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 At parties, we were told to wear the pin on the inside of the shirt, with the clasp bar on the outside. That way, you were still identified as a pledge (the school was small enough to know who you were pledging), so it worked out well. I remember I had surgery during my pledge period and asked my pledge mom if I had to wear my pin into surgery, lol. I think my pledgesister/a.k.a. next door neighbor held it for me. Sigh. Good times. | 
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 I WANTED to wear my pledge pin all the time, but we couldn't.  It was treated like our initiated sister badge - only to be worn with "badge attire." I was dressed up pretty much never, so outside of my pledging ceremony/initiation, I maybe wore it once or twice. | 
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 I am currently undergoing therapy for PTSD because the experience was so devastaing for me ;) | 
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 We loved to wear ours. We were proud to be Pi Phis and Greeks. The first week, all the sororities' NMs wore pledge ribbons in our colors behind our pledge pins. | 
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 We wore ours (with ribbons underneath of course) M-F 9-5 (or whenever you were done with school).  That was pretty standard for all the sororities on campus.  We also were allowed/supposed to wear it with everything - thank God.  DZs had to wear theirs with dress pants or skirts only (in other words they had to dress up for school for 6 weeks) so that made me certain that DZ and I were not meant to be. ;) | 
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 And none of that M-F bit, either - we were expected to wear them at all times! Oh, the humanity! | 
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 The thought of wearing it all the time is nice, but I personally like that we wear it just when we are dressed up. I generally went to class in yoga pants, t-shirt and hoodie. My pledge pin deserved more than that. You can represent your org by wearing a t-shirt, carrying a bag, wearing jewelry with letters/colors/symbols, etc. | 
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 Back in the day . . . we wore our pledge pins when we were dressed up (mostly for pledge meetings and chapter functions).  Otherwise, we wore ribbon pins in our sorority colors (all of the 15 chapters did that); and on 2 days of the week, we had to wear our pledge t-shirts with our letters on the front and first names on the back.  Also had to have our pledge notebook with us at all times, so we didn't get demerits from the actives. | 
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 Ohhhh...in the old days, we wore our pledge pins every day.  Before we got our pledge pins, we wore the ribbons.  Once we got our pledge pins, we had to wear our pledge ribbons on our bra straps LOL  I'm currently seeking therapy KIDDING!!! | 
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 The thing in my mind that distinguishes a pledge/NM pin from other things (like wearing colors) is that it doesn't just represent the org, it specifically symbolizes the wearer's place and role in the org. Different orgs may reach different conclusions about whether that's a good thing or a bad thing. | 
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 It reminds me of how Maryland's governor Martin O'Malley insists on calling illegal immigrants "New Americans". I mean, you can bake half a dozen baseballs and call them biscuits, but they'll still be baseballs. Unless they're biscuits I baked. In which case they will actually be biscuits but will taste more like baseballs. ***by "earning their sisterhood", I don't mean having to dress identically and walk together through campus, submitting to being forced to drink and being dumped somewhere and having to find a way home or any other demeaning or dangerous acts we know to be hazing. I'm talking about things like I had to do like learning about our Founders and our history, learning a little about other sororities, going to mandatory study hours and weekly meetings. | 
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