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You're Not Perfect and that's ok (Original Post) La Lioness Priyanka May 2012 OP
This ^ Catherina May 2012 #1
Rec and shared through email and FB. *sigh MerryBlooms May 2012 #2
Thanks for posting this. momto3 May 2012 #3
Every American kid goes through that these days. Neoma May 2012 #4
Yes - I do not remember it being like that when I was her age. momto3 Jun 2012 #11
K&R stevenleser May 2012 #5
How many of you remember the first time you had make up on? stevenleser May 2012 #6
Hehe, I was 10. Neoma May 2012 #7
I had a class in 8th grade for this. momto3 Jun 2012 #12
"Makeup" of the mind is always beter than makeup of the body IMHO... Fearless May 2012 #8
I'd have been grateful to look like "Before" FloridaJudy May 2012 #9
There is a sucker born every minute. Rex May 2012 #10
I think this vid is worth posting: laconicsax Jun 2012 #13

momto3

(662 posts)
3. Thanks for posting this.
Fri May 25, 2012, 05:50 AM
May 2012

First time posting in this group, although I read daily.

I have a 12 year old daughter. She looks at herself in the mirror and all she can see is her blemishes and imperfections. How do I teach her to love herself, build up her self-esteem, when she is constantly bombarded with these images of "beauty" in every media outlet to which she is exposed?

Very frustrating for me, and hard for young women, these days. I think it was easier when I was younger, because we did not have TV 24h a day, plus internet, plus music videos etc...

momto3

(662 posts)
11. Yes - I do not remember it being like that when I was her age.
Fri Jun 1, 2012, 06:31 AM
Jun 2012

It is still heartbreaking to see her staring at herself in a mirror critiquing her every flaw. When I tell her she is beautiful, I get "Mom, you have to say that". It is very difficult parenting a girl these days.

 

stevenleser

(32,886 posts)
6. How many of you remember the first time you had make up on?
Fri May 25, 2012, 11:35 AM
May 2012

Since it happened to me for the first time as an adult 3 yrs ago, and it was professionally applied, the memory is pretty fresh in my mind.

I wanted to look the way I looked when I was made up, not the real me with flaws, etc. One of the times I was made up, I had an acne outbreak and I was concerned about how it would make me look. The person applying makeup smiled at me, brought out some sort of makeup application instrument that looked like a gun, took it to the problem areas and then even knowing exactly where the problem was and using a lighted mirror, I could not see it.

Some woman, I dont even remember who now, once said, wow, you look so different with makeup, obviously meaning I look so much better and she was less appreciative of how the real me looked.

This is one of those issues I get pretty well from personal experience. Makeup, airbrushing, unreasonable expectations of how you should look, all of those are incredibly destructive things.

momto3

(662 posts)
12. I had a class in 8th grade for this.
Fri Jun 1, 2012, 06:34 AM
Jun 2012

It was the Catholic school version of sex ed at that time. How to keep your skin clear, how to apply makeup, how to walk. I think there may have been an actual pamphlet thrown in at some point talking about menstruation and sex.

I did not start wearing makeup consistently until I was 40. I needed a little bit of something to hide the bags under my eyes!

Fearless

(18,448 posts)
8. "Makeup" of the mind is always beter than makeup of the body IMHO...
Mon May 28, 2012, 10:27 PM
May 2012

A person that is confident and loving of who they are radiates physical (mental and emotional) attraction. What feels better: To love oneself for who they are, "flaws" and all. Or, to feel like you have to hide who you really are because you feel ugly or not "beautiful enough"?

FloridaJudy

(9,465 posts)
9. I'd have been grateful to look like "Before"
Tue May 29, 2012, 11:12 AM
May 2012

Even when I was four decades younger. Worse, I think, is judging women's intellectual and political worth by their appearance.

Who gives a flying whatever if Hillary Clinton has gained or lost a few pounds, or if her ankles are swollen? It's what she says and does that matters. And Ann Coulter isn't ugly because of her appearance: it's her words that are repulsive (having said that, I must admit I once captioned Coulter as a praying mantis. I thought it captured her personality perfectly).

 

Rex

(65,616 posts)
10. There is a sucker born every minute.
Tue May 29, 2012, 03:05 PM
May 2012

I was going to post something on this topic the other day, but had to really think about how to post it.

I have a great problem with perfection...it is impossible to obtain and a fools quest. We in society are now so use to seeing what is fake as real that I worry about this particular brand of social engineering.

It is very unhealthy and sends the message...'you too can be perfect! Just like this CGI'd model that doesn't exist!'




Very bad message imo. Besides the pictures on the left are natural beauty...the pictures on the right are bastardized unnatural images.

Are we really a society so obsessed with perfection that we have fooled ourselves into believing it is possible?

Prefect beauty? Only found in the bottom of a jar?

Balderdash!!!

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