, got a pair of 14 eye black Doc Marten boots for my birthday (thanks, mom!) and decided that wearing all black was the way to go. My friends and I would swarm the local Goodwill after school and find the coolest castoffs. It was a much different time – wearing designer clothing or carrying a designer handbag definitely was not cool. We carried backpacks or vintage lunchboxes instead.


ask nubby advice

Goofing off with Richard, 1997


I remember having every color of stripey tights imaginable and I would save my money to buy new clothes and jewelry at Hot Topic. Though there weren’t fashion blogs, there were popular ‘cam girls’ that would show off their new purchases (who were your favorites?)

Being ‘different’ in a really uptight suburban high school wasn’t easy but I always stayed true to who I was. Nobody could really say anything, even when I showed up looking like a total freak because I always had near perfect attendance and made the honor roll.

When I was 17, I went to a Marilyn Manson concert and met him afterwards on the steps of his tour bus. He was the nicest guy. My classmate’s jaws dropped when I came back on the following Monday and casually mentioned that I’d met him. After that, I really didn’t care what anyone thought. People would make rude comments but that only fueled me more. I told myself that someday, I would get the last laugh.

Around the same time, I started dating an older guy who not only worked at a record shop but was also the most amazing hairdresser. From then on, I traded in my boring brown hair for shades that covered nearly every color of the rainbow. Usually, I had my hair in a bob with neon colored roots (purple, pink or red — see below) paired with black tips.

The End


During my last two years of high school, I was far beyond the drama (and beyond bored). And, most of my close friends had dropped out or were a year ahead of me and had graduated. I spent most of my time taking art classes, then skipped prom and graduated. I didn’t even want to walk in the ceremony, but I did it for my parents.


ask nubby advice

My trademark 2-tone hair a few months before I graduated, 2000. The beginning of Nubby Twiglet.


Can you tell that I didn’t care? Ha. I took this photo and a few more in my school’s courtyard for the senior pictures section of the yearbook. It was my way of rebelling against those cheesy posed shots! My hair looked like this for quite awhile — I got the roots bleached and changed constantly and matched my wardrobe around the color.

I was really into vintage Swiss poster design and medical-themed stuff at this point. I wore a little white dress that I have to this day with red cross pins across the front all the time. I also came up with the idea for Nubby Twiglet around this time.

Looking Back


Now that it’s been 10 years since I graduated from high school, what would I tell my younger self? I would remind myself that I was right to not conform – it made my life a lot more difficult at the time but it also made me stronger and care way less about what people think. I also would tell myself that many of the people that made fun of me ended up staying in the same town, in jail or worst of all, dead (seriously) and that none of what they said really mattered anyway — now I think back at some of the comments and get a good laugh!

If you’re still in school, as chiché as it sounds, stay true to yourself. High school doesn’t last forever. If you’re feeling disillusioned, start thinking about what you want to do next. If you hate your town, your parents and your life, it’s okay to be dissatisfied but don’t take it out on everyone else — use that energy to plot your next step instead. Once you graduate, move to a bigger city. Get a job. Find roommates. You’re bound to make new friends wherever you go and thanks to social networking sites, it’s now easier than ever. Apply for colleges – you’ll meet even more like-minded people. Your life is yours and your alone. If people spend their time trying to tear you down in high school, brush it off…and use it as fuel to prove them wrong. Time flies — get out there, make your mark and stand tall when you return for your 10 year class reunion!

What was your style like as a teenager? Was it completely different than how you dress now? Have you embraced it or are you terribly embarrassed? What would you do differently in 2010 compared to then?


45 Responses to Ask Nubby #30: What Was Your Teenage Style Like?

  1. Sally says:

    Hah! I’ve got a post much like this coming up next week – someone asked to see my style evolution.

    Amazing how different-yet-the-same you look, lady. And I love your advice to current high-schoolers. It’s such a tough time to be an individual, but sticking to your guns does pay off in adulthood. (Not that I was able to do so all the time myself, of course …)

  2. elizabeth says:

    I was in high school directly after you!(2000-2004) In 9th grade I discovered punk and riot grrl and never really looked back. I remember a brief time in middle school when I tried REALLY HARD to dress like the popular kids, but I quickly realized it just wasn’t me. Plus, dressing in clothes I didn’t really like didn’t make me any more popular and it kind of freaked out my friends.

