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  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2006
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    I 100% agree with Sarah's post about appearance and 'hotness'. When I was in my 20's I had a girlfriend whom guys would fall all over themselves to talk to or date her. I once showed a photo of her to some of my guy friends (and my brother) and they didn't get it. They said she was cute, but certainly nothing special...until they met her in person. 20 minutes later, they too were in awe. It's not about looks...it's about attitude and how a person carries themselves and how they interact with others. Many women learn this later in life and therefore become hot at 30, 40, 50 or 60. Some never learn it.

    Case in point: me. I am not hot. I never have been and probably never will be, but it has little to do with how I look and everything to do with how I feel about myself. I don't know how to be sexy. Even my husband teases me about it. I don't know how to learn and at this point, I think I'm too old to bother. I have all the confidence in the world when it comes to my abilities, my brain, my inner strength, etc...but physically? Yeah, that's a huge short-coming for me and it always has been. And outside of being a little more overweight than I was in my 20's - I pretty much look exactly the same. In fact, due to some necessary surgery, my smile is even better than it was back then. If I was hot at 21, I'd still be hot now at 41. Too bad I'm not.
    My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by GLC1968 View Post
    I 100% agree with Sarah's post about appearance and 'hotness'. When I was in my 20's I had a girlfriend whom guys would fall all over themselves to talk to or date her. I once showed a photo of her to some of my guy friends (and my brother) and they didn't get it. They said she was cute, but certainly nothing special...until they met her in person. 20 minutes later, they too were in awe. It's not about looks...it's about attitude and how a person carries themselves and how they interact with others.
    I had a friend like that in college, too. There was just something about her. She was pretty, but people's reaction to went beyond that.
    Live with intention. Walk to the edge. Listen hard. Practice wellness. Play with abandon. Laugh. Choose with no regret. Continue to learn. Appreciate your friends. Do what you love. Live as if this is all there is.

    --Mary Anne Radmacher

  3. #3
    Join Date
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    Wow, a lot of insightful, and beautiful, input on this thread. What an inspiration to read all this!

    I guess we ALL struggle with wanting to feel beautiful or attractive both inside and outside, I am not immune to sometimes feeling physically unappealing in various ways either.
    But my mother (who died 2 years ago) unfortunately led her life imprisoned by a sense of the all-important physical appearance. She was a great natural beauty. And yet, despite being born more 'beautiful' than 99.9% of other women, she constantly worried and fretted about her appearance and whether others would think she was physically beautiful- it deeply affected her whole life in various sad ways. Because her appearance was the most important aspect in how she felt about herself, she naturally thought that others felt the very same way in how they perceived her.
    I suspect she would have successfully instilled the very same attitude in me if she weren't usually too busy fussing over her appearance to take the time to 'train' me.
    The only good part of all this was that I was able to see in her life the consequences of this obsession about looks, and thus watch for the danger signs in myself.
    Lisa
    My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
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  4. #4
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
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    Hey, Grog had no idea about the tv episodes. How interesting.

    Zen, where did you get that tiara?
    Speaking of which, one of my closest female friends for about 20 years, before she and I naturally parted ways, was in a Miss Canada beauty pageant. (Yea, it's true, some of the snippy stuff backstage. Waste of time.) Long after that event (which she didn't win and didn't care to because she was caught up in her university studies), she was with a bunch research colleagues in a downtown teaching hospital in Toronto where she did her work. There was a parade outside which included a Miss Canada regally in some car/float.... Her research colleagues hooted and mocked, made minor jokes.

    She absolutely dared not to reveal that she was in the pageant once upon a time. She really wanted to do well on her pharmacology thesis based on her brainpower and work.

    She also had 2 older sisters who were genuinely nice individuals...and they did each do part-time modelling. Last I heard one of them died of breast cancer recently.

    In some sort of curious way, I would be interested in knowing/meeting her daughters..if they took upon their mother's need to constantly look good. One of them would be same age as my niece....a great young woman (can't you tell I'm a proud aunt?), whom I've never seen wear makeup at any dressy party event so far. I'm glad...no reason..she's with family.

    Same for my partner's daughter. I'm secretly glad she drags in to visit us, looking dishevelled at times, but bohemian chic. I've only seen her wear makeup once after all these years. As soon my partner told me she was exploring feminist theories etc. when she was 16, I thought: GOOD!!!!! that's when eureka starts. Hopefully.
    Last edited by shootingstar; 02-26-2009 at 06:02 PM.

  5. #5
    Jolt is offline Dodging the potholes...
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    To answer the original question, not a whole lot. I don't spend much time thinking about how I look, or doing things like makeup, keeping up with the latest fashions etc. (not that there's anything wrong with doing those things within reason). Just not really interested, and for me a lot of that stuff is just a pain so I only pay a lot of attention to it when I really need to (like certain professional situations or special occasions). I do like to look healthy, but that comes naturally from being active and eating reasonably well so it's not something I find myself thinking much about.
    2011 Surly LHT
    1995 Trek 830

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr. Silver View Post
    However, I have to admit...I was never "cool" or "hot" when I was 20 and was rarely comfortable in my skin. But I had a confidence that pushed me past that and that's what got me multiple job offers when I graduated.
    I think this is what my issue is. People who know me in real life would never guess that I have this internal insecurity. It's also never held me back in my career, but it manifests itself in subtle ways one of which is my ability to project 'hotness'.


