Anonymous wrote:Yes!!!!!Anonymous wrote:I was very vain in my younger years but never comfortable in my own skin. I figured it was anxiety. Do I look good, do I wear the latest fashion, own the latest hand bag, is my makeup perfect, am I fronting someone I know I'm not. On and on and on ...
Then when I turned 50, I let it all go. No more caring what others thought, no longer caring about fitting in, being who I wanted to be, not some stupid mold someone else thought I should be.
I do what I want when I want. I dress how I want. Rarely wear makeup. Don't color my hair. See wrinkles.
For the first time in my life, I AM FREE.
My younger self should stay gone. I don't like her.
Yes!!!!!Anonymous wrote:I was very vain in my younger years but never comfortable in my own skin. I figured it was anxiety. Do I look good, do I wear the latest fashion, own the latest hand bag, is my makeup perfect, am I fronting someone I know I'm not. On and on and on ...
Then when I turned 50, I let it all go. No more caring what others thought, no longer caring about fitting in, being who I wanted to be, not some stupid mold someone else thought I should be.
I do what I want when I want. I dress how I want. Rarely wear makeup. Don't color my hair. See wrinkles.
For the first time in my life, I AM FREE.
My younger self should stay gone. I don't like her.
Anonymous wrote:No issues. I'm 46 and look 15 years younger. Good genes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I run almost every day, and I've also recently added light weights. I don't see much difference at 37 and I love how toned my legs and butt are from running.
I really suggest you find an exercise routine you enjoy enough to do regularly, and then do it enthusiastically and hard enough that it will actually work your muscles. I know this is an unpopular opinion, but yoga has never been enough/effective for my body type, and it does not give me that glorious "high" I get from a super hard run. My friends whose exercise consists of yoga or similar ARE getting saggier with age, even if they are not overweight. You need hard, regular cardio as you get older to keep off the middle aged spread, but it is very possible to maintain if that is what is important to you.
Also, you don't care about your "age number" when in the throes of a runner's high; you only care about how great you feel. This is a lot better than fretting.
Neither did I at 37. Check back with me in 10 years. At 45 is when I started noticing.
Anonymous wrote:I was very vain in my younger years but never comfortable in my own skin. I figured it was anxiety. Do I look good, do I wear the latest fashion, own the latest hand bag, is my makeup perfect, am I fronting someone I know I'm not. On and on and on ...
Then when I turned 50, I let it all go. No more caring what others thought, no longer caring about fitting in, being who I wanted to be, not some stupid mold someone else thought I should be.
I do what I want when I want. I dress how I want. Rarely wear makeup. Don't color my hair. See wrinkles.
For the first time in my life, I AM FREE.
My younger self should stay gone. I don't like her.
Anonymous wrote:I run almost every day, and I've also recently added light weights. I don't see much difference at 37 and I love how toned my legs and butt are from running.
I really suggest you find an exercise routine you enjoy enough to do regularly, and then do it enthusiastically and hard enough that it will actually work your muscles. I know this is an unpopular opinion, but yoga has never been enough/effective for my body type, and it does not give me that glorious "high" I get from a super hard run. My friends whose exercise consists of yoga or similar ARE getting saggier with age, even if they are not overweight. You need hard, regular cardio as you get older to keep off the middle aged spread, but it is very possible to maintain if that is what is important to you.
Also, you don't care about your "age number" when in the throes of a runner's high; you only care about how great you feel. This is a lot better than fretting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I run almost every day, and I've also recently added light weights. I don't see much difference at 37 and I love how toned my legs and butt are from running.
I really suggest you find an exercise routine you enjoy enough to do regularly, and then do it enthusiastically and hard enough that it will actually work your muscles. I know this is an unpopular opinion, but yoga has never been enough/effective for my body type, and it does not give me that glorious "high" I get from a super hard run. My friends whose exercise consists of yoga or similar ARE getting saggier with age, even if they are not overweight. You need hard, regular cardio as you get older to keep off the middle aged spread, but it is very possible to maintain if that is what is important to you.
Also, you don't care about your "age number" when in the throes of a runner's high; you only care about how great you feel. This is a lot better than fretting.
Uh, this is posted in 50 and over, brainiac. They don't want to hear from whippersnappers like us.
37 is not young. Only thing separating 37 and 50 is 13 years... it will go by in a couple of blinks. Aging is relative. You'll be here in no time. Just enjoy every age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I run almost every day, and I've also recently added light weights. I don't see much difference at 37 and I love how toned my legs and butt are from running.
I really suggest you find an exercise routine you enjoy enough to do regularly, and then do it enthusiastically and hard enough that it will actually work your muscles. I know this is an unpopular opinion, but yoga has never been enough/effective for my body type, and it does not give me that glorious "high" I get from a super hard run. My friends whose exercise consists of yoga or similar ARE getting saggier with age, even if they are not overweight. You need hard, regular cardio as you get older to keep off the middle aged spread, but it is very possible to maintain if that is what is important to you.
Also, you don't care about your "age number" when in the throes of a runner's high; you only care about how great you feel. This is a lot better than fretting.
Uh, this is posted in 50 and over, brainiac. They don't want to hear from whippersnappers like us.
37 is not young. Only thing separating 37 and 50 is 13 years... it will go by in a couple of blinks. Aging is relative. You'll be here in no time. Just enjoy every age.