<p>I'm unsure about most people, but throughout my life when I'veheardtheword"modesty"beingused,ithastypicallybeeninreferencetovestmentandhowmuchskinoneisexposing.Inotherwords,animmodestvestmentwouldbeonethatemphasizesthesexualorindecentattributesoftheperson(typicallyawoman)whileamodestvestmentwouldbeonethatrespectsthesacrednatureoftheseandattemptstopullattentionawayfromthese.Andalthoughthisismostcertainlyaformofmodesty,itisaverylimitedunderstandingofit.</p>
<p>Perhapstheeasiestwaytothinkofmodestyisasanactofcharity.It's about making sure you'renotdrawingattentionawayfromwhatisimportant.DuringtheHolyMass,theobjectofeveryone's attention should be God and Christ in the Eucharist. To dress or act in a way that distracts people from this would be immodest, as you'redrawingattentiontoyourself.Youcanalsointerpretthisfromapositivelens,whereitwouldbemodesttodressoractinsuchawaythatyounotonlydonotdrawattentiontoyourself,butremindpeopleofGodbygivingexampleofareverentandrespectfulbehaviour.EvensomethingsthatwemayinterpretasbeingmodestsuchaswearingaveilforHolyMasscanbeimmodest,suchasiftheveilweretobecolorfulinsteadofplain,asthisdrawsattentionawayfromGod.</p>
<p>Itisquitethesignofthetimesthatmodestyinalltheseregardshasbeenlosingitspresenceandimportance.Perhapsthelastbastionofmodestyliesincertainformaleventsandreligiousceremonies.Themostprobablecauseofthisistheindividualisticmentalityoftheagewe're in. We are taught to make a brand of ourselves and to market ourselves, and as any good salesman knows, the best way to market your product is by figuring out how to set it apart from the rest, especially in the most superficial (and easiest to notice) manner. The first aspect of this is the mentality of "be yourself". The idea is that there is a <i>you</i> that exists that is immutable and does not truly change, or at the very least has no reason to ever change or improve. As such, rather than attempting to perfect and improve ourselves throughout the course of our lives - such as how Christians are called to follow the example of Christ and become more like Him - we instead are supposed to express this inner self. What'smore,becausewebelievethis<i>self</i>isatleastsemi-immutable,orhasnoreasontochangesinceeveryperson'swayof<i>beingthemselves</i>isequal,weinsteadaskthattheentiretyofsocietychangetoadapttoourmanufactured<i>self</i>.Butinterestinglyenough,weextendthisideaof<i>self</i>beyondsimplybeingourcharactertobeingprimarilyaboutouroutwardappearance,andaboveallitisaboutwhatweconsume.</p>
<p>However,thisidealendsuprunningintoacontradictionwithitself.Inordertomarketourselveswecreateanimagethatseemsuniqueanddrawsattentiontous,butwhenthisimagebecomespopularthenitnolongerdrawsattentionandwetrytofindsomethingelse.Thisfallsintodirectcontradictionwiththesupposedimmutabilityofone's <i>self</i>, which is why we often fall back to the relativity and equality of each person's<i>self</i>.</p>
<p>Therefore,takingastepback,itwouldseemthatthemost<i>unique</i>thingtodoispreciselytobemodest.Whileeveryonecontinuesintheratraceoftryingtostandout,simplyfollowingtheexampleofChristandworkingonimprovingourcharacterwouldseemtobethemostoutstandingthingwecando.Don't act in the interest of drawing attention to yourself, but act in the interest of being positively modest, and redirecting people'sattentiontowhatistrulyimportant.Thisitselfhasmuchmoremeritandisdeservingoftherespectofothers.</p>