Old, sloppy, and successful, please

I’ve decided. I want to be old, sloppy, and look ridiculous in a bikini. I want to have a stain on my shirt that looks suspiciously like ketchup. I want to keep all the weight I’ve gained over the years. I want to prove that that is the look of success.

I heard they dressed some of the Occupy Wallstreet protestors up in suits and cut their hair, and then suddenly people took them a lot more seriously. I want to be the opposite. Except for the hair cutting– that’s fine. I want to go the other direction. And be taken seriously.

When I get old, or even considerably older, I want to look my age. I want to wear big, comfortable clothes. I want to never wear anything I don’t feel like wearing. I want to forget to look in the mirror, even when there’s something in my teeth. I don’t want this to make me quirky or eccentric or gross. I want it to be the way life works.

I want to be better at everything when I’m old. Better at knowing what really matters. Better at appreciating myself. Better at being nonjudgmental. Better at doing the things I love and being around the people I want to be around.

And at the same time, I’m scared of being old, sloppy, and ridiculous looking in a bikini. I’m scared of weight. People talk about baby weight “After my third kid, there’s no WAY I was losing that weight.” Oh shit, I think. Should I have kids?

I keep getting the impression that getting older successfully means looking like you’re not getting much older. Which usually means fighting a desperate, constant, losing battle against biology. From a distance, it looks a lot like having a terminal illness. And in a way, I guess it is. You fight every day, putting yourself through painful procedures and grueling exercise regimens, and then, eventually, the things you’ve been staving off overwhelm your body. And that is that.

I don’t want to waste my time.

A reader sent me this little clip. (I could probably embed the video so it looks better, but for some reason I forget how and I don’t have enough time to figure it out.) In it, the peppy announcer is praising Jennifer Love Hewitt for getting back on track. As in, losing weight, and keeping a young-looking body. “She’s back from the dead!”

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Kate on October 27th 2011 in Uncategorized

Aunts

This is a guest post from a reader who wishes to remain anonymous. Here are a few things about her that she’s comfortable with me sharing: she is 27, lives on the Jersey Shore, works in the mental health field, and recovered from an eating disorder (she’s co-authoring a book about it). Here’s what I want to say about her: she is really, really cool. We’ve been having an email correspondence for a while, and I asked her to write something for the blog. Here is what she wrote:

I recall a conversation that I overheard when I was six or seven years old.  My aunts, my dad’s sisters, were talking. They all would have been in their 30s or early 40s at the time.  They were are all relatively successful (and relatively thin).  So, I hope, at this point, that you are assuming that these women were discussing politics or their families or the meaning of life or anything other than what they WERE talking about: diets.

I did not hear the entire conversation, but I heard enough.  What I remember is that my favorite aunt (favorite because she lived next door and I saw her most often) described her food intake for a day, at least for a “good” day.  She said that she drank 16 ounces of skim milk for breakfast, ate a dressingless garden salad for lunch, and then allowed herself to have a “normal dinner” at night with her boyfriend.  I wish I did not remember these things.  I shouldn’t, I guess, considering that my memories of second grade are few and far between.  But I do.  And I also remember asking this aunt, who probably didn’t realize that I was listening to the conversation at all, “Aren’t you hungry?  I mean, eating like that?” And I remember her reply, just as clearly as I remember picking up batteries from a local pharmacy yesterday.  She said, looking sadder and more serious than I had ever seen her, “Yes, ALL the time.”

It’s hard to explain how I felt, hearing this as a little girl.

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Kate on October 26th 2011 in Uncategorized

no one is too smart to worry about beauty

A teenage reader named Maggie left a great comment on one of these posts the other day. She was talking about how feeling bad about the way she looks is confusing, because she is growing up in a great environment where people aren’t focusing on appearances. Her attempt to lose weight disgusted her, but then she felt terrible about gaining the weight back. Why? How can those things go together?

Yup. Exactly.

My mom is surprised that I write about this stuff. Why would I? I was always told I was pretty as a kid. But, more importantly, I grew up in a world that wasn’t about looks. It was about learning, and developing a fulfilling skillset, and figuring out what about the world needed fixing, and then trying to help with that. I grew up reading stacks of books and playing in the forest out back and building forts with my brothers and my friends.

So why am I writing about my nose so much?

My mom is confused. I’m confused. I’m embarrassed. Maybe I should concentrate on the stuff that matters.

It’s embarrassing to be the girl who admits to feeling insecure about something that really smart girls shouldn’t be thinking about. If I was smarter, I would have already figured out that this stuff doesn’t really matter. That’s the message. It’s a lot like the message about confidence.

When Deborah Rhode wrote a piece about how damaging high heels can be in the New York Times, she received enraged responses. “This is NOT what we should be talking about!! There are real issues that women face every day! Fashion is not one of them.”

Sometimes when I tell people I write about beauty, I feel like I need a disclaimer. And then I can’t think of one.

So it’s like, “What’s your blog about?”

“Um, like, body image and beauty and…you know…life.”

“Oh. Cool! That sounds…cool.”

“Yeah, thanks. It’s pretty fun.”

“Yeah, I can see how that would be pretty fun.” *PAUSE* “So, like, does anyone pay you to do that or anything?”

I don’t know why I compare myself to other women. I don’t know why I’m affected by the eternal implied Beauty Standard. I don’t know why I look at my face so critically in the mirror and wonder why it isn’t different and fantasize for a second that if it was a little different, everything would be  so much better.  I don’t know why I categorize myself. I don’t know where I’m getting all of the rules.

It feels uncreative to say, “Society. You know, it’s just out there. The media.”

But the thing is– it is just out there. And somehow, gradually and persistently, I’ve picked it up. Like a virus that keeps adding to itself.