    I LOVED my red plaid pants and little mod dresses I’d get from Goodwill or Delia’s. I remember the Delia’s dresses being such a splurge (WHOA! $40 for a dress!) and my parents rarely wanted to shell out the money for them. I loved to stomp around in those dresses and my huge black boots.

    I also had a hoodie from Hot Topic that was made out of black faux fur and had two red cat ears on the hood!

  3. Lizzi says:

    I love this article Nubby! The picture of your matching hair and clothes is so wonderful, I think it’s such a good idea. I’m still sixteen but I think it’ll be interesting to compare my style now to how it will be in a few years. I’ve grown up being constantly inspired by things in blogs, getting obsessed with things from Japanese lolita to steampunk to pin up to what can only be described as ‘unicorn chic’. I think my style changes as fast as the internet does but yet I only wear the things I like. Looking back in a few years will show what defined ‘my style’ as it is now but at the moment I can’t see it. Do you think you could’ve defined your style at the time as clearly as you have now?

  4. Oohhh! I love these photos of you. It’s so interesting to see how you’ve changed. I’m only two years into college but I’ve changed really rapidly in the past 5 years.

    In high school I wore the studded belts, cutoff gloves, chains etc. I wasn’t really very stylish. I just picked anything that would show off my rad figure x___x boy oh boy. Anyway, I think I’m a lot more “sophisticated” now. I actually think about what I wear and I’m not all about skin tight clothes hahaha!

  5. Gab Whtie says:

    Aw, I love this post, it’s always nice to look back and see how far you’ve come. I graduated high school fairly recently, in 2007, but even now when I look back at pictures it’s kind of amazing how different I am.

    Great photos too!

  6. Alice Grimm says:

    Awesome post, really enjoyed it!
    Indeed, things get so much better after high school, I wish someone had told me that when I was still there.
    I was a total “baby bat” in high school, wearing more eyeliner than Alice Cooper, and avoiding pastel colors like the plague. In some ways, some things have not changed, I still wear a lot of black, but I’m not as stubborn about adding a splash of color to my outfits, and I know now how much eyeliner is too much eyeliner… And thanks to the internet, I’ve discovered Gothic Lolita. Slowly but surely, my closet is being filled with ruffled skirts and fluffy petticoats.

  7. Melanie says:

    These were the 90s! My all-time favorite decade! Glad you let your eyebrows grow. But even then you’ve had the most amazing, deepest eyes.

    Style in Germany at that time was pretty similar – we’re quite the same age. It was influenced by grunge and heavy metal and later melted into crossover/hiphop and was all about xxl-clothing and being different and alternative and so coooool (at least for stylish party people like me and my friends :-) ) and wasn’t that mainstream I’ve got the impression it is today (maybe I’ve grown too old and nostalgic :-) ) Also there was the *GIRLIE* thing (girlpower!) bringing Buffalo platform sneakers, colourful flower hair clips and cropped tank tops about. Such a great time!

  8. That was sweet.

    I agree that in High School–as tough as it is to be an individual–it’s really important to be yourself. All the conformists who make your life miserable.. They’ll never be interesting or unique later in life. I had some rough teenage years. My style was mostly tomboyish. I’m still a tomboy, but I dress in women’s clothing. I love my style. I’m so glad I never succeeded at conforming in High School, because I wouldn’t be who I am now.

  9. Lola says:

    Ya know, Nubs, this is why I really like you and your website. I don’t know how someone could honestly call you a narcissist when you open up your life to help other people along and educate them with what you know. I think you’re a stellar individual, and to put yourself out there takes a lot of guts. Yeah, we all went through an awkward stage, but many of us want to tuck that away and never revisit it. You’re there showing a young girl that the most fabulous people started somewhere, even with pictures to better illustrate it (by the way, the shot of you with the 2 toned hair strangely reminds me of a beautiful Dutch painting, like a Vermeer). So cheers to you, Nubby. You will reap nothing but the benefits from opening up your life to better others. Keep up the good work. :-)

  10. I absolutely love this and you, Ms. Nubby, for sharing. I’m 26 and we were in high school around the same time so I remember all of this fashion and I’m so glad to see that someone else remembers it fondly (too many people our age like to pretend it never happened or that they were always as chic as they are now). I still have the urge to wake up in the morning and grab a bottle of pink Manic Panic. If I could figure out how to pull it off with my current style, I’d do it tomorrow!

