T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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108.1 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri May 04 1990 14:47 | 3 |
|
It's big business. The GNP would suffer if it were changed. So it
won't.
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108.2 | Social pressure for all stinks!! | MILKWY::BUSHEE | From the depths of shattered dreams! | Fri May 04 1990 14:49 | 14 |
|
Jody, I hear what you are saying and agree with most, but
(always is a BUT in there isn't there? :^) ) men also have
a great deal of social pressure placed on them. For women
it does tend to be towards beauty, while for men, it's
success/wealth. While growing up I can't remember how many
times I heard in order to get a good woman a man must have
a good job with lots of money. Even look at alot of the single
ads you see in the papers today. What do you see as one of the
most stated requirements of women? "must be "GENEROUS/SUCCESSFUL".
No matter which way you cut it stinks!!!!!!
G_B
|
108.3 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Fri May 04 1990 14:59 | 8 |
| re -1. Oh, I don't know, I'd rather my success be tied to something I
could do something about, such as getting a good job, rather than tied
to something I can't, such as being born with the right genetic
combination. Therefore I find the pressures unequal. And they're
especially unequal these days where a woman is now *also* expected to
have that good job, too. No similar "beauty" burden has been placed
upon men to equal the career burden women now have in addition to the
beauty burden they've always had.
|
108.4 | | ASHBY::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Fri May 04 1990 15:02 | 13 |
|
Maybe people are lonely. They feel that if they want a companion they must make
themselves attractive to others.
Maybe someone wants a job. They won't be able to get that job unless they
conform to a certain look. (How many people would go to a doctor who sported
a green mohawk and nosering?)
A very large part of one's life is spent interacting with others, therefore,
the way someone makes themself look probably depends on how that person
wants others to see them.
Lisa
|
108.5 | simple answers are best | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Fri May 04 1990 15:09 | 3 |
|
because men are in charge and women are chattel
|
108.7 | selling women's bodies for profit goes way back... | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri May 04 1990 15:13 | 1 |
|
|
108.8 | subject/object | ULTRA::ZURKO | Feel your way like the day before | Fri May 04 1990 15:47 | 5 |
| I think it was The Second Sex that talks about women 'being' and men 'doing'.
I'm sure there's lots of glass-chewing feminist tomes about this concept. I wish
I could pull out the name of the definitive one. If anyone else can, I'd
appreciate it.
Mez
|
108.10 | And can someone tell me | YGREN::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Fri May 04 1990 16:17 | 26 |
| why is it [in my life anyway] that most of the pressure comes from _women_.
when I was skinny -- _really_ skinny -- not one man complained, but women gave
me hell for being scrawny.
when I put on a few pounds, not one man complained, but women told me that I
looked like I was letting go.
I've never experienced a _single_ instance of lack of male company that could
be tied to the way I look -- the glass chewing has chased a few away, though.
Men _have_ indicated that my hair would be more attractive worn loose, but
concede that pulling it back tends to keep it out of my food -- and theirs --
and generally leave it at that. I must have at least three women a day tell
me to perm it to be sexy or cut it to be professional or put it up to
accentuate my neck or ...
I've had many women call me unfeminine and emasculating -- which really makes me
wonder where the insight is coming from -- but only one man.
Women tell me my fondness for bold colours makes people take me less
seriously.
Or maybe, I just don't get it and men would rather not face my response ....
Ann
|
108.11 | you mean it's not p.c. ? | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri May 04 1990 16:19 | 3 |
| re .9 -
maybe he only meant it as a chattelyst for discussion.
|
108.12 | | RANGER::TARBET | Haud awa fae me, Wullie | Fri May 04 1990 16:24 | 12 |
| <--(.10)
That's really interesting, Ann! Maybe it's because you've got "it"?
I spoze it could be that I was just too self-absorbed to notice, but in
truth I can never recall anyone apart from my daughters putting any
pressure on me to do this or that in aid of better looks. I know that
it happens to other women and I guess I've always assumed that nobody
bothers with me cuz they figure what's the use...or either they've a
good sense of self-preservation, one. :-)
=maggie
|
108.14 | | SONATA::ERVIN | Roots & Wings... | Fri May 04 1990 16:28 | 31 |
|
re: .10
>>why is it [in my life anyway] that most of the pressure comes from _women_.
Well, I don't know if this is *the* answer, but it's my theory...
I believe that women are socialized to fit a certain look, role or set
of behaviours and to teach/pass on and enforce these rules as a part of
the socialization of young girls.
My mother was the one that told me all the b.s. about how I
should/shouldn't look, that I should let the boys win when playing
sports, that I should not appear smarter than boys, that I must shave
my legs, etc., that wearing make-up would make me look prettier, that
wearing dresses and skirts would make me look more attractive, and the
list goes on.
