I had a low self-image when I was younger.
Nowadays it shocks me a bit when I see myself in the mirror and I think I look pretty darn good![]()
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I like Bikes - Mimi
Watercolor Blog
Davidson Custom Bike - Cavaletta
Dahon 2009 Sport - Luna
Old Raleigh Mixte - Mitzi
I had a low self-image when I was younger.
Nowadays it shocks me a bit when I see myself in the mirror and I think I look pretty darn good![]()
2009 Lynskey R230 Houseblend - Brooks Team Pro
2007 Rivendell Bleriot - Rivet Pearl
I can imagine, Mimi. Methinks there maybe alot of TE members, including myself, hope that we look abit younger or at least MOVE, younger than our age.
In response to Crankin, I don't diss makeup. It is useful for certain times. I'm just glad to be with grown sisters, nieces and my partner's daughter who don't feel any need to look better with makeup when we visit one another even if we haven't see each other for awhile.
I haven't worn mascara in past quarter century. My eyes feel exhausted after 1-2 hrs. And you can't really notice the mascara on me anyway. Useless.
Alot of Asian eyes, the way how the eyes are set into the face, require a ton of mascara, or curling the eyelashes plus eyeliner to make it noticeable /worthwhile. However some of my sisters nominally use the stuff.
But for myself, I am with a guy ..who doesn't even want to kiss me when I wear lipstick. Lipstick has fragrance. If I wear foundation, he turns his face away..he can smell the fragrance which he is allergic. There are people like him, who if they sat beside a woman wearing make-up, they start getting a headache /allergic reaction which makes it difficult to concentrate at a meeting. It happened to him at a biz meeting in a small board rm. He really wanted to leave the rm.
As for ever looking like a hottie at any point in life, LOL, I think I missed that stage. I must have been sitting by the roadside of life, when it all happened.![]()
Last edited by shootingstar; 02-27-2009 at 08:29 AM.
Winter riding is much less about badassery and much more about bundle-uppery. - malkin
1995 Kona Cinder Cone commuterFrankenbike/Selle Italia SLR Lady Gel Flow
2008 white Nakamura Summit Custom mtb/Terry Falcon X
2000 Schwinn Fastback Comp road bike/Specialized Jett
I know what you mean. Most miserable time of my life, alas. Wish I could get a do-over.![]()
2009 Lynskey R230 Houseblend - Brooks Team Pro
2007 Rivendell Bleriot - Rivet Pearl
What lph said. I could've written a lot of that, except not nearly so eloquently! (And except for the fact that I loved my muscles when I was 18, too.)
I would expand a little by saying that there's a huge difference between "looks don't matter" vs. "the type of looks that matter to me are maybe a little different from what I perceive as mattering to the mainstream media." An enormous difference.
Like a lot of you, maybe most women, much of my self-image comes from cruel, ugly things my parents and peers told me when I was a pre-adolescent. So in that way, you could say that looks don't define my self image - I feel just as fat at 122 lbs as I did at 150.
I never learned to put on makeup, and there are times (pretty infrequent) when I feel "naked" without it, but in general I don't miss it. I'm not enormously concerned about my hair, and I'm not terribly motivated to cover my grey; but six months of stupendously awful haircuts (two winters in a row) really added up to make me feel unattractive.
When I look at my chest in the mirror, I don't care that I don't see large firm b00bs. But I do care that I can make my pecs dance. The scars on my legs, well, I'd be happier not to have them, but if I catch a glimpse of defined muscles in the mirror when I'm putting on pantyhose, that does give me an ego boost. I'm okay with my cyclist's tan (white shoulders, white upper thighs, raccoon eyes), but I do feel pasty and pudgy when I have no tan at all (and I will cop to putting sunblock on my nose in a pretty futile attempt to keep it close to the same color as my cheeks at least). I'm not shy about walking into stores in my cycling shorts. But I'd change before I went to the opera.
I read something a few years back that I just now remembered and I may not be describing this exactly right, but I know I have the gist of it. Some researchers put male and female subjects through exercise programs. All of the participants lost weight and got stronger. But if the women's self-image improved, they were more likely to say it was because they were stronger and more muscular; if the men's self-image improved, they were more likely to say it was because they'd lost weight. The researchers interpreted this as indicating that the non-stereotypical values mattered more to each gender; but I thought it was something else.
For me, and for most women, my self-image about my weight is immutable. I know in my heart that I am fat (and yah, I know, I'm sure years of therapy could help me with that, but honestly I have more important things to deal with in therapy). No amount of weight loss will make me feel not-fat. Being strong and muscular, on the other hand - because it's something I received no messages about as a child - I can see the changes in my body honestly, without all the filters and "tapes." I can own the results of the work I've done and be happy about it. My guess is that it's the same for men - their idea of whether they're strong or weak is instilled as a value judgment in childhood and difficult to change, whereas they can see themselves more objectively as fat or thin.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
This was just handed to me; it's a real piece of history:
Office instruction - Aero-Space Division Secretarial Standard No. 901
June 28, 1961
Personal Appearance
An attractive appearance is important and can be achieved by using intelligence in the selection and care of clothes and the use of proper makeup.
Clothing should be selected which is suitable, not only for the job itself, but the work area as well. A girl whose work requires physical effort should obviously select clothes which are both attractive and comfortable. Low-cut dresses are never appropriate and excuses such as “dates” or “hot weather” will not make them correct.