    Thanks for searching you pictures with us!

  11. Ooh I love this! I really relate to your high school style. Mine was up and down between mainstream and more Manson style, and ended off very mainstream-boring. I wish I would have found a balance sooner.

    This makes me want to scan my photos. One of my faves is from my freshman year with neon pink hair. I remember one of my friends telling another, the summer after middle school, that she would not be seen with me in high school if I had pink hair!

    I didn’t want to walk in our grad ceremony either.

    Goes without saying you were at least gorgeous, which let/s you get away with quite a lot when it comes to fashion – Before I read the caption I thought the first photo was a scanned photo of a model from a magazine.

    While I wouldn’t have minded being a little less awkward, ultimately I would not be the way I am if I’d had a smoother adolescence, so looking back it’s worth it.

  12. oh boy, you were (are) a total bombshell! i always find it strange when gorgeous girls like you weren’t super popular and loved in high school. anyway, you kind of remind me of scarlett johanssen’s character from ghost world in terms of physical appearance, and thora birch’s character in terms of attitude and style (i love that movie).

  13. Erin says:

    I love this post. Even though I was too young (and too nerdy) to notice anything fashion-related in the 1990s, I love seeing photos of it now.

    I was very goth/punk as a teenager, and though I still love the style, I wear way more flowery dresses these days. I just pair them with my doc martens. :)

  14. Amy says:

    Fascinating :) You were so cute! I’m shocked by the colors, really. Your description of “the end” reminds me of the end of my own high school years–right down to the art classes and skipping prom (except I also skipped graduation–in fact, I graduated six months early and left the country)! Glad you posted this; it’s neat how we evolve.

    By the way, though I love your current sense of style and black hair, I think you were equally adorable before the changes!

  15. Amanda says:

    I saved all my Delia’s catalogs for awhile and then got rid of them in a move. Oh how I wish I still had them! There was nothing like the style in them. We went to high school at the same time and I too didn’t conform while I was experimenting. Oh the days. So glad that I am still a unique individual. Thanks for sharing!

  16. It’s funny – most of my favourite bloggers were goths when they were in their teenage years. You, Gala, Michelle from Kingdom of Style – it seems like the teenage goth aesthetic inevitably develops into something more refined, but still with that dark edge.

    Or maybe I’m just biased, as I too was a teenage goth.

  17. Nubby says:

    Sally: I can’t wait to see yours! Style evolution is so much fun to look at.

    Elizabeth: Delia’s was a total splurge! $40 or $50 for a dress, $35 or $45 for platform, round toed shoes. I remember making ym back-to-school list, trying to figure out what I could get. So funny to think back on now. But it was expensive compared to Goodwill. ;)

    James Lamacchio: It’s so awesome to hear from you, since you were there and remember it all too! Glad we all made it through that period but it’s fun to look back.

    Alice Grimm: Hooray for baby bats! Such cute style all of you had….

    Melanie: That’s so funny to hear that styles were so similar on the other side of the world! We never really got into the girlpower thing much over here — I think that was more of a european thing?

    Caroline Royce: Thumbs up for another non-conformist! I’m glad you stayed true to your style, no matter what.

    Lola: Thanks for that. And I always think, “If everyone loves you, you’re doing something wrong.” Gotta keep it real, even if the reality is sometimes laugh inducing! I still remember those years fondly and it really wasn’t about being the most fashionable of put together. It was about mixing, matching and having fun while doing it. There were no strategies, reading up on street style blogs…we just went with what we were feeling. I miss that sometimes.

    Vainbuthonest: Agreed. I don’t really feel like fashion has become super refined and easily accessible until the last few years so there’s no reason to try and hide who we were before fashion blogs, Project Runway, magazines that show you how to shop, etc. We didn’t have any of that influence so we just went for it! Though the outcome was sometimes messy, it was real and honest.