My father quite inadvertently undermined my mother's best efforts at
"turning me into a lady." He bought me baseball gloves and bats,
footballs, golf clubs, and other sports equipment, along with paying
for the lessons to learn the various sports, and encouraged me to be
the best that I could be in these endeavors.
I believe my mother would have felt negligent in her duties if she had
not tried to teach me the litany of rules and regulations for being an
acceptable women in this society. And once we've heard enough of this
sh*t, I think we internalize it. And sometimes without even thinking
we repeat it to other girls/women.
Laura
|
108.15 | Pressure from family - Grrr! | TLE::D_CARROLL | Sisters are doin' it for themselves | Fri May 04 1990 16:45 | 38 |
| Some random, semi-related ramblings...I'll write more when it solidifies into
something more substantive...
Last week, I saw my grandparents for the first time in a few years (at
Dad's wedding - brag, brag). Within *five minutes* Grandma started in
on my hair. "Oh my you cut it. I really liked the way it was. It's
so short now, it framed your face so nicely before. I thought you were
a boy when I saw you coming off the plane! I think you'll have a hard
time finding boyfriends if you look like a boy. Oh, it looks so harsh,
don't you want it to look gentler?..."
This irritates me (my grandparents, particularly grandmother, irrirate me a lot
this way, and I, unfortunately, can't resist baiting her when she gets that
way.) First, I tried to explain that her that *I* liked my hair (She says "Yes,
but..." which I don't even listen to.) and while she is free to tell me her
opinion of how it looks, I resented the implication that I *should* change it
based on her opinion. I assured her that I had no problem whatsoever finding
men, and that more-over, I hadn't decided to have short hair in order to attract
men, I decided to do it because *I* like it! (She says "Men don't like short
hair", I say "I don't like men who don't like short hair, so this will keep them
away.")
Later in the week, I mentioned in her hearing that I was thinking of getting
a crew-cut, and oh, she was mortified. I explained that I have three criteria
for choosing how to wear my hair (and clothes): Do *I* like the way it looks?
Does it make a statement that *I* want to make? Does it attract the kind of
people that *I* want to attract? I pointed out to her that none of those
reasons has anything to do with looking feminine, or what "most men" like,
so arguments relying on those were pointless. The critereia are based around
*me*. She found this attitude totally horrifying - arrogant and selfish, I
guess. I think it reflects a healthy self-esteem (self-identification as
opposed to other-identification?)
[Oh well, once can't get too upset at Grandma, that's just the way she is.
She was also totally mortified to discover that my new step-uncle had...gasp,
a pony-tail!]
D!
|
108.16 | | MILKWY::BUSHEE | From the depths of shattered dreams! | Fri May 04 1990 16:47 | 21 |
|
RE: .3
Sandy, If you don't think men are also burdened by social
pressure I can relate a few for you. I've lost count of
how many times I have talked to women on the phone (setup
by friends) and they all said they couldn't wait to meet.
Soon as they saw this 5' 11" 113 pound man walk in they
all lost intesrest. Seems I didn't fit the *hulk* image
they thought. Some of them had asked my height, but never
my weight (could almost knock over with a feather when they
saw me). A few were even bold enough to say it right to my
face that they couldn't be seen with a MAN that weighed less
than they did. Even around other men I find my ideas alot
of the time are taken seriously. I've said things in groups
and had it ignored, yet when someone else made the same point
a few minutes later all of a sudden it was a major breakthrough.
Just goes to show ya, if'n ya don't fit the mold of what others
determine you're an un-person!!
G_B
|
108.17 | moooooooo | ULTRA::ZURKO | Feel your way like the day before | Fri May 04 1990 16:55 | 4 |
| D!, it reminds me of all the grief Nana used to give my cousin Shelly; "They
won't buy the cow if they can get the milk for free". I have so little overlap
with her plane of reference, I just laugh.
Mez
|
108.18 | pattern recognition? | RAB::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Fri May 04 1990 17:30 | 14 |
| There seems to be a pattern here.
When women say, "I am being oppressed or conditioned in this way"
Men react (but not acknowledge what women say) but jump right into
"But men are conditioned/oppressed in another way" or coming up with
some counterexamples and then men and women arguing over who has is
worse, etc if we could leave room for everyone here. It doesn't have
to be an either/or proposition.
Can't we acknowledge the conditioning/treatment we all get by gender
and just examine it without blaming each other?
john
|
108.19 | | HOO78C::VISSERS | Dutch Comfort | Fri May 04 1990 17:59 | 38 |
|
> (She says "Men don't like short hair", I say "I don't like men who
> don't like short hair, so this will keep them away.")
This part in D!'s reply made me smile and also made me think about
something I wasn't able to word previously (I'll confess I've been
reading the 'hair' topic with great interest - a couple of times
the remark was made how this seems less of an issue in Europe and
I really get the impression reading that string. Must say I've never
even thought about whether or not shaving legs is a normal routine
for women until it got mentioned in discussions I had with American
women. And really - shaving underarms really got me puzzled. :-})
But oh well, on track. It's been mentioned also that a decision
not to shave legs could be 'career limiting' and there are actually
interviewers who'd not hire one for that sole reason but be serious...
would you want to *work* for a company that'd do that? Would you
give your skills and potentials to a company that looks at your
legs first?
