
How many days of the week do you dread going to the closet to pick out clothes to wear?
Or maybe you — like so many other people around the world during pandemic — have given up on getting dressed at all.
Often–when we are weight challenged– we have many sizes of clothes in our closet. The smaller sizes taunting us, making us feel bad for not being disciplined enough to wear them. The larger ones mock us even more because they often seem uninspired, drab and frumpy– not who we really want to be or look like.
So how can we shift into a new way of Thin Thinking about how we dress ourselves and give ourselves the permission to look good no matter what size we are wearing?
Today on the Thin Thinking podcast, we are going to explore with my guest expert fashion consultant Ginger Burr on how to get excited about dressing ourselves and expressing who we are with self respect, style, and lots of love, no matter what size we are.
What are you waiting for? Grab your empty hangers and come on in.
In This Episode, You’ll Learn:
What pushed Ginger to help other women with their wardrobe and style.
The top three things you should consider every time you get dressed.
The Baggy Clothes Syndrome and how it actually doesn’t really hide you.
Links Mentioned in this Episode
I used to dread my closet. Maybe you know the feeling—sweatpants still calling from the pandemic years, “goal” jeans glaring from the top shelf, and a sea of black “good enough” pieces that neither fit nor felt like me. When I struggled with my weight, I wore the same elastic-waist black pants everywhere. If they were tight out of the dryer, I’d do a few squats and tell myself it was fine. It wasn’t.
On the Thin Thinking Podcast, I invited fashion stylist and image consultant Ginger Burr to help us rewire how we think about getting dressed. The shift isn’t about trends; it’s about an inner beauty dress code—reflecting who you are on the inside, in what you wear on the outside, right now, at any size. In this post, I’ll share exactly how I reframed style during weight release, the mindset traps that keep us hiding, the four colors that flatter most of us, and a simple closet method to make getting dressed easy (and actually fun). If you’ve been waiting to “deserve” nice clothes until after you lose weight, this is the mindset makeover your wardrobe—and self-respect—have been waiting for
What is an “inner beauty dress code,” and why does it change everything?
Your inner beauty dress code is a simple rule: dress the person you are on the inside—today—and your confidence will follow. When I asked Ginger where to begin, she surprised me: she won’t shop with a client until they’ve done an inner beauty consultation. Translation? Before we talk clothes, we honor essence. Are you serene, passionate, edgy, quietly intense, refreshingly graceful? When your outfit reflects that, you feel at home in your body—no matter the number on the scale.
I used to chase trends or copy a friend’s “look,” then wonder why I felt off. That disconnect is exhausting. When I aligned clothes with my inner words—calm, creative, encouraging—my outfits started working for me. The result wasn’t louder; it was truer. And true reads as confident.
Try this:
- Write 3–5 inner words that describe you at your best (e.g., grounded, playful, refined, bold, serene).
- Ask: “Does this top/dress/shoe express those words?” If not, it’s costume, not clothing.
- Bonus micro-habit: When you look in the mirror, smile first. Your brain shifts from critique to connection. Then decide.
Quotable: Dress your essence, not your insecurity.
If the idea of aligning your outer presentation with your evolving identity resonates, you might also enjoy Episode 112 — Michele’s Success Mindset Released 35 Pounds, where Michele shares the mindset shifts that helped her feel confident and visible throughout her transformation.
How do I stop hiding in baggy clothes without feeling exposed?
Clothes that skim your body are more flattering—and more comfortable—than clothes that drown it. I hid in oversized tops for years, thinking more fabric = more safety. It didn’t. Baggy doesn’t actually hide; it just removes shape and confidence. Ginger taught me the “skim rule”: choose silhouettes that follow your lines without clinging. Think wrap details, subtle waist shaping, diagonal necklines, gentle drape—easy, not tight; fluid, not boxy.
And yes, comfort is non-negotiable. Post-pandemic, many of us equate comfort with sweats only. But a beautifully cut knit dress or soft trousers with stretch can feel like pajamas and look like presence. If you tend to freeze and grab the oversized sweater, try a side-by-side: one oversized, one skimming. Notice your posture and mood in each. Your nervous system will tell you which one supports you.
Try this:
- Swap boxy tees for a wrap-style top or a tee with a curved hem.
- Choose soft structure (stretch ponte, drapey jersey) that glides instead of grips.
- If baring more shape feels scary, start with a skimming top and keep bottoms easy.
Quotable: Skim—don’t shrink or swamp—the body you have today.
Which colors flatter most people when I’m not sure what works on me?
When in doubt, reach for forest green, teal, deeper periwinkle, or watermelon—four shades that flatter many skin tones. Color is the fastest way to feel alive in your clothes, especially if your closet is a wall of black. Even if black is one of your best colors, a black-only wardrobe feels dreary. I know—mine did.
Try one of these on top (near your face) and watch what happens in the mirror:
- Forest green (deep, earthy green)
- Teal (blue-green that’s vibrant but grounded)
- Periwinkle (a mid-to-deeper blue-violet—harder to find, worth the hunt)
- Watermelon (the pink-coral cusp that flatters warm and cool undertones)
This isn’t about color theory perfection; it’s about permission to bring life back into your outfits. Start with one top or scarf. If someone says, “You look rested,” you found a keeper.