    Janine – Alternative Housewife: It’s so nice to hear from all you other 90′s era high schoolers. Being too perfect in adolescence doesn’t prepare you for how harsh the real world can be so I am glad that I did things the way I did. My best friend Erin rocked the pink hair too — while working at Dairy Queen!!!

    Auntie Nubs: Remember, your photo collection is supposed to be on lockdown in the family vaults!

    Jess Needs A New Face: I guess I didn’t care about being popular and if you looked different at my high school, it just didn’t fly. It was out towards the country, surrounded by nurseries and farms and many of the kids were super religious and afraid of ‘the goths.’ So funny to think back on now!

    Erin: I’ve always loved dresses with Docs. I did that too at the time. Glad you’re keeping the look alive!

    Amy: A kindred spirit!

    Amanda: At that time, Wasn’t Delia’s the coolest ever?! I loved getting their catalogs — the fashion was always so much cooler than what you could find at the mall.

    Nadia: I know what you mean! All those goths from that age group grew up and became super cool with a sleek yet edgy fashion sense. It’s okay to biased. ;)

  18. mimi says:

    (Gala sent me!) You have no idea how much this made me smile! I seriously wish I went to high school in the late 90s. What’s big at my school is… whatever rappers are wearing.

  19. Stephanie says:

    This post is G-R-E-A-T. In high school, I never had a cell phone either. Actually, it was kind of blissful! And the internet was different when I was in high school (1999 – 2003), I remember having my own personal website, first on gURLpages and then on a domain. I taught myself basic html in a summer.

    But this post totally strikes a chord in me – I went through tons of phases, especially the Hot Topic & Delia’s lot. I loved those skinny plaid pants with the bondage straps – how en vogue I thought I was. But at the same time, it was a totally fun and eye opening experience. There’s still a bit of that teenage goth-punk girl that comes out once in a while – I still love black clothing and pyramid studs.

  20. Ophira says:

    I never wanted to be the girl who had to change her body to be happy. I watched my friends going crazy over plucking their eyebrows, shaving their legs, applying heaps of powder, and dieting. I never wanted any of that. I never wanted to be dependent on products for confidence and I never wanted to cause myself pain in exchange for a tacky, generic brand of beauty. In a world where girls were excited and happy to be wearing the exact same jeans, I didn’t own a single pair. I didn’t do anything for the sake of “beauty” besides wear clothes that I liked. You can imagine just how popular that made me. I liked tights. I liked dresses. I liked cardigans. I liked paint smeared aprons with oil pastels and chocolates in the pockets. I wore my hair in the lowest maintenance styles possible and never wore makeup unless I was performing in a play. Everyone around me told me that I wouldn’t hate school so much if I “made an effort” to fit in, but I think that standing out was easier. To be honest about who I was and not give a damn about what anyone said worked for me and I can’t imagine trying to get through high school any other way. I went to college early, ditched graduation and prom (though a really gorgeous senior girl had taken me the year before) and I got through. I still wear a lot of the same things as I did in high school, but it doesn’t matter so much now. No one really cares in college whether I’m in my pj’s or a vintage inspired cocktail dress. I like that.

    • Nubby says:

      Ophira: I admire you for staying absolutely true to who you were / are and doing what made you happy, even if it wasn’t considered the norm. That takes major guts, especially when we’re still teens.

  21. Joanne says:

    In my teens I was what was known in the UK as a ‘greebo’ which basically boiled down to baggy jeans, hoodies, lots of eyeliner and black hairdye. Closely related to the rock/metal/punk scene. We got teased a lot and definitely more than our fair share of verbal abuse but I think that builds character in a way. It either breaks you down and you’ll give up on looking how you want to, or it’ll give you a thick skin and the skills to cope with the people in life who try to bring you down or tell you that you can’t be who you want to be, or do what you want to do.

  22. Ember says:

    I reeeeeally liked this post… very honest and cool. ;) i felt this period in life was so hard but now look back and it was such an amazing time in life…

  23. Angeliska says:

    Holy moly, these are so adorable. I love the first photograph especially – it’s lovely.
    It’s time to drag out my photo box and do some scanning! I think looking back, and seeing
    an evolution of personal style is really helpful – both to us, and to anyone that might wonder how exactly we came to be who we are today. I’m also loving the chance to show people what real 90′s youth-culture style looked like! Baby barrettes, corduroys and lunchbox purses! Yep, we were pretty glamorous. Cuteness.

