Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 43. I don’t feel this way at all based on midlife but I did feel that way at certain times and phases of life.
- does your partner care about or react to you dressing up? Not having a husband who ever took me out on dates or complimented me made me not try very hard.
- having little kids made me not care very much either. They’re older now and I have more time for myself. I was also a SAHM for years.
- being overweight also made not trying on clothes very fun. I lost weight and now I love showing it off.
I am divorced, have an enthusiastic partner, and feel more sexy and beautiful than ever. I think the difference is confidence.
This doesn’t sound like confidence TBH. It sounds like you’re pretty insecure and need external validation / like random people looking at you. Which is normal for your teens and 20s or if otherwise “single and looking” but if you’re settled and married and happy and still saying “I love showing it off” that’s not really healthy IMO.
It sounded like confidence to me. You are the one who sounds insecure, with the need to post this. DP
Anonymous wrote:I’m 43. I don’t feel this way at all based on midlife but I did feel that way at certain times and phases of life.
- does your partner care about or react to you dressing up? Not having a husband who ever took me out on dates or complimented me made me not try very hard.
- having little kids made me not care very much either. They’re older now and I have more time for myself. I was also a SAHM for years.
- being overweight also made not trying on clothes very fun. I lost weight and now I love showing it off.
I am divorced, have an enthusiastic partner, and feel more sexy and beautiful than ever. I think the difference is confidence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread title - A++++
As for the sentiment, I understand.
+1
And I’m a bit of a contradiction. I spend a lot on Botox, my skin, hair, nails, and even some plastic surgery, but cannot be bothered to wear more than leggings and sweatshirt unless I go into the office (which I don’t do often) and I rarely wear more than sunscreen and lip gloss. I used dress well and wear a full face of make up.
Anonymous wrote:This thread title - A++++
As for the sentiment, I understand.
Anonymous wrote:I think this article by Kathy Horn was posted at the time, but relevant : https://www.thecut.com/article/cathy-horyn-how-i-lost-and-found-my-personal-style.html
Anonymous wrote:Right there with you, OP. I'm 47 and my interest in fashion has waned. I just want to be comfortable, honestly. Jeans and a cashmere sweater and nice boots is simple and comfortable for me. I also bought ZERO clothes in 2024 except one pack of underwear to replace some that was worn out and it sort of cured me of the constant need to buy.
I am thinking about spending all that money I used to spend on clothes on a nice watch.
Anonymous wrote:I think once you age and lose your looks no amount of fashion and clothing will help you feel beautiful.
Anonymous wrote:I feel this way even though I am thin and have an "easy to dress" body.
I think part of it is just having been around long enough to really question spending money on clothes, because I remember in my 20s and 30s buying so many things thinking "I'll wear this a ton" or "this will never go out of style" and it's usually just not true. As I've gotten older I've reverted to more actually "timeless" fashion, but the truth is that it's timeless because it's pretty boring and nondescript -- straight cut jeans, striped tees, sweaters and jackets in neutral shades, etc. Like your basic middle age mom uniform.