    Quote Originally Posted by lph View Post
    Did you ever switch over from wanting to be thought of as older, to wishing you were younger?
    I think I might be getting to this point, but it's not due to how I look (yet). It's mostly because I don't recover or heal as well as I used to!

    I actually still get mistaken for being younger than I am. It's not quite as pronounced as it used to be (up until the past 5 years, people truly thought I was still in my 20's). BUT, my lifestyle is such that what I look like means next to nothing to me. It's important that my husband is attracted to me, and it's important that I'm presentable at work...but other than that, I'm never even in social situations where what I look like matters anymore. Though, it's this same lifestyle that dictates that I am often dressed like a bum, wearing ugly shoes, covered with mud, wearing a baseball hat (or a bandana) and totally without makeup. If I can look, at the very least, unoffensive under these conditions, I figure I'm doing ok!
    My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom

  7. #7
    Join Date
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    Ya know, I was mildly "hot" in my 20's, but it made absolutely no difference to my quality of life. If you have not a wit of self confidence (mine was very low), it makes no difference what you look like. If you are depressed, as I often was, being attractive has no value. I am 43 now, and happier than I have ever been. I look older--a lot older, thanks to being raised underneath the rocky mountain sun sans sunscreen my entire youth..., and--except for the skin cancer issues--I pretty much dig it. My smile lines have merged with my eye lines. My hair line is doing some interesting things, but that's okay. I am much more engaged with life and living, and that seems to make all the difference. I go through phases where I am in relationships and doing that work, then lovely periods of solitude where I think: this rocks! I really have a hard time with people surgically improving their looks: I just find it painful to know that people think it truly matters, and spend their hard earned money to perk things up. How will this look when they are 75? That is my question. Anyone see Death Becomes Her? I have a mother like one of the posters: stunningly beautiful her whole life but she never knew it or truly felt/believed it, so it made no difference.

    Beauty and looking youthful are completely irrelevant to happiness. This I know. If anything, they are a hindrance to happiness because they are so valued and so difficult to maintain, and have so very little to do with one's actual character.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
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    Longmont, CO
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    Whenever we got down on ourselves my friends and I would play something we called the gene pool game. Basically, it just got us to pull our heads out of our butts. The deal was, if you could have an entirely new body and appearance, but you had a 50/50 chance of getting to be um, let me phrase this carefully, "conventionally attractive and thin" or "conventionally unattractive and morbidly obese," would you do it? Answer was always no, rather happy with me thanks.

    Back when I was shaking my a** for cash I cared a lot about my looks. It was brutal because you equated the amount you made any given night to your self worth, and your appearance. I tried not to, but it was hard. It definitely was an eye opening experience. It also opened my eyes to the wide array of what men find attractive. I was really scared when I started because I wasn't super skinny and since I got um my "twins" have lacked fullness in the bottom half and I hated them. One night there was a customer, gorgeous ooooh goodness gorgeous, I thought was digging me. He ended up spending a ton of cash on a Malibu Barbie type girl and then towards the end of the evening bought one dance from me. He told me that he had wanted a dance from me all night but she was being all pushy. Huh. Another guy spent over $100 on me in 1/2hr because he loved that I wasn't all plastic and had curves.

    I must say I bummed out when I grew into my legs, I was a leggy kid. But, that's life. I guess spending most of my life around horses I never worried to much about looking cute because I was going to get dirty. I was really baffled when the horse show mom's were doing their girls makeup. Really? For a 4-H show? She's 10!!!

    So come middle school and into high school I had a rude awakening when girls got downright nasty about how you did your hair, wore your makeup, and got dressed. My parents got divorced around that time and mom was struggling to feed and clothe us, and I was shooting up in height. I got mocked for my too short pants every day at the bus stop until one night in tears I had my aunt take me to K-Mart where I used my allowance to buy longer pants. I was sooo sad because my mom bought me these super cute outfits that all coordinated with matching colored denim.

    Later I decided that because GAP khaki wasn't my thing I'd go through angsty goth phase. Ahhh, the old days, when it was goth, not emo, and we had better taste in music. Give me Sisters of Mercy any day!

    When I took up mountain biking two things happened that peeved me. One, my mom pointed out that I was losing weight in such a manner that it sounded like I desperately needed to. Two, yall will love this, the boyfriend who got me into mountain bike said, no lie, "Most women take up biking because they like how it makes their bodies look." WTF? Yes, the giant hematoma on the back of my calf from a wicked top tube tango is soooo sexy! Okay, I was proud of it but for reals?

