Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone on dcum looks more than a decade younger, duh
Hahaha so true. I’m 35 and everyone thinks I’m in elementary school.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 45 but look about 54. I looked good for my age until peri-menopause started at age 41. My estrogen is very low and it shows in my skin. I have deep lines in my face now from the lack of estrogen. I'm also thin and look haggard. Plus the stress of the pandemic has been really hard on me and that aged me about 5 years, I also lost a lot of weight from the stress and worry of the pandemic. Overall I am not looking good at all but I'm trying to gain some weight back.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone on dcum looks more than a decade younger, duh
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's rather pointless replying to this thread, right? If you say you look 10+ years younger, you're delusional (despite your day of o day experiences). If you say you look your age, it's to be expected.
I think the bar has been raised over the past few decades. People nowadays wear sunscreen daily, don't smoke, rarely drink, exercise many times a week, eat veg, have skincare routines, use Botox and filler. There's a lot more knowledge on how to preserve one's looks easily available now. Weren't the Golden Girls in their late 40s and early 50s on that show? Most women in that age range look nothing like that.
The actress that played Blanche was early 50s. The other two were in their 60s (playing women in their 50s).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know less than 5 women who really, truly look shockingly younger than they are and all of them are childless and live stress-free lives. I think this is a function of getting enough sleep plus hairstyle and clothes. I know my hair gives away my age (35 and still doing the Zooey Deschanel hair) but I love it and can't bring myself to try the parted down the middle thing now.
I agree with that but genetics also play a role. Having a slim toned body makes you look youthful while having one of the thick to fat body types makes you look like you might have already given birth to 5 kids and are a mature older woman.
I’m very slim, 39, and being skinny probably makes me look older. The past year has not been kind and I probably look early 40s. Who knows though? How you look at a certain age is individual and it’s hard to make these categorizations.
I didn't say very slim I said slim and toned. Being thick or fat makes you look matronly no matter how sexy you may think it is.
Not inevitably. For some folks and some figures (and triple chins), sure. But a fuller face is an asset as you get older. Because of the volume loss that comes for us all, lots of my plus-sized friends in their 40s end up with faces that fit a slimmer person in their 20s.
You come of as extremely weird. A so called "very slim" woman or man? Who defends bigger people ferociously while berating herself as looking old. You sure you ain't another fat troll?
Anonymous wrote:
Is there only white women where you live? Do you think other races age better?
Anonymous wrote:As a 40 year old man who frequently attends school functions and kids' sports events, I regularly meet moms my age who I would have thought are 10 years older than me. It's amazing how poorly white women age. I would say 75% of it is just bad diet and 30 pounds of extra weight. The guys aren't much better but anyone claiming to look younger than they are is living in lala land based on my community in northern virginia. And don't try to claim it's better in MoCo. The median MoCo resident looks 65 years old[
/quote]
Is there only white women where you live? Do you think other races age better?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know less than 5 women who really, truly look shockingly younger than they are and all of them are childless and live stress-free lives. I think this is a function of getting enough sleep plus hairstyle and clothes. I know my hair gives away my age (35 and still doing the Zooey Deschanel hair) but I love it and can't bring myself to try the parted down the middle thing now.
I agree with that but genetics also play a role. Having a slim toned body makes you look youthful while having one of the thick to fat body types makes you look like you might have already given birth to 5 kids and are a mature older woman.
I’m very slim, 39, and being skinny probably makes me look older. The past year has not been kind and I probably look early 40s. Who knows though? How you look at a certain age is individual and it’s hard to make these categorizations.
I didn't say very slim I said slim and toned. Being thick or fat makes you look matronly no matter how sexy you may think it is.
Not inevitably. For some folks and some figures (and triple chins), sure. But a fuller face is an asset as you get older. Because of the volume loss that comes for us all, lots of my plus-sized friends in their 40s end up with faces that fit a slimmer person in their 20s.
Anonymous wrote:It's rather pointless replying to this thread, right? If you say you look 10+ years younger, you're delusional (despite your day of o day experiences). If you say you look your age, it's to be expected.
I think the bar has been raised over the past few decades. People nowadays wear sunscreen daily, don't smoke, rarely drink, exercise many times a week, eat veg, have skincare routines, use Botox and filler. There's a lot more knowledge on how to preserve one's looks easily available now. Weren't the Golden Girls in their late 40s and early 50s on that show? Most women in that age range look nothing like that.
Anonymous wrote:I have exactly one friend who looks significantly younger than her age, and my friends all take care of themselves and do the usual maintenance in terms of things like highlights, light Botox, that sort of thing (we're late 30s / early 40s for the most part). I think when people think of what those ages "should" look like they are picturing norms from the past.