  24. Anna @ D16 says:

    Love this.

    Looking back on my high school self now (I can’t believe I graduated 17 years ago…eek!), I’m pretty proud of how unafraid I was to look and act different from the pack. Sometimes I suspect that it really stemmed from a fear of failing at being “popular”, but all these years later, I still feel most comfortable when I’m doing my own thing. My style hasn’t really changed all that much, either — it’s mutated, for sure, but the core elements are still there.

    You know what makes me happy? The knowledge that my 17-year-old self would probably think my 34-year-old self is pretty cool. ;)

  25. Niki says:

    Love this post because we got to see who you were then. I definitely love the photos of you especially that first one that your Aunt Nubs took of you. Thinking back at high school, I know I really didn’t care much for what people thought too. I’m glad high school wasn’t as painful as others had theirs but I definitely don’t want to go back to that time. I’m happy how I ended up but I know I can still do better.

  26. Luana says:

    I absolutely love this post & you for writing it!

    Oh how I miss the 90′s. Back then I went through a bit of a preppy phase, but I wouldn’t consider myself a typical ‘prep’ as it was defined at the time. I just wore simply constructed outfits and avoided patterns, and I’ve pretty much stayed true to that til now. I just bought whatever I liked regardless of where it was from. I wasn’t really in the popular crowd either, I was in some sort of middle ground where I had friends from every little group so to speak.There are definitely some cringe-worthy moments in my fashion history, but I don’t really regret any of them. In fact I feel there’s quite a bit of nostalgia attached to these memories, and I like my awkward years, I wouldn’t trade them for anything.
    I remember one Halloween, while all the girls dressed in some slutty getup I decided I’d wear a bright blue wig, blue patchwork suede pants and a jean vest. I’m not exactly sure why, but I think that was the moment I stopped caring about what anyone had to say about me and I had so much fun with it, haha.

    Also I guess while you’re in Highschool, all the drama seems so important and worth it because it really is your life. It’s a good thing that none of it really matters once you’re out of it (except irreplaceable friendships and one or two things learnt along the way…!) And College/University life is just so different in terms of people have already grown out of it all and we have all (ok, at least most of us have) realized we can coexist happily no matter what our fashion/music choices etc.

    Wow, what a ramble.
    Anyway thanks for writing this and giving us all an insight to your own past, it was lovely to read!

  27. Geneviève says:

    I really connected with this post Nubby – I’m 29 and graduated in 1999 :)

    As a teenager…I went to six schools and quit the school system completely for a whole year when I was about 14, and went to work at Burger King. I’ve always been a very outspoken and strongly individualistic person, and I’d just had enough of the other kids I guess. In the city I lived in, it was rather scandalous for a kid to just leave school, and a lot of people didn’t understand how my parents could be so supportive of my decision – I often copped a lot of nasty comments from former classmates who saw me walking down the street. I just wanted a year off to work out where I was going in life. I worked all day, sometimes serving some of my old classmates (!), and spent all my paychecks on op-shopping finds, mostly 70′s clothes – there was a very big Salvation Army near where I worked, and I was there every day after work buying things. When I went back to the school system a year later, I was wearing 70′s gear all the time, and because I’d been out working full-time with adults, I couldn’t find anything in common with the other kids, couldn’t converse with them, couldn’t connect with the normal teenage dramas about guys and being cool, being accepted – it all just seemed so far away and insignificant. I was more focused on my studies, writing songs, sewing, and drawing in my spare time. I was very intense as a teenager in an artistic sense, lol.

    Now, nearing 30, I think I’ve embraced the 70′s style I picked up as a teenager, but I’ve also added to it from the different experiences and styles I’ve worked in as a performing musician (country, bluegrass, jazz, pop, heavy rock/goth), and discovering a love for the 50′s and 60′s in terms of both design and dress sense. Studying and now working in design has really strengthened that aspect. I’ve been performing in music since I was 3 years old, so if anything, I *do* sometimes feel a bit sad at having bypassed a lot of the normal childhood and teenage concerns by not fitting in and just not being around, but I think it’s paid off in my adult life in that my work ethic is very strong.

