Anonymous wrote:Most of us don't have to work as hard as you do to look great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much time is this taking?. Looking good is nice but if it takes away time from getting to know you as a person. Is it really worth it.
And no one wants to hear about your very special diet and the million things you can't eat.
Basically by middle age most people are looking for depth not just looks when it comes to long-term
On a weekly basis I spend 5 hours at the gym, 2 hours at yoga, 4 hours on skincare and nails.
How does yoga help you lookswise?
Yoga helps maintaining a strong core. 5 hours in a gym is not a low. I spend 10/week (2-3 workouts) and also on a strict diet (only salad at night. no bread, sugars, alcohol). It take a great will to preserve body and looks after 40 for women
It takes a lot for men too.
But the men don't talk about it. If they do, we'd roll our eyes. I recently brought to my DH's attention that most of the middle aged men around him are dyeing their hair and going to the gym daily. He did not even notice. He thought he was aging prematurely.
That’s just a lie. There is not a guy in the universe with any kind of fitness routine— and god forbid running marathons— you will not hear all about.
Disagree. My dh does triathlons, masters swim in the mornings before work, runs during lunch and never talks about it. He eats really healthfully too, a spinach salad heaped with vegetables for lunch every day, barely drinks and doesn't talk about it. (1.5 hours working out daily, 30 min prepping vegetables)
What he really wouldn't talk about is how I got him wearing sunscreen and moisturizer (with HA and vitamin c) every morning, tretinoin at night. He couldn't stand the tretinoin, but now it's just like flossing and he does it.
I have heard his friends joke about his high metabolism and how low maintenance he is. He actually thinks he's low maintenance too. I can't imagine most of them wake at 5am for masters swim.
Anonymous wrote:I try to stay attractive by working out, eating healthy, and having a disciplined beauty regimen. Men I date appreciate that I look good. I’m middle aged and all of this stuff takes more time and money as I age. Even though guys like that I look nice, many don’t want to support the stuff I have to do to keep up. For instance, they may resent the time it takes or that I have to be strict with my diet. How do others handle this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad's wife is like this. She can't do anything or be seen by anyone in the morning before 9 AM, so everyone has to wait around for her. She spends a ton of money on it. My dad keeps his mouth shut but I know he thinks it's dumb. After all of that, she still doesn't look very good.
This is such a mean spirited comment. Talk to a therapist please.
Anonymous wrote:My dad's wife is like this. She can't do anything or be seen by anyone in the morning before 9 AM, so everyone has to wait around for her. She spends a ton of money on it. My dad keeps his mouth shut but I know he thinks it's dumb. After all of that, she still doesn't look very good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much time is this taking?. Looking good is nice but if it takes away time from getting to know you as a person. Is it really worth it.
And no one wants to hear about your very special diet and the million things you can't eat.
Basically by middle age most people are looking for depth not just looks when it comes to long-term
On a weekly basis I spend 5 hours at the gym, 2 hours at yoga, 4 hours on skincare and nails.
How does yoga help you lookswise?
Yoga helps maintaining a strong core. 5 hours in a gym is not a low. I spend 10/week (2-3 workouts) and also on a strict diet (only salad at night. no bread, sugars, alcohol). It take a great will to preserve body and looks after 40 for women
I'm 52. I wash my face with gold dial soap and follow with some target brand moisturizer. I do style my hair every day, which takes maybe 20 minutes to blow out and curl. I use suave shampoo and conditioner and pantene hair smoother. I put Vaseline on my lips and brush my eyebrows and lashes. No make up. My exercise is walking 2-3 miles daily, hiking 2-4 times a week and push ups/planks. I still turn heads and, if I weren't already married, I could easily attract a partner. If you have to work as hard as you do to look basically decent, you either have impossible standards or you were starting from an unfortunate place.
I am 59 and look about 45. I don't even take my makeup off most days. I moisturize once most days. I wash my hair once a week, and it looks good without having to do much to it. I am a little chubby, which helps your face look less wrinkled as you age.
This is all to say that a lot of this is genetic and having a mother who made me wear sunscreen and a hat outside when I was young. There is only so much one can do.
PS-- my pedicures also last 4+ weeks if I exfoliate and moisturize my feet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much time is this taking?. Looking good is nice but if it takes away time from getting to know you as a person. Is it really worth it.
