| For white women (I'm white), agree late twenties especially if they fake and bake or have the hair extensions/fake nails. It starts to look very 'ridden hard and put away wet'. |
Dude, who do you hang out with?! |
| 55+. At a certain point, skinny or even slender starts to look frail. I used to be a lot thinner and while I sometimes regret gaining some weight (went from bmi of 20 to 23), in some ways I look better now despite having more of a tummy. |
How may skinny old women do you see? How many obese fat old women do you see? I rest my case. |
I appreciated the responses. Confirms what I have always known - which is that some extraordinarily disordered people post on these threads. We should take all comments from a place of recognizing that. |
I’m 39 and just ate 3 Belgian chocolate truffles in bed as a consequence of this thread. I figure I need to stay young looking so, guess I’m going to have to do this anti-aging routine daily. Thanks, ladies!
|
I'm latin and my cheeks are full but I'm skinny. And I'm 42 and I still pass for younger according to doctors for the haters on here. |
Have fun big bertha |
| It's no secret this thread pertains to white women who age like milk. And some Latin people. |
I am! A lot! YOLO |
I would think the indoor runners look better, skinwise and the outdoor runners feel better, mentally. |
I would never comment on other people's body size out loud, that would be rude. I was just answering the question. Clearly OP wants some guidance on this. I was glad to help. FYI I haven't noticed anyone laughing at me, except maybe you, and I assume that's because you are skinny. Condolences. |
I don't know why I am looking for logic in the comments on this deranged thread but, wut? Some older women look frail but only if they actually are. Frail means "weak and delicate." So someone with delicate bone structure who isn't very active or strong will look frail. Also people who are actually unwell look frail at times. My FIL looked very frail in his last year, but he was undergoing chemo and radiation and had no appetite and felt horrible. It's just weird to equate frail with "bad" because it's actually a sympathetic state. But I know a lot of women in their 50s for whom thin and strong go hand in hand. They work out, lift weights, and stay active, and this keeps the menopausal weight gain in check while also making them look (and feel) anything but frail. Use it or lose it. I'd much rather be thin and "frail looking" but actually feel strong and healthy because I'm taking care of my body, then gain weight I don't need in order to have fuller cheeks or more of a butt? Some of you have insane priorities. |
Frail is not the same at all as lean and muscular which is what you are describing. Frail must be “sympathetic,” but it is unhealthy and unattractive. |
And vice versa. |