Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone looks the same now.
Botoxed face, fillers everywhere, stenciled eyebrows, contouring make-up, eyelash extensions, refined nose tips, tan.
Same damn look on every face in Hollywood and becoming increasingly the same damn look on every middle class to wealthy woman.
I'm 36 and UMC and very few women I know who are my age do any of these. Eyebrow waxing, hair dye when you go gray, and pedicures are normal. But I rarely even wear makeup and that's not uncommon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that millenial women overall are much more naturally plain than women of past generations and they all kind of look alike (same clothes, same hairstyle). And maybe it is just the DC area, but I have never really seen a stunning millenial woman. They are really only nice looking to any extent because of their youth. But, man, they are TALL.
It is the DC area. The women in the DC area are not particularly attractive. I'm not sure why. But go down south and you'll see a lot better looking women
True. A whole lot of plain in this town.
I'd say the exact opposite.
People in DC, as well as other major professional cities, look more put-together, classy, and less overweight than in the rural South.
For example, within my group of friends I'd think I was about average. At the lower end of the BMI scale but I'm young and haven't had kids. I wear a size 2-4 and would say most of my friends would wear the same size, give or take a few inches in height. It absolutely floors me that the average weight of an American woman is 170 lbs. I look around me and think how is that possible that so many American women weight that much, and that 49.9% weigh significantly more, to offset people like my 115-135 lb colleagues?
Then I look at people in other places. Last time it really hit me was when I took a connecting flight in Houston last year. Holy moly. Everyone was a whale.
I was talking about southern cities. Like Austin, Atlanta, Miami. The women in these cities run circles around DC women. I’m not talking about how “put together” they look. No man cares about it. We care about body and face, and DC women body and face below average for major US cities
Anonymous wrote:Women are fitter now.
But older women are uglier: botox, fillers, etc all make you look like a freak show.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that millenial women overall are much more naturally plain than women of past generations and they all kind of look alike (same clothes, same hairstyle). And maybe it is just the DC area, but I have never really seen a stunning millenial woman. They are really only nice looking to any extent because of their youth. But, man, they are TALL.
It is the DC area. The women in the DC area are not particularly attractive. I'm not sure why. But go down south and you'll see a lot better looking women
True. A whole lot of plain in this town.
I'd say the exact opposite.
People in DC, as well as other major professional cities, look more put-together, classy, and less overweight than in the rural South.
For example, within my group of friends I'd think I was about average. At the lower end of the BMI scale but I'm young and haven't had kids. I wear a size 2-4 and would say most of my friends would wear the same size, give or take a few inches in height. It absolutely floors me that the average weight of an American woman is 170 lbs. I look around me and think how is that possible that so many American women weight that much, and that 49.9% weigh significantly more, to offset people like my 115-135 lb colleagues?
Then I look at people in other places. Last time it really hit me was when I took a connecting flight in Houston last year. Holy moly. Everyone was a whale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that millenial women overall are much more naturally plain than women of past generations and they all kind of look alike (same clothes, same hairstyle). And maybe it is just the DC area, but I have never really seen a stunning millenial woman. They are really only nice looking to any extent because of their youth. But, man, they are TALL.
It is the DC area. The women in the DC area are not particularly attractive. I'm not sure why. But go down south and you'll see a lot better looking women
True. A whole lot of plain in this town.
I'd say the exact opposite.
People in DC, as well as other major professional cities, look more put-together, classy, and less overweight than in the rural South.
For example, within my group of friends I'd think I was about average. At the lower end of the BMI scale but I'm young and haven't had kids. I wear a size 2-4 and would say most of my friends would wear the same size, give or take a few inches in height. It absolutely floors me that the average weight of an American woman is 170 lbs. I look around me and think how is that possible that so many American women weight that much, and that 49.9% weigh significantly more, to offset people like my 115-135 lb colleagues?
Then I look at people in other places. Last time it really hit me was when I took a connecting flight in Houston last year. Holy moly. Everyone was a whale.
I was talking about southern cities. Like Austin, Atlanta, Miami. The women in these cities run circles around DC women. I’m not talking about how “put together” they look. No man cares about it. We care about body and face, and DC women body and face below average for major US cities
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that millenial women overall are much more naturally plain than women of past generations and they all kind of look alike (same clothes, same hairstyle). And maybe it is just the DC area, but I have never really seen a stunning millenial woman. They are really only nice looking to any extent because of their youth. But, man, they are TALL.
It is the DC area. The women in the DC area are not particularly attractive. I'm not sure why. But go down south and you'll see a lot better looking women
True. A whole lot of plain in this town.
I'd say the exact opposite.
People in DC, as well as other major professional cities, look more put-together, classy, and less overweight than in the rural South.
For example, within my group of friends I'd think I was about average. At the lower end of the BMI scale but I'm young and haven't had kids. I wear a size 2-4 and would say most of my friends would wear the same size, give or take a few inches in height. It absolutely floors me that the average weight of an American woman is 170 lbs. I look around me and think how is that possible that so many American women weight that much, and that 49.9% weigh significantly more, to offset people like my 115-135 lb colleagues?
Then I look at people in other places. Last time it really hit me was when I took a connecting flight in Houston last year. Holy moly. Everyone was a whale.