Eventually someone will have to draw the line between the way 'society'
expects someone to look and the way one wants to look theirselves, or
the amount of work someone is willing to go through in order to meet
that expectation, and it's the person involved who makes that decision.
It's a balance between what one gets (appreciation, a job, a partner)
and what one is willing to give up from their own personality. If
enough people decide the fashion is not something they want to follow,
the thing will eventually die out whatever the 'norm' is.
I'm not so sure what I want to say with this, I'm still thinking
about how far these things really affect people. I'm always fascinated
seeing people being comfortable with themselves no matter how far
they look from the accepted standards and in effect just make this
statement "This is me. Take it or leave it.". They're right, even
though half the planet doesn't know it yet.
Ad (a wimp in these things, really :-})
|
108.20 | | STAR::HEERMANCE | Overdrawn at the Memory Bank | Fri May 04 1990 18:07 | 20 |
| Re: .0
Pressure is placed on men also.
Some examples:
Bald men are bombard with messages that they should have hair.
Muscular men are usually the hero in action movies.
Short men are told that they are inadequate. Ads for lifts are
seen in many men's magazines.
Men are told to shave there faces.
If I thought I little while I could come up with many more.
Interestingly enough the pressure comes from other men.
Martin H.
|
108.21 | it's so *easy* | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Fri May 04 1990 20:43 | 5 |
|
re:.10
the best way to keep the oppressed oppressed is to have the oppressed
do the oppressing.
|
108.22 | so much prettier if you got the hair off your face | CUPCSG::RUSSELL | | Sun May 06 1990 20:05 | 26 |
| Wow. This reminds me of my Mom and Nana. Be pretty or you won't get a
husband. (Men don't like smart women. Men don't like tall women.)
Pretty is hair in a certain way, some light pink lipstick but no
eyemakeup (mascara looks cheap), pretty feminine pastels. I begin to
wonder if a lot of it wasn't survival techniques of the older
generations.
Back then (and now for many women) women's survival largely depended on
getting a husband because a woman had very limited means of self
support. (I won't go into how important a woman was to a man's
survival as that isn't the topic.) So our mothers and grandmothers
dolled themselves up and survived.
But things have changed very quickly in the last few decades. (And
hardly at all, it sometimes seems.) Pretty doesn't have the survival
value it used to have. Pretty is also more elusive and changing than
ever before.
To this day my Mom complains about my hair, clothes, makeup -- it's
never right by her standards. But I think I'm doing just fine. I'm
still here surviving at a quite pleasant quality of living, thank you.
I look the way I look because of my _own_ aesthetic standards, given the
genetic and health jumble any one of us contends with.
And yes, it was Germain Greer (among others) who wrote of the
politicization of feminine beauty and its rituals.
|
108.23 | | KID2::VASKAS | Mary Vaskas | Sun May 06 1990 21:05 | 8 |
|
> And yes, it was Germain Greer (among others) who wrote of the
> politicization of feminine beauty and its rituals.
Also, more recently, Susan Brownmiller, in _Femininity_.
MKV
|
108.24 | So, why listen to your mother? | RANGER::CANNOY | Fnord | Sun May 06 1990 21:30 | 4 |
| RE: .22 Gee, Margaret, me and my friends think you look just great! I
got nothing against tall, gorgeous blondes. :-)
Tamzen
|
108.25 | Mom, I know you mean well, but... | CUPCSG::RUSSELL | | Sun May 06 1990 22:50 | 15 |
| Tamzen,
(.24) If I listened to my Mom, I'd believe that I am about as ugly as a
gorgon, cheap looking, over-educated, bossy, loud, loose, taking a job
that belongs to a man, unfeminine, unnatural, etc, etc. Problem is, I
wouldn't want the kind of life or relationship I'd attract if I looked,
acted, and was as she wants me to be.
Maybe I'll just have to settle for being a "tall, gorgeous blonde"
(gee, thanks!! blush! blush!) and have the friends and lover I've got.
I've actually not thought of myself in terms of pretty/not pretty.
I've worked so damn hard to be MYSELF and not some introjected
personality with somone else's looks.
Margaret
|
108.26 | comfort counts | SNOC02::WRIGHT | PINK FROGS | Mon May 07 1990 01:32 | 17 |
| re: .10
Ann,
Have you ever noticed that when you walk into a public place
(usually a bar or social gathering) and you aren't wearing the "right"
clothes it is the women that give you the funny looks and whisper
behind their hands. Most of the men wouldn't even notice unless it was
particularly outrageous (or revealing :-}).