Quotable: Color is confidence you can see across the room.
How do I shop when my size is changing?
Buy to fit the largest part of your body now, then tailor the rest; build a tiny “right-now” capsule instead of waiting for perfect. Many of us punish ourselves by postponing real clothes until we’re “thin enough.” I’ve done it. The problem? Wearing baggy, past-self clothes keeps your mind in limbo. Your subconscious reads that oversized waistband as permission to drift.
Here’s the kinder, smarter plan:
- Right-now capsule (2–3 outfits):
Pick two tops, two bottoms, one third piece (cardigan/blazer/light jacket), and one dress or jumpsuit you love in today’s size. Aim for mix-and-match. - Fit rule:
Buy to fit where you need room (hips/tummy/shoulders), then have the rest nipped or hemmed. A neighborhood tailor or dry cleaner can handle most tweaks affordably. - Price strategy:
You don’t need a splurge wardrobe. Combine sale finds, thrift gems, and one or two better basics you’ll wear constantly. - Comfort standard:
Comfort is required. Choose fabrics with stretch, waistbands with give, and shoes you can live in.
The mindset shift is everything: you deserve to feel good during your transformation, not just after.
Quotable: Dress for the body you’re leading—today—so your mind can follow.
What’s the quickest way to fix a stressful, overstuffed closet?
Only keep what fits right now in your working closet; move every other size and “someday” piece out of your daily line of sight. When I asked women how much of their closet they actually wear, many confessed: less than 20%. No wonder mornings feel hard.
Try my two-zone method this weekend:
- Zone A (Working Closet): Only today’s-fit clothes you like and will wear.
- Zone B (Overflow): Other sizes, special occasion, sentimental, or “not sure yet.” Box or move these to a different rack or the far end.
Why it works: You’ll stop making 42 decisions before coffee. You’ll see what you really have—and what key piece would unlock 3–4 new outfits. And you’ll remove the daily emotional static of “once-upon-a-time” sizes. If the only thing you do after reading this is create Zones A and B, you’ll feel lighter tomorrow morning.
Quotable: Decision fatigue lives where too many sizes share one rod.
How do I buy only pieces I’ll actually wear (and love)?
Use this five-question dressing-room script—and don’t buy “good enough.” Most of my past mistakes started with one thought: I’ll make it work. That’s how closets become museums of tags. Before anything comes home with me now, I ask:
- Color: Does this color make my face look brighter and more rested?
- Essence: Does it express my inner words (e.g., serene, creative, refined)?
- Fit: Does it skim (not squeeze or swamp) my shape? What tailoring would make it perfect?
- Outfit math: Can I make 2–3 outfits with pieces I already own—shoes included?
- Feeling: Do I smile when I see myself? Would Future Me thank me for this?
If the answer is “meh,” I put it back. A wardrobe of “good enough” pieces guarantees “good enough” mornings. I want joyfully obvious—and you deserve that, too.
Shopping energy hack: Before you shop (even online), breathe and imagine finding one piece that makes you feel amazing. You don’t have to picture the item—just the feeling. It changes what you notice and reduces impulse buys.
Quotable: “Good enough” in the store becomes “never again” at home.
FAQ: Your top style-while-losing-weight questions, answered
1) How can I feel better in the mirror right now?
Smile first. It resets your nervous system and softens the inner critic so you can assess with clarity instead of contempt. Then name one thing you do like (eyes, shoulders, hands) before deciding on changes.
2) I’m embarrassed to be seen—how do I start?
Start small and skimming: a wrap tee, a soft dress with gentle shape, or a draped cardigan. Choose one of the four “safe” colors near your face. Let comfort and essence lead.
3) Should I keep multiple sizes in the closet?
Yes, but not in your working closet. Keep only the current size where you get dressed; relocate the rest. You’ll reduce decision fatigue and stop triggering daily comparison.
4) How do I handle tailoring on a changing body?
Buy to fit your largest point now and tailor easy areas (waist, sleeves, hems). Simple nips and hems are inexpensive and instantly elevate everything.
5) Is black really that bad?
Black can be great—just not only black. Add color near your face and watch your energy (and compliments) rise.
6) I hate shopping. What’s my alternative?
Order 3–5 options online per item category (tops/pants/dress), try at home with your shoes, keep only what sparks an immediate “yes,” and return the rest. Or work with a stylist for a curated experience.
7) What’s the one thing to do this week?
Create Zones A and B in your closet. Then add one color-rich top you love in forest green, teal, periwinkle, or watermelon.
Conclusion
I spent years waiting to be “worthy” of a wardrobe. That wait kept me hiding—in my clothes and in my life. The inner beauty dress code changed everything. When I dress the version of me I’m becoming—not the one I’m shaming—my brain, my choices, and my confidence line up. You don’t need 30 new pieces. You need 2–3 outfits that reflect your essence, skim your shape, and let you smile at your reflection before breakfast.
Want to learn more? Check out my free masterclass, How to Stop The “Start Over Tomorrow” Weight Struggle Cycle and Start Releasing Weight For Good.
If you found this episode helpful, you might also enjoy this related Thin Thinking episode: