So how do they have time for truly meaningful hobbies and volunteering? Oh wait... |
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Op I know what you mean and marvel at this. I see it as a combination of the following:
- fit and toned body - well cared for and styled hair - beautiful clean skin - good quality and well fitted clothes - well coordinated shoes and accessories It’s A LOT of effort, time and money. Some women seen their presentation as an essential part of who they are and their self worth. |
I don't participate, but why are you judging what's "truly meaningful?" Who cares if their hobby is make-up vs. knitting? How do you know that they don't volunteer? They actually do a ton of charity work (a lot of it is based on socializing, but they do help people). What's your damage? What "truly meaningful" hobby do you participate in that is so much more worthy of your appreciation? GMAFB |
So you spend two hours gardening and they spend it blow drying their hair - how are you morally superior? OH WAIT.... |
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I think a lot of this is:
1) hair. I have curly frizzy hair. I’d have to get it professionally blow dried multiple times a week and never get it wet in order for it to look perfect all the time. So I’m never going to be that perfect straight haired girl. There’s a satc episode about thisL curly vs straight haired women. 2) some women’s moms teach them how to do makeup and hair and dress well. And then they put effort into doing so. My mom dressed like a homeless lady half the time. 3) body. My body is fine. Tall. Fairly thin. But I have large hips and that makes It harder to look perfect. Some of this is body type. Some bodies just look better and more put together in clothes than others. We might still have nice bodies, but clothes just don’t hang as well on us. |
OP here. I feel all of this. Especially the thing about moms. My mom was so weird about appearances and self care when I was a kid. She HATED her appearance and was always dieting and changing her hair. She had no idea how to wear makeup but tried. No idea how to dress either and since she hated her body she slowly just morphed into wearing huge sack clothes that covered it up. Growing up I didn't necessarily know who I wanted to be but I knew I didn't want to be like that. I refused to loathe my body, no matter what. Like I said in my OP, I think I'm good looking. But maybe that's it -- maybe there's some key that confident, put together women pass on to their daughters and I just don't know what it is. I wish they'd share it with me! I don't have low self-esteem but I'd love to just feel more composed in my day to day. |
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OP, I’m a woman like this and to be honest? Beauty and fashion is my hobby. I enjoy watching fashion shows, learning about makeup techniques on YouTube, and chatting with my Derm about new products. Consistently looking pulled together isn’t effortless, but some people enjoy the effort more than others. Here’s what I do:
Standing personal care - hair, nails, skin, brows Exercise and eat well - count calories every day and try to make sure I MOVE Wardrobe - I got in a rut and had a personal stylist who helped me spend $7k on my wardrobe. Tons of basic and special pieces. Now a supplement each season and I felt great about my wardrobe. And with doing all this, there are tons of women who look more pulled together than me. Because they work for it more than I do. More effort. |
If it’s influencer, this is their job and they aren’t financing it. |
+1 Social media makes people unhappy. Case in point. |
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All has to do with age. I dated a few truly beautiful “women” between 20-31. For fun over years on LinkedIn or Facebook take a peak. Most have not aged well at all.
BTW it is intermediating to date a really beautiful women. I recall I had this one girlfriend literally more beautiful than any model or movie star. Five foot nine inch, 120 pounds yet somehow a figure and perfect breads and beautiful blonde hair. I recall folks described her as a much better looking younger version of Christie Brinkley. She did not work out and ate junk food. Weird part I took her to two weddings and I could feel the bride wanted to rip her heart out. Even my old uncles were lining up to dance with her. I later took her to my company Xmas party and the posted photos pretty much had her in like 30 percent of shots. She did not work there. I have guys pretty much jump out of cars while I was walking with her. I dated three girlfriends that level. They are that hot. One girl I dated pre internet got paid to go to clubs and restaurants. They actually pay her to eat and drink. I recall one club owner said 40-100 guys will come on extra if she just sat in front. But all of them got old |
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My hair is naturally frizzy and I don’t have the best sense of style so I am not one you are talking about. I don’t post photos on social media.
However, I do often get comments about my skin and how they don’t believe I can have kids my age or how I look the same as I did…. I take time on my eyebrows and Botox. Those two things do wonders. |
This. It takes a lot of time and money, especially as you get older. OP, if you want to do this, then find some outfits online and try to copy them, or go to a personal shopper. I think Nordstrom might still offer this as a free service. Don't try to recreate the wheel and start shopping from a blank piece of paper. Just copy others. If you don't have an established sense of style, then you need to buy complete outfits, including accessories. Don't buy anything if you don't know what to wear it with. Say you settle on a pair or two of shoes for a season. Make sure everything you buy works with those shoes. Start off trying to look polished even if you're copying some basic looks. Don't jump into trying to look like a high end model right off the bat. And don't buy anything that doesn't look fabulous on you. You can get some things tailored to fit better too. Find a skin care expert or influencer you like and copy them. Follow tutorials for your type of hair. Get a good haircut. Use dry shampoo so you only have to wash your hair a couple times per week. Follow makeup experts and copy them. Go to a few beauty counters to find products you like. It will still take you a lot of time to get ready, but this is how to get started if you really want to do it. Finally, you have to get in good shape or nothing will look as good on you. I focus on exercise and diet and only occasionally do my hair and make up. I have a decent sense of style so I have some casual pieces that look cute while I'm doing activities with the kids. It's just not worth it to me to look Instagram-ready every time I leave the house. I feel like I get more bang for my buck staying in good shape anyway. |
| Because you haven't seen their credit card bills. |
There is it $7K! All at once or close to it. |
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https://www.wsj.com/articles/facebook-knows-instagram-is-toxic-for-teen-girls-company-documents-show-11631620739?mod=hp_trending_now_article_pos5
Instagram is toxic no matter what age you are |