I'm lucky, my mum always stressed that clothes should be comfortable
above all else. Besides if you aren't comfortable in what you wear it
shows and then people notice. I always find it amusing (though I know
it's not really "nice") when I see women in short tight clothing who
are continually fiddly with it and pulling it down. I too have been
guilty about whispering about another woman but usually when I can see
she doesn't feel comfortable in the clothes she wears.
Holly
|
108.27 | suffer=beautiful?!?! | RANGER::LARUE | An easy day for a lady. | Mon May 07 1990 09:17 | 11 |
| I remember my Mom (just in time for Mothers'Day)yank, pin curling my
hair, jab. Plucking my eyebrows, och, ouch. Making me shave my legs.
And sewing the most horrendous all purpose (slacks, shorts, skirts,
blouses all in variations of red white and blue stripes so they'd mix
and match). And the refrain was "You gotta suffer if you wanna be
beautiful." I don't wanna be beautiful and I don't wanna suffer for
anything or anybody!! Now, Dad was all right. Bought me levis and
sneakers. That's the way to go if I want to get work done.
Dondi
|
108.28 | | YGREN::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Mon May 07 1990 09:35 | 9 |
| re.21 - you could be right. on the other hand when my reactions range from
irritation to baffled amusement, perhaps the tactic is not so effective after
all.
re.26 - Aha! and I always thought they were going on about the unmitigated
pushy gaul I showed in actually being there at all! You mean to say that all
this time they just didn't like my clothes?! What a relief.
Ann
|
108.29 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | do you have a brochure? | Mon May 07 1990 11:31 | 15 |
| I think I've had just as many, if not more, men say mean things
about my appearance as I have women. I think I've had just as many
of each sex say flattering things about my appearance as well.
It amazes me how many women had mothers who tried to tell them how
to dress, to look feminine, etc. Many feminists today would be
quite pleased I think by my mother's attitude towards appearance.
As far as I can tell she went entirely for comfort without regard
for anyone's opinion, and apparently didn't care what I looked like
either since she never passed on any wanted or unwanted tips. I
found this very frustrating because I could have used some help
trying to look like those girls in "Seventeen" magazine!
Lorna
|
108.30 | Some rambling musings | WFOV12::APODACA | NotesDon'tInsultPeople,NotersDo ;) | Tue May 08 1990 10:39 | 65 |
| In looking at the title of this note, I reminded myself that "sociatal"
includes not only men, but women. It's a little easy to polarize
in this notesfile, but on further reflection, I thought "Yes, there
is pressure by society to conform"--and I believe we've thought
about this in one form or another.
I am not really certain that women are exclusively the targets of
"having to look sexy". Altho there is no where the sheer quantity
of beauty aids, fashionable clothes magazines, behavior/appearance
modifiers (weight loss, cosemetic surgery, etc.) aimed at men as
there is at women, a short study of the ads on TV and in the readable
media will prove that no one is safe from "making yourself socially
acceptable"--not even your dog and cat.
However, men's fashions still tend to be somewhat limited to the
suit, polo shirt and slacks tree, while we all know women like to
be clothes horses ;) I don't know why there are so many kinds
of clothes for women to wear as opposed to men, perhaps it's because
you can't just change your shirt and tie and have your dress look
different everyday, like a suit can. Also, women have the cosmical
cosmetic industry--as someone before said, without it, the GNP would
probably fall off drastically. (whatta concept. The Gross National
Product is driven by Maybelline!)
As for why do women have more alternatives to "looking right" than
men (clothes, makeup, hair color/applicances/etc.) I don't know.
However, we aren't all gussying ourselves up to go out with Jabba
the Hutt either--men are obligated to dress right (usually in some
GQ sort of way), have just the RIGHT amount of stubble on their
face (or none at all, depending what year it is), wear the right
cologne, have the right job (it's becoming fashionable to have the
"right" upwardly mobile job as a woman, too!), drive the right macho
car, have the right amount of hair ("I'm not only the president
of the company, I'm a client!"), look the right physical way,
and certainly drink the right beer.
Women have to do the same things. Dress the right way, drink the
right soda or beer, have their hair the right shade of the right
color, be not only the right worker, but the right mother as well,
be the right weight, play the right sports, and wear the right makeup.
What I guess my point is that as a society, none of us are 'safe'
from our own concepts of what "being the right person" is. We all
contribute to these ideas, even though half the time we like to
blame "society" without acknowledging we're a part of it. It's
like when presidents are elected (ie, Reagan.) He wins by a landslide
and suddenly, no one voted for him. At least no one said they did.
It must have been Someone Else. THEY voted for him.
It's the They concept in action. "They", "Them", whoever. But They,
aka Society, are not a group of mysterious beings who dictate what
We aka Everyone else, likes. We do, indirectly or directly. When
enough of us like one thing, it's fashionable. Designers prey on
this--throw enough things as us (society), coupled with age-old
mores and ideas of our roles, and we will find something we like
better than what we used to--the "right thing".