REMINDERS
1. Regardless of how attractive your clothing may be when new, they must be kept clean and well pressed. A fastidious person knows that good grooming includes cleanliness both in her person and her garments.
2. The well-dressed girl wears proper undergarments. She knows she does not look well on the outside unless she is dressed correctly underneath.
3. Extreme hairdos should be avoided. Gaudy flowers and ornaments are not appropriate for the office.
4. Heavy makeup attracts attention but not always admiration.
Don’t risk embarrassment to either your employer or yourself. Invariably, the girl who is most admired by her fellow employees is well groomed but tailored, and has learned the importance of being properly dressed and immaculate in her appearance. She never arrives at work with her hair in curlers and without makeup, thereby creating the impression that the effort to be “ready for her job” is just too great. She knows that good mental and physical health are important in order to be attractive.
She never uses personal appearance as a substitute for intelligence by knows that being well groomed is part of her job.
I like Bikes - Mimi
Watercolor Blog
Davidson Custom Bike - Cavaletta
Dahon 2009 Sport - Luna
Old Raleigh Mixte - Mitzi
I definitely agree; my idea of looking good is looking fit (I think I tried to say that before). And what lph said about looking good for one's age vs. looking younger is right on. I look good for 55. Do I look 40? I don't think so. I want to say to my friends who say they "can't do what I do" that this is what a fit 55 year looks like. Come see my cycling friends.
You know, Oakleaf, I think that I was a case of your thinking, but in reverse. I was always thin and then in my twenties, I gained about 25 pounds. I lost it and kept it off until I was in my mid forties (well I didn't gain as much). Both times, I was slow to accept the fact that I needed to do something, because I saw myself as a thin person. In fact the second time, I saw myself as a fit, thin person, even though I was barely going through the motions at the gym. The first time my husband took me out on the bike, I almost fainted. I still thought I was fit and thin until I was gasping for breath going up a teeny hill. Then I got pissed at myself and started on the right track to getting fit again.
That won't happen again.
Biciclista
That is priceless! ! ! ! But I do wish they would put the low cut top rule back into play. I get tired telling the girls all day to pull up their tops - the poor HS boys even admit they don't really like it - they have no where to look.
Crankin' your story sounds like mine - even when I was ill and gained 40 lbs I still perceived myself as a thin person. I don't realize how bad I looked until I look at old photo's.
I gained weight again after a personal crisis and am now trying to get it back off. A friend told me last night I am starting to look "fit". As I am growing older I see that being valued more than being "Hot"
Just a thought
Perhaps it is a statement of the species - men are attracted to "fit" older women because they know they will be healthy enough to take care of them in their old age. But then men are attracted to young and "hot" too when they are old.probably to test there virility and reproductive rights
Luckily more older men are attracted to old and fit than young and hot or I would be in a lurch of ever finding another soulmate.
Just an interesting aside - I met a guy in his mid 50's whom I thought was rather interesting, he said when he met me he wasn't interested because I was too young for him. I am 52! (he perked up a little when he found that out)
I always thought all older men wanted young and "hot" but apparently there are some out there w/ brains and integrity who take mature and fit over young and hot.
Me on the other hand . . . .yep I will take men who are mature and fit any day over young and hot.
Last edited by eclectic; 02-27-2009 at 01:56 PM. Reason: spelling errors but there are probably more
It's about the journey and being in the moment, not about the destination
I'm still wondering about this one:
2. The well-dressed girl wears proper undergarments. She knows she does not look well on the outside unless she is dressed correctly underneath.
are we referring to garterbelts? slips? girdles?
I like Bikes - Mimi
Watercolor Blog
Davidson Custom Bike - Cavaletta
Dahon 2009 Sport - Luna
Old Raleigh Mixte - Mitzi
Probably girdles. My mother told me of having one basically explode off of her, it was so taut. A nice girl never left home without one.
Or, if you apply it to today: no VPL, a bra that fits and no thongs showing above the waist band.
Actually, as a former retail outlet manager, I can see how that entire dress code could easily be applied to today's standards with ease. I had plenty of women (men too, actually) that had NO idea how to dress appropriately for a business situation. In fact, when I worked for the last retail establishment before I left the industry, dress code training was a critical part of your early employment. As an employee of my store, you were a representative of the designer and were expected to dress as such. It was a constant battle. Anyway, replace 'girl' with something more gender neutral (and dump the curlers phrase), and it would still apply.
Last edited by GLC1968; 02-27-2009 at 03:40 PM.
My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom
I was on a hut trip a few weeks ago and the guys were talking about girls/women on their snowboards and that they must be cold because of the "whale tale" I was pretty confused because I had no I idea what a "whale tale" was. I was trying to think of all these complicated things then I finally asked and they said it was when you could see the womens thong because there pants were too lowTalk about cold when one is snowboarding
The brain struggles: how is wearing a thong comfortable when doing any sport? Please inform nuthead here.....
Red: I giggled over that girdle story.
Alas, body shaping garments have come back in the lingerie section. When I first saw their 21lst century of the old, I was abit put off.
It's ok for the annual party or whatever. But really hopefully not for regular wear! Instead of forcing body to look hot in clothes, instead for some women to focus on their health and fitness.