    Another thing that irks me, on the rare occasion I put make up on, I really detest the compliments. Like I wasn't good enough before, but now that I've painted my face with crap I am? Lipstick? Don't even get me started. Lipstick was originally intended to replicate the female sex organs in a state of arousal. Hurray! Makes me want purple to scare away icky guys!

    So I guess that brings me to now. I've learned to be happy in my own skin. Being strong and healthy is good. If I enjoy a little too much dark beer during the cold, dark days of winter and pudge up a bit, whatever. It will go away in due time. I'd rather give in the Ben and Jerry's ice cream now and then than live a life obsessed with my weight, what I eat, etc. Yeah I've had a few gray hairs since I was 14 but the coolest teacher I ever had was completely gray and would dye little inconspicuous strips whatever color of the rainbow she felt. There's a size I'd rather be it, but it's not too far away from where I am, and at that size I have no boobs or a butt, so that's kind of lame. I never ever broke out in high school, but suddenly I'm playing catch up. Payback for something I guess. I think I'm cute but not hot or sexy, and that's cool, there's a market for cute. People thought mom was 30 in her mid 40s so hopefully I don't start sporting my dad's genes out of nowhere.

    Hmm, straying here. I guess I'm glad I grew up in an era, and with parents who didn't expect me to stand still and look pretty. My grandma on dad's side sure believed that was my purpose. She thought it was great I rode horses until she found out I groomed, tacked up, and cleaned stalls myself. Mom taught me all about construction and carpentry, how to play a mean game of softball, encouraged me when I became a star pitcher. Dad took me to riding lessons and horse shows faithfully every weekend and made sure I knew horses were work. My friends taught me to work on my truck, my bike, how to build fences and irrigate hay fields. My job on the guest ranch taught me to stomach scrubbing disgusting wounds and how to keep a cool head in veterinary emergency. So that's what defines my self image. If I need to toss my hair in a pony tail and wear something I don't mind getting cow after birth on so be it. If that makes me less attractive to a guy, I don't want him. Curiously though, I found wearing ratty shoes, grubby Carhartt work shorts, some ancient t-shirt from the bottom of the drawer, and a baseball cap into the lumber yard would get the attention of all the young guys, even a seriously enhanced Barbie doll with a pulse was in the store.

    I could want to look like other people all day, but I kind of like me. In line at Whole Foods with a coworker she made a snarky remark about all the starve yourself to be thin girls on magazine covers. Instantly we weren't popular so I finished it off and said, "Oh, you mean skinny fat girls? Ya know, the ones who are thin but have no definition? No tone?" Oooooh, collective Care Bear "Glare" from the good people of Boulder. So we paid and took our wobbly from sprints at the track, but well toned legs and butts the heck out of there!
    "True, but if you throw your panties into the middle of the peloton, someone's likely to get hurt."

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
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    Limbo
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    Quote Originally Posted by shootingstar View Post

    Zen, where did you get that tiara? .
    I was last year's Queen of the Turtle Races

    Really I was just trying it on at a store. I should have bought it. It was only $20 and you never know when you'll need one.
    2008 Trek FX 7.2/Terry Cite X
    2009 Jamis Aurora/Brooks B-68
    2010 Trek FX 7.6 WSD/stock bontrager

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
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    somewhere between the Red & Rio Grande
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    Quote Originally Posted by Zen View Post
    Really I was just trying it on at a store. I should have bought it. It was only $20 and you never know when you'll need one.
    Isn't that the truth! I sold my wedding tiara in a "decluttering" phase and some days I just wish I had it to parade around in. Every woman should have a tiara.
    Amanda

    2011 Specialized Epic Comp 29er | Specialized Phenom | "Marie Laveau"
    2007 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Road | Selle Italia Lady Gel Flow | "Miranda"


    You don't have to be great to get started, but you do have to get started to be great. -Lee J. Colan

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
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    Today have learned all sorts of stuff about TE forum members never dreamt of.

    There's something about the beauty of the anonymity of the Internet.

    And one day maybe I will know of a woman in person who had and will tell others that she had plastic surgery just to make herself more beautiful...not because she suffered breast cancer, was a burn victim, etc.

    Until then, my world remains narrow.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
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    Quote Originally Posted by shootingstar View Post
    And one day maybe I will know of a woman in person who had and will tell others that she had plastic surgery just to make herself more beautiful...not because she suffered breast cancer, was a burn victim, etc.

    Until then, my world remains narrow.

    hmmm....I've said this on this board before.....I had plastic surgery (got breast implants). I got them to make my body more attractive.

    That's the bottom line. But there is much more to it.

    With them I have a better self image of my body. I could discuss this at length, but I know that there are those would never understand my decision and would call my swallow or have some other less that positive opinion of me because of it. And although, I really do care what others think of me.....It's my intention in life to have a positive, inspiring and encouraging influence on other people....It doesn't matter to me if there are those who disagree with my decision to get plastic surgery.
    "Being retired from Biking...isn't that kinda like being retired from recess?" Stephen Colbert asked of Lance Armstrong

 

 

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