And no one wants to hear about your very special diet and the million things you can't eat.
Basically by middle age most people are looking for depth not just looks when it comes to long-term
On a weekly basis I spend 5 hours at the gym, 2 hours at yoga, 4 hours on skincare and nails.
How does yoga help you lookswise?
Yoga helps maintaining a strong core. 5 hours in a gym is not a low. I spend 10/week (2-3 workouts) and also on a strict diet (only salad at night. no bread, sugars, alcohol). It take a great will to preserve body and looks after 40 for women
Nothing is worse than a golfer! They recant every hole. I was once at a function and my friend's husband was going into great detail about his golf game, and I thought, "I don't have to listen to this because we are not married." LOL
It takes a lot for men too.
But the men don't talk about it. If they do, we'd roll our eyes. I recently brought to my DH's attention that most of the middle aged men around him are dyeing their hair and going to the gym daily. He did not even notice. He thought he was aging prematurely.
That’s just a lie. There is not a guy in the universe with any kind of fitness routine— and god forbid running marathons— you will not hear all about.
haha, this is true!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much time is this taking?. Looking good is nice but if it takes away time from getting to know you as a person. Is it really worth it.
And no one wants to hear about your very special diet and the million things you can't eat.
Basically by middle age most people are looking for depth not just looks when it comes to long-term
On a weekly basis I spend 5 hours at the gym, 2 hours at yoga, 4 hours on skincare and nails.
How does yoga help you lookswise?
Yoga helps maintaining a strong core. 5 hours in a gym is not a low. I spend 10/week (2-3 workouts) and also on a strict diet (only salad at night. no bread, sugars, alcohol). It take a great will to preserve body and looks after 40 for women
I'm 52. I wash my face with gold dial soap and follow with some target brand moisturizer. I do style my hair every day, which takes maybe 20 minutes to blow out and curl. I use suave shampoo and conditioner and pantene hair smoother. I put Vaseline on my lips and brush my eyebrows and lashes. No make up. My exercise is walking 2-3 miles daily, hiking 2-4 times a week and push ups/planks. I still turn heads and, if I weren't already married, I could easily attract a partner. If you have to work as hard as you do to look basically decent, you either have impossible standards or you were starting from an unfortunate place.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. I spend 30 mins a day on skincare…..washing twice a day, exfoliating every other day, sunscreen, moisturizer, gua sha, eye cream, lash serum, and weekly facial. I spend 30 mins a week on nails (I don’t do gel or anything fake).
Anonymous wrote:Stop living for various rando guys you meet from the internet. Start living your own fabulous healthy life and having your own interests.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much time is this taking?. Looking good is nice but if it takes away time from getting to know you as a person. Is it really worth it.
And no one wants to hear about your very special diet and the million things you can't eat.
Basically by middle age most people are looking for depth not just looks when it comes to long-term
On a weekly basis I spend 5 hours at the gym, 2 hours at yoga, 4 hours on skincare and nails.
How does yoga help you lookswise?
Yoga helps maintaining a strong core. 5 hours in a gym is not a low. I spend 10/week (2-3 workouts) and also on a strict diet (only salad at night. no bread, sugars, alcohol). It take a great will to preserve body and looks after 40 for women
It takes a lot for men too.
But the men don't talk about it. If they do, we'd roll our eyes. I recently brought to my DH's attention that most of the middle aged men around him are dyeing their hair and going to the gym daily. He did not even notice. He thought he was aging prematurely.
That’s just a lie. There is not a guy in the universe with any kind of fitness routine— and god forbid running marathons— you will not hear all about.
Disagree. My dh does triathlons, masters swim in the mornings before work, runs during lunch and never talks about it. He eats really healthfully too, a spinach salad heaped with vegetables for lunch every day, barely drinks and doesn't talk about it. (1.5 hours working out daily, 30 min prepping vegetables)
What he really wouldn't talk about is how I got him wearing sunscreen and moisturizer (with HA and vitamin c) every morning, tretinoin at night. He couldn't stand the tretinoin, but now it's just like flossing and he does it.
I have heard his friends joke about his high metabolism and how low maintenance he is. He actually thinks he's low maintenance too. I can't imagine most of them wake at 5am for masters swim .