I trust that makes sense in some way ;) Exactly how the whole process
works is beyond me at this point. I would expect some Marketing
training would help. But I thought it relevant to point out that
the very societal factors we often bemoan because "society" imposed
them upon us is often a product of us--the ones who are just as
much a part of society as society is a part of us.
---kim
|
108.31 | | ASHBY::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue May 08 1990 11:03 | 7 |
| My uncle works at Macy's. According to him, the department that makes the most
money, by far, is the Cosmetics dept.
As one who wears very little makeup, I guess I just don't understand why you'd
spend $20 on a tube of mascara.
Lisa
|
108.32 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | do you have a brochure? | Tue May 08 1990 11:30 | 14 |
| Re .31, Lisa, I've *never* spent $20. on a tube of mascara! I use
Revlon which costs around $6.50 at CVS and lasts for 4 or 5 months.
I buy it and wear it because it makes my eyelashes look longer
and darker than they would otherwise. I think long, dark eyelashes
look more attractive than short, light ones.
It's always difficult to understand why other people spend their
money the way they do. People just have different priorities,
different things they want to own, and do. I can't understand why
anyone would pay over $10K on a car, myself. I wouldn't spend $20
on a tube of mascara, but I spend $6.50.
Lorna
|
108.33 | | YGREN::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Tue May 08 1990 12:58 | 17 |
| re.26 and walking into a public place ...
I have to laugh. I get 'the Look' from just about everyone all kinds of places.
Like the time I wore my grey flannel yuppie suit [you know the I'm-a-small-
authority-figure-here-and-you-can-trust-me costume] to make a budget
presentation and thought I drop by to say 'hi' to a friend on a different floor.
I'm please to annouce that the men & women of NaC or DSE or whatever didn't open
a window an toss me, but they had that Look about them.
Or wandering into the Black Rose in Boston for a pint of Harp with the orchid
wreath in my hair [I'd been in a wedding] and my white smock & leggings ...
Which is not to say that I'm _never_ dressed appropriately, just that I expect
people to accept me or just not bother
Ann
|
108.34 | | ASHBY::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue May 08 1990 17:50 | 32 |
| Didn't mean to offend with .31. I have one tub of mascara (Revlon
hypoallergenic stuff), one box of eyeshadow (that I got from my Mom),
a bottle of base and some face powder. Every now and then I
wear it, and sometimes I think I look nice.
What I'm talking about is the way some people are, the ones who buy all
their cosmetics at department store (like Lancome or similar, I could
see if you had an allergy, maybe you'd want to get a bottle of base or
something), that have multiple bases, eyeshadow, mascaras, blush,
lipstick, nail polish etc., for every time of day and every change of
clothes.
I'm talking about women who must put on full face before being seen in
public. I notice this more when I go visit friends and relatives in
the NJ/NYC metropolitan area. There seems to be much more pressure to
look "right" there. I mean even to go out to 7-Eleven to get milk
at 1am, they have to look perfect.
One of my friends grew up in Queens. She was mentioning how it was the
normal way to go to school in full make-up. Once she said she didn't
wear any and people kept coming up to her and asking if she was sick.
I actually feel weird if I have too much make-up on or I have hairspray
in my hair....it's not natural for me. And I have too many other
things I'd rather spend money on. My opinion has always been that if a
person doesn't want to be with you if you're not dressed up or have
make-up on, then that person doesn't care about you, they care about
the way you look.
Rambling.....
Lisa
|
108.35 | | YGREN::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Tue May 08 1990 18:52 | 22 |
| I own soooo many cosmetics. I love them! And, yes, I own a $20 tube of
mascara -- after a 4-year search for that quintessential shade of dark mossy
green, I'd have probably gone as high as $35, but that's not the point.
The point isn't if I do or do not wear make-up or silk or slickery fabrics. It's
in having the ego to do it or not because _I_ choose. The point isn't whether
the society and culture that surrounds me would incline me to certain tastes
or even expect them. It is that I have the freedom and the ego to indulge
myparticular tastes because _I_ choose.
I frankly do not care if men or women find my hair attractive; I like the feel
of it on my back on a warm summer day. That many find my dress and mode of
expressing myself either too pushy or too passive is hardly surprising because
I ABSOLUTELY refuse to buy into the laughable myth of Political Correctness.
I'm not going to stop doing something I like simply because some man likes it
too. Neither am I going to do something I do not like to do because some man
likes it.
Whose life is this anyway?
Ann
|
108.36 | pressure isn't pretty | CUPCSG::RUSSELL | | Tue May 08 1990 21:58 | 33 |
| There seems to be a consensus shaping up here that women eventually
learn how to dress and look the way we want to dress and look.
I say "eventually" because it seems to be the result of process and
growth and evolving self confidence.