  28. Acid says:

    Oh jesus. All those strange coincidences. All the things you said about people making fun of you and not giving a damn ’bout it(I’ve never even called myself goth or smth. they just decided that I am one off them), the ease to be different and thinking that those “cool kids” will end somewhere way worse than you. And the thingy that few days before this post I decided to give up my all black hair and dyed the roots red(but I used a bit more natural shade of red and didn’t bleached). yeah, I’m pretty much livin’ those hard time you went through. Living in such a small and pretty conservative country has lots of minuses. but enough of whining…I loooved this post. It’s one of my favourite posts of your ever :)

    p.s. is it just me, or you had shaved off ‘brows back in high-school? I’ve recently grew back mine, but I think I’ll be filling them in with all kinds of different color eyeshadows.

    p.s.s. damn, if somewhere in this blog you had written that you were teenage goth I’ve totally missed it, but I had that feeling in my heart. It’s really not difficult to see that an over-20-fashionista used to be goth(or maybie just to the darker side). Or is it just me?

  29. My personality could be described as “sarcastic and rebellious.” So could my taste in music, movies, anything else. I think in high school my “look” matched my personality more, at least the way most people would pair them off. It started with kind of a casual punk, and ended up in a very scene kid place after a short goth phase. Of course, being in high school about five years after you graduated, things were much more manufactured and stereotypes were much more set by then. Looking back, even though wearing all black fit pretty well with other aspects of my personality, I think I really did it to fit in with the cool goth kids. Who could totally be as stuck up as the trendy kids when they wanted to be.

    Now, I like to wear bright colors and floral patterns, sundresses and fuzzy sweaters. People are always surprised that I like to listen to Joan Jett, talk openly about sexual politics, and read actual works of literature. I just don’t strike people as particularly serious, rebellious, or outspoken when they see what I wear. I look thoroughly like a “nice, normal, unassuming girl.” And really, I think this is more fun, since it’s always great to see the looks on their faces when they actually get to know me.

  30. melinda says:

    I was the screen t-shirt type of girl. I hinged around the goth/punk/band geek style, mainly wearing vintage classic rock tees and my favorite shirt with a stitched (a cat made out of stitching) with my fish necklace with a grain of rice with “Mouse” written on it. I was into underground music of any type (still am). Prided myself on the music that my friends never knew about. And jeans galore.

    Not much has changed, but I do agree with you Nubby, it may hurt, the comments, the jabs, the stink bombs in your backpack, but when you look back, it doesn’t matter. High School is not the whole world, and that’s what I’m teaching my students now. Look in the future, High School is just a chapter in your own life, what doesn’t kill you, makes you only stronger. Look at it as a way to survive life, cause if you can survive high school, you can survive anything!

    <3 Melinda, A teacher, teaching at her old high school that made life a living hell.

  31. Pingback: curated. | Parker+Muse

  32. Pingback: Nubbytwiglet.com » Blog Archive » What I Wore: 7.31.10

  33. Leila says:

    thank you so much for answering this question! I’ve done a lot of experimenting with different types of fashion in high school and never been satisfied with my style, but now as a senior I’ve only just recently felt like I’m finally getting it all together, haha. this was the perfect post. so good to see what you were like in high school, especially versus how you dress now. (for the record, your outfits are always so consistent & flawless, seriously!) thanks again for sharing, Nubby.

  34. eleanorhope says:

    i wish we were in high school as best friends….sigh. HS was hell on earth for me, especially my senior year. GREAT post…when i have kids i’ll make sure to have them stay true to themselves.

  35. Pingback: final fashion » just a thought – hair is a conscious statement

  36. Pingback: Daily Outfit – Time Travel edition! {cue ‘Doctor Who’ music}

  37. Pingback: curated. August 11, 2010 » Parker+Muse

  38. cratteLar says:

    For tohse who see that your nails are becoming white or yellow in cloour and separate barely from the ani,l that could be isgns ofc a nail fungus infecction. See youe doctor who can prescribe anti-fungal medicines to rid you of this fungus.

    __________________
    [url=http://www.fitnails.com/vicks_vaporub_fungus_a/152.htm]Vicks Vaporub Fungus[/url]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Please note: Any comments deemed inappropriate (spam, off-topic, rude language) will be removed.