by petladyinRI » November 21st, 2006, 6:26 am
"Mostly a 4!" Listen to yourself! I don't know where you were when you started, but if someone had told you then you'd be in a Size 4, wouldn't you have been happily incredulous? I can't speak for you, but I know I'll never be completely satisfied. First of all, at 58, there's stuff no amount of diet or exercise will fix! And, the standards we're comparing ourselves to, as portrayed in the media, are set by genetic outlying values, at the far end of the bell curve, who have been reworked by professional makeup and hair stylists, lit and photo'd in the most favorable way, then air-brushed or photo-shopped a la Katie Couric. Oh, and let us not forget plastic surgery. In a way I yearn for the good old days, when people my age looked like someone's grandma and not like Cher! (And I actually think Cher is a hoot). But, short of her resources and surgeries, how many people look better pushing 60 than they did in their 20's, like she does?
So, when I look in the mirror, do I admire the newly-emerging bones or the hint of muscle peaking out from the fat and dimpled skin? Hell no. I instead look at the anorectic, unusually tall models in my Bloomie's catalog and rue that, no matter how much I lose, I will never have legs like those in skinny jeans. Frankly, I love when "People" (c'mon, we all have guilty pleasures) snaps candids of celebrities walking the dog or whatever, un-made-up, in their grubbies, and I can think, hey, they don't look so different from everybody else (read: me). But those images are way in the minority.
So, yes, body acceptance is a real issue. And maybe a lot harder than MF. I'll work on it, if you will!
Hugs,
Sue in RI
"I think I can, I think I can..."