I wonder if the "pretty" message doesn't do a great deal to hurt us and
to slow our growth when we are not women but girls. As much as
childhood and teenagerhood are useful stages, the necessity of "pretty"
can subvert some of the other, more important growth we need to
experience.
As most (all, some?) societal pressures affect kids and teenagers more
because teens are more vulnerable, more impressionable, more in need of
mirroring and acceptance, so too is the "pretty" pressure more felt by
young women and girls.
I do not believe that pretty is a good pressure. Boys are pressured to
excell at sports, science, math. Boys are pressured to learn skills
and teamwork. Boys are even pressured to avoid girls. (Yes, I KNOW
many boys like and want girls but it seems to be a yucchy part of
growing up for a boy whereas, for a girl, having a boyfriend is socially
important.)
So girls spend a lot of time and energy (and sometimes harm their
health) in search of elusive prettiness which is so differently defined
by their parents, peers, magazines, and idols that attaining the goal
is impossible. It's a waste of intelligence and effort and the
constant failure (according to some outside metric) is hurtful to
developing healthy self confidence.
There's nothing wrong with looking nice, nothing wrong with putting
effort into personal appearance but there is a great deal wrong with
pretty as a goal.
|
108.37 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | do you have a brochure? | Wed May 09 1990 10:00 | 6 |
| Re .36, I agree completely. If I had spent as much time when I
was 14 trying to pass algebra as I did trying to look pretty....well,
I might have passed algebra.
Lorna
|
108.38 | if that's not her face, then... | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Wed May 09 1990 11:17 | 23 |
| re: .36
Yes!! Pretty is fine; but it's harmful as a main goal. Yes!!
My mom didn't pressure me to be pretty. Looking back, I am so
grateful...the pressures some people in this file have written about
(direct pressure to be pretty to find a man to take care of you) are
shocking to me. Shows how we are all brainwashed subtly. When I was a
kid, we would go shopping and my mom would say in the car, "whoops, I
forgot to put my face on!" and would put on lipstick. I always used to
wonder about how makeup could be her face more than her regular face
was...
At Mount Holyoke, we wore sweats mostly, and the preppy crowd wore
corderoys and monogrammed sweaters. Most did not bother to put on
makeup, skirts, heels, hairspray to go to classes. I was always blown
away when I visited coed campuses, because most of the women took such
care to look really nice all the time. What really struck me was the
curled hair, lipstick, and nylons/pumps. I remember talking with my
friends about it, and commenting on how we felt free to be comfortable
and sloppy with how we looked on our campus.
Pam
|
108.39 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | sparks fly round your head | Wed May 09 1990 11:45 | 13 |
| Pam
I've been down to Wesleyan where my oldest son goes and most
of the women there appear to be about as 'sloppy' as you
describe the MHT's as being.
When I was at Holyoke, we wore jeans and sweat shirts but
had to change to skirts for dinner. I still set my hair every
night and wore some make up to class. However, I did feel
that I was *much* less dressed up than I would have been
at a coed school.
Bonnie
|
108.40 | Inner beauty lasts a whole lot longer. | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Wed May 09 1990 12:43 | 21 |
|
This discussion has given me a lot of insight about attitude
about beauty in this country. I grew up in Asia where the
definition of beauty is different. I came form a culture that inner
beauty is worth a lot more than physical beauty. Make-up and
pretty clothes can't hide inner imperfection (remember Cinderella's
step-sisters?). My mother didn't use make-up when she was young
but as she matures, she uses a little bit to "fool" the eyes.
All she uses are foundation and lipsticks. The way I see make-up is
- it is used to cover imperfection. I use it when I look awful.
In Asia, heavy make-up is for the movie stars and prostitutes.
Well educated women do not "contaminate" their face with chemicals.
I am married to an American and now have a 4 1/2 yr old daughter,
I hope I can pass on to her my values. It sounds like it'll be tough!!!
She has already learnt the value of "beauty" since people comment
on her "gorgeous" features all the time. Can't people say "Your
daughter is so smart." for a change? So far, she is a tomboy,
I hope she'll stay this way for a while.
Eva.
|
108.41 | of course, the T-sips in Austin were highly polished products | YGREN::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Wed May 09 1990 12:55 | 12 |
| Well, Texas A&M was co-ed when I went there. But it was hardly typical.
As we [all 487 of us] the women were outnumbered by about 14 to 1, we were
not pressured to conform to the look-of-beauty-du-jour. Somehow being female,
being clean, and being disease free was enough.
Yup, right from the convent to a recently co-ed former military school, no
competition either place for vastly different reasons.
Did I miss a part of growing up? Am I going to regress now?
Ann
|
108.42 | but you knew that too :-) | ULTRA::ZURKO | My life is in transition | Wed May 16 1990 14:30 | 3 |
| re: 94
I'm with Justine (if her answer is yes as well) and Joe White.
Mez
|
108.43 | | CADSE::KHER | | Wed May 16 1990 14:46 | 12 |
| Yup! I agree with Justine. The standards for what's considered
attractive in a woman are a lot more strict than those for men.