It’s in the  face that models always seem to have, even when they have slightly different bodies. It’s in the body type that’s famous. It’s in the constant barrage of weight loss ads and books and articles that I can’t go three steps without running into. It’s in the family photos passed around, where people always point out the “pretty one.” Even when she’s three years old. And the casual way guys approve of girls if they’re hot enough and dismiss them if they aren’t. It’s in the air.

And none of these things are totally consistent.

But they’re all totally real.

A smart girl picks up on it.

It sticks.

I don’t want to have to explain why I think about this. As though, obviously, I shouldn’t. Obviously, women like me should have moved on. We have serious interests. We work hard. We have a life.

But, obviously, how can I not notice?

I just got back from Bear’s business trip. After Miami, we went to London, and then Amsterdam. Every day, he had meetings for most of the day, and I wrote and wandered. It was a little blissful. It was my first time in that part of the world. I’m not well-traveled. Or even close. I felt amazed. I tried not to gawk. I tried not to get hit by a bike. And then another bike, and then another bike. I have this weird phobia about getting hit by a bike that I was forced to overcome, then and there, before I could cross the street.

I was charmed by the different taste of the diet coke, and how the cans were smaller. I was looking for the slight differences everywhere. And everywhere I went, I saw the same images of feminine beauty. The same faces. Sometimes the same models, even, from a Victoria’s Secret campaign. I saw the same body type on the tram stops and billboards. I saw the same thing.

It wasn’t that I expected it to be different.

But a smart girl, any girl, any girl at all can’t help but notice.

(source)


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Kate on October 25th 2011 in Uncategorized

the end of best friends

I was reading this chick lit book on the plane. I secretly like chick lit a lot (as long as the grammar is good). I don’t let myself read it very much. Because I am young, foolish, and married, I like books with “husband” in the title. Which I am the slightest bit proud of, because I feel like it somehow helps balance all the interest in books with “wife” in the title. That’s like the most subtle type of subversion ever. Ever. Lame.

Anyway– I was reading this book with “husband” in the title, and hoping that the main character wasn’t going to go back to the ex-boyfriend, now that he was famous and stuff, and then the best friend popped up, rooting for her at every turn. The main character wrote for a newspaper and the best friend, who was of course drop-dead gorgeous, a successful lawyer, and super upbeat, wrote letters to the editor all the time, about how great her friend’s writing was.

And suddenly I felt bad. A little empty.

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Kate on October 21st 2011 in Uncategorized

Reasons why you should feel good about your body

This post is part of the 2011 Love Your Body Day Blog Carnival, from NOW’s Love Your Body Day. They made me say that. Carnival? But they’re still really cool. Here are some reasons why you should feel good about your body:

1. It enables you to recognize yourself, and other people to recognize you. Which is really important, because there are billions of people in the world. You have stuff going on that no one else does. It’s fantastic. It’s a really good thing. In fact, I want to meet you, just to see all the ways in which we’re interestingly different and comfortingly similar.

2. It is incredibly complicated, but tends to work. And you’re alive. Which is absolutely astounding, when you take a moment to think about it.

3. Even though you can recognize yourself, you always look different. How you feel and what you do and who you’re with and what kind of mirror you’re looking in all shift and rearrange the way you appear to yourself. It’s cool. Sometimes it’s awful. Sometimes you feel like total crap. But there’s always potential for startling beauty. Or surprising awesomeness.

4. No matter what you look like, you’re hot to other people. Like, seriously hot. Except to internet trolls. Even supermodels aren’t hot to them. Once I read someone’s rant about how big Gisele Bundchen’s nose is. Which made me feel like my nose was about the size of, let’s say, the moon. But longer. My friend told me that she was feeling really ugly the other day and then someone on the street was like, “Hey, you’re beautiful!” A homeless guy on the street told me I have a gorgeous ass two nights ago. OK, not exactly the same. The point is– it’s pretty sweet that we’re all attractive. Did I really mess that point up, with the homeless guy comment? Moving on.

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Kate on October 19th 2011 in Uncategorized

some reasons why I love being married

Yesterday, while Bear was at his conference all day, and it was raining, and my cell phone didn’t work because Verizon hates the beach, or something, my brother was going through a bad time, and I called him from the room phone and it cost $73. Which was truly shocking to discover and made me hate everything. I also read two articles about marriage, in honor of my anniversary. One was in The Atlantic. It was about the ways marriage is changing, and has become increasingly optional. The woman who wrote it is in her late thirties and single. It was good. The other was about getting married young. It was on Slate. The woman who wrote it was in her late twenties and had been married for a while. Both of them had my name. Almost.

I don’t often think about marriage. I didn’t think about it very much when I got married, either. I got the sense that I was supposed to. I was supposed to ask “what does it all MEAN?” I read Elizabeth Gilbert’s book “Committed.” I read “Against Love: A Polemic” that argued that monogamy was oppressive and awful. But mostly I just, you know, did my thing. For such a huge life change, marriage felt like an easy choice when I met Bear. The truest thing that people had said to me about it my whole life was “you just know when it’s right.” Which often makes me feel like I can’t really participate in the whole marriage conversation, because I think that one is more about working to keep your relationship strong and dealing with hard times. We might get there in a bit. But we’re not there yet.

Actually, I think my voice in the marriage conversation is totally lame a lot of the time, because I’m so happy with Bear. Like I said in the panic attack post (I’m sorry to keep bringing it up, I’m annoying myself, too), I’m not great at happiness. So it’s strange that I’m so happily married. And suspicious. Is something going to fall on my head soon? Something really large? Should I just shut up?

No! I won’t be silenced! Instead, I will write a list, now that our marriage has existed for an official amount of time. Reasons why I like it:

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Kate on October 18th 2011 in Uncategorized