I am also afraid with all the changes in position something might get out of place. I’ve had a shirt get caught on the bottom of the pew seat before and get tucked up and couldn’t feel it was messed up until I saw it. I don’t want to be indecent during mass either.
Either you’re leaving your clothing out of whack, which bothers someone, or you’re adjusting it into place, which apparently also bothers someone. You can’t win.
When standing, people fixing / adjusting / pulling down / obsessing over the back of their shirt / dress. Sometimes I see this done vigorously and conspicuously. Do you see it often, and does it distract you?
I think it ought to be assumed that if someone is adjusting their clothing, it is because it is making them uncomfortable. Yes, I have seen people adjust their clothing. No, I would not call it “vigorous,” unless maybe you call it “vigorous” when the bride’s train is spread out by a bridesmaid. I wouldn’t even call that distracting, because let’s face it, if the bride is standing front and center with her train rolled under on one edge, it is going to bother someone who can see it for the whole wedding. At least the bridesmaid is done in a matter of seconds and it’s over.
Look at it this way: If someone adjusts their clothing, it bothers you for probably less than 10 seconds, plus whatever CPU time you dedicate to obsessing about why it needed to be done, which is quite out of the hands of the person who adjusted their clothing. If they leave it unadjusted, however, the person who is bothered by clothing that is all rumpled up and out of place is going to be longing to fix it for the entire Mass.
Once clothing slips out of place, one of the two kind of souls who obsesses about what other people look like are going to be obsessing about other people, either way. Unless someone has her skirt tucked into her pantyhose and doesn’t realize it, I’d say that is pretty much on the person who has an unfortunate obsession with other people.
I’ve sat behind two women who literally whispered to each other through the entire Mass, non-stop. It upset me so much that I said something to them after Mass about it. I always regretted that, because I was still upset when I said something, and they were both clearly mortified. I totally embarrassed them.
If people could read minds, OP, you’d wish you had chosen to cover the faults and eccentricities of others in charity and long-suffering. I suppose this is why “bearing wrongs” is considered a spiritual act of mercy. While this doesn’t really fall into the category of a “wrong,” I think it can be safely said that deliberately choosing to overlook the faults and eccentricities of others is something we will want on our ledges come Judgment Day, don’t you? Seek after the greater gifts by seeking to use this irritation as an opportunity to put up a store of litle mercies in your ledger. We can’t tell, but based on the Beautitudes, I think little things like that compounded over a lifetime could turn out to a real store of merit.