I also see another difference. It's one thing to want your partner
to look a certain way and another to expect J. random person to
adhere to those standards. Rarely do I see people talk about how
ugly a certain male looks. But people do talk about how women look
('She needs to do something about hair'; ' she needs to lose some
weight', 'I mean, really, Jane has no sense of style' etc. etc.)
It's as though all women are expected to look good all the time.
manisha
|
108.44 | Only twice as demanding | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed May 16 1990 15:37 | 9 |
| I agree too. Just a few months ago there was a court case {filed|
tried|dismissed|decided|appealed|whatever} in which an airline's
women flight attendants sued for discrimination because while the
men workers had to come within 10% of their ideal weight (and
were not often tested against it), the women workers had to come
within 5% of their ideal weight (and *were* often tested against
it), and were fired if they exceeded the limits.
Ann B.
|
108.45 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Thu May 17 1990 08:18 | 12 |
| That is a double standard, and should be corrected. Something I
noticed one morning while watching the "Today" show - Willard Scott,
the weather guy is light years from being attractive, yet he's very
popular. If a female was *as* overweight and changed hair styles as
often (hair today, none tomorrow ..) they'd never get on local news,
let alone national. I guess all this business goes WAY back into
history where men worked outside the home, got dirty, aged quicker, die
quicker, etc. While the women were at home, pretty as a picture with
supper waiting. Times have changed, unfortunately those roots are
pretty deep ....
Jerry
|
108.46 | or maybe this goes in the "quotable men" topic | DCL::NANCYB | southern exposure | Thu May 17 1990 08:37 | 10 |
|
"There's not very many years that a woman is a beautiful girl.
Those years - maybe, say, roughly from 15 to 25 - 10 years,
that's not a long time."
John R. Silber
Candidate for governor of Massachusetts
|
108.47 | Not always | AIADM::MALLORY | I am what I am | Thu May 17 1990 08:53 | 10 |
| Re: .46
I've got news for John Silber. He may (or may not) be right in his assumption
that they are only *girls* for ten years, but that doesn't work for beauty.
An overweight 50 year old woman can be more beautiful and more appealing than a
*sexy* 25 year old.
wes
|
108.49 | I like the before pictures better | SCIVAX::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Thu May 17 1990 10:42 | 17 |
|
re .48 Mike,
I think you're comparing two different things here. I have a sense
of what societal standards are for female beauty. I've listed
them in other replies: youthful appearance, slim, etc. However,
I find many women who do not fit that standard attractive. I don't
see a contradiction there.
Re Mark a few back... I didn't mean to compare mere attractiveness to
beauty. I think that the standards of attractiveness are different for
men and women. I think men can be considered attractive even if they
look their age and are overweight. I don't think that's true for
women.
Justine
|
108.51 | It's not the money or power | BEING::DUNNE | | Thu May 17 1990 12:09 | 15 |
| Lately I have read a few notes from men talking about how women find
men with money more attractive, and this is a common stereotypical
view. I think that when men notice other men who are not very physically
attractive being successful with women they attribute it to the money.
I don't think that's it. I think in general that what attracts people
to each other (with the exception maybe of Hugh Hefner and
Donald Trump, who are soul dead, IMO) is metaphysical. Successful men
are likely to have other characteristics that make them attractive.
I think that both Aristotle Onassis and Woody Allen were/are very
attractive, and it is not the money or power that makes me think so.
Eileen
|
108.53 | same concept, DIFFERENT DEGREE | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Thu May 17 1990 15:14 | 25 |
| re: .52 Mike
Well, the real issues to me are:
1) "prefabricated" by WHO and WHAT and is there a reason WHY?
2) howcome men have more items on their checklist for women
than women have on their checklist for men?
Why do you want to make this "effort for appearance" question appear
equal for women and men? You've personally stated several times that
you prefer women who make more effort over their appearance than you
would be prepared to make for them. (Leg-shaving for one.) Clearly
you *realize* that women put in more work and clearly you *appreciate*
the results of that work; all that is being said here is that it is
*UNFAIR* that women are *expected* to do that work when men are not.
Yes, both men and women make an effort to look attractive so they will
attract others. No big surprise there. What you seem to think is just
hunky-dory, though, is that women are EXPECTED to do a lot more than
men are EXPECTED to do. For instance:
A woman puts on makeup for a date. (5 min-1 hour.) EXPECTED.
A man does not. (no time.) EXPECTED.
(A man does: shock. But that's for another topic, I guess!)
Pam
|
108.55 | | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Thu May 17 1990 18:37 | 53 |
|
I agree with Ann in .10 that most of the pressure to 'be beautiful'
seems to come from women. I for one am 100% more likely to put on
makeup to meet a female friend for dinner than a male friend. No
male in memory has *ever* told me I should put on makeup or shave
my legs (although a doctor I 'shadowed' on a high school 'career day'
chided me for not wearing a skirt), but women have. Sure, I tend
to get more positive reactions when I look more perfectly groomed,
but I wouldn't say I feel a societal pressure to do it on a regular
basis.
This was true of my parents too. It was generally my mother who'd
make comments about my clothes, telling me I _should_ wear higher
heels or a different combination of fabrics or a different color
of nylons. My father's comments tended to be more general and less
obligatory-sounding, along the lines of "you'll probably want to wear
something dressier than that to this restaurant", or "Your hair looks
nice curled".
As for men's and women's "lists" of what they want in an SO of the
opposite sex... I know plenty of women who, when you talk to them,
are very particular about how they want a man to look ("tall, thick
dark hair, cheekbones, a prominent chin, and bedroom eyes with long
eyelashes. A nice smile, clear skin, and no facial hair. Big
shoulder muscles and big hands with long, elegant fingers. No beer
belly, and no flabby legs. A muscled chest with a fair amount of
chest hair, but no hair on the back. And his voice shouldn't be
too nasal or too high-pitched...") ...and yet, they seem to scrap
these physical 'requirements' in their real life choices. (After
all, how many men do *you* know that fit the above description?)
In other words, I'm saying, in effect, that it's a version of supply
vs. demand. Immaculately groomed, fashionably dressed men are in
short supply, so very few women, realistically, can "require" this.
Immaculately groomed, fashionably dressed women are much more prevalent,
so a man can stick to such requirements without severely restricting
his choices.
The other reason that women's grooming may have been emphasized to
such a degree is that traditionally, men were supposed to make the
advances in dating situations. So a woman, to be "noticed", had to
resort to indirect means such as superior grooming, whereas a man
would stand out from the crowd by virtue of expressing interest.
What I think has happened is that those grooming standards haven't
grown lax as quickly as the convention of the man's always asking the
woman for a date has. So perhaps it's not so much an issue of the
men *requiring* the extra primping per se as *appreciating* it, and,
since the grooming standards for women are so pervasive, it's just
easier for men to meet women they like that also fit their
physical/grooming ideal.
Sharon
|
108.56 | my opinion | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Thu May 17 1990 18:43 | 13 |
|
re:.55
> In other words, I'm saying, in effect, that it's a version of supply
> vs. demand. Immaculately groomed, fashionably dressed men are in
> short supply, so very few women, realistically, can "require" this.
> Immaculately groomed, fashionably dressed women are much more prevalent,
> so a man can stick to such requirements without severely restricting
> his choices.
i believe that this is not coincidental and is a function of oppression
(q.v.)
|
108.57 | | RANGER::TARBET | Haud awa fae me, Wullie | Thu May 17 1990 20:04 | 10 |
| Elaine Walster & her husband [I think it was they, anyhow, but she's
the biggest name in the field so maybe that's why I think so...it's
been awhile] did some research that supports Mark's contention that
there are tradeoffs that can be made (eg, a homely woman/man with money
is just as attractive as someone smashing but poor), and that the
reason it looks like the physical standards are higher for women is
that traditionally women have had access to fewer "compensators" and
thus have had to rely harder on their looks, grooming, etc.
=maggie
|
108.59 | form vs function | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Thu May 17 1990 23:32 | 38 |
|
.55>> In other words, I'm saying, in effect, that it's a version of supply
.55>> vs. demand. Immaculately groomed, fashionably dressed men are in
.55>> short supply, so very few women, realistically, can "require" this.
.55>> Immaculately groomed, fashionably dressed women are much more prevalent,
.55>> so a man can stick to such requirements without severely restricting
.55>> his choices.
>
.56> i believe that this is not coincidental and is a function of oppression
.56> (q.v.)
Sure, but so what? The fact that society systematically denied
"good girls" (sic) the active role in the initiation of dating
relationships is a form of oppression. And those oppressions
become norm, to the point that they are no longer forms of oppression
but also _expected_modes_of_behavior_. Men are expected to have
"showcase" beautiful wives, and society scrutinizes their choices
of women in a way that it does not scrutinize women's choices of
men. So while the initial mode of oppression (= denying women the
power to initiate relationships without paying a societal price)
may no longer be in effect, the forces it engendered still are.
But this in itself is not universally a form of oppression. When
it extends to inequities on the job (stewardesses being fired because
of a 5 lb. weight-gain, for example, when stewards are not), then
it is oppressive. But forms of oppression and functions of oppression
are not the same thing: one is an *ongoing reality*, whereas one is
a result; a present-day fact that does *not continually recreate itself*.
However, these things are two-edged swords. Gender-based societal
norms box in members of both sexes (i.e., anyone who is not naturally
inclined in the direction society would like them to go is pressured
to conform). This is not (only) a women vs. men issue, but ultimately
an issue in the best interests of anyone interested in living according
to choices they themselves make, and not those society dictates.
