surf(name removed by moderator)ure:
I do notice what other people are wearing, and so far as it effects me or my family, I do care. I am tremendously disturbed that my children are growing up in a culture that has turned sexuality into an idol. I am bothered that my husband can’t go into our Catholic church without having to avert his eyes and control his thoughts half a dozen times.
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I need to be more careful with my choice of words.

I do care … about THEM, not their clothes.
I sympathize with all men, married or single, attempting to live a chaste life in our sexually saturated culture. While I commend my husband for averting his eyes, I lovingly remind him that it is in his WEAKNESS, he must avoid his eyes. That this is good for avoiding sin, but to not be satisfied with that. To strive for greater love in Christ to be able to someday, like Him, be able to look at her with a gaze of love. Not a gaze of lustt or condemnation (from a man or woman) but to see this child of God, no matter how dressed, with the eyes of Christ, who I don’t believe for a minute averts His gaze.
I am reminded of a story told about two Bishops attending a public parade. A scantily clad woman atop a float was coming towards them. The one Bishop warned the other to avert his eyes. The bishop replied “why she is one of God’s children?” or something to that effect. He approached the woman, and it was said that he looked at her with such pure eyes of love, that she sensed the love of God in him and repented and lived her life for Christ afterwards.
The pharisees were annoyed with Jesus, because he allowed himself to be touched by Mary Magdalane (probably not considered by most to be modest), but Christ saw something more in her.
God is not taken by surprise by the state of our society, and we can rest assured that He will provide all the graces necessary for His Glory.
It IS difficult and can seem overwhelming trying to raise our children and help our family to live a holy life in the midst of a world so saturated in sin, but be of good cheer, He has overcome the world and in Him we can too.
I have noticed that during many of my trials, God does not lift my cross, but instead gives me the strength to carry it and to bring it to my good and His glory. I ran across a phrase that I felt accurately reflected His parental love for me, and I have embraced it as my motto for raising my children. You may or may not find it helpful.
PREPARE NOT THE PATH FOR THE CHILD, BUT THE CHILD FOR THE PATH.
surf(name removed by moderator)ure:
While modesty, just as any virtue, can be taken to an un-virtuous extreme, it is still vitally important.
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Yes, modesty is important. Modesty, being a virtue can never be an unvirtue (vice). It would cease to be modesty and be either false modesty (counterfeit) or a different sin altogether such as it’s contrary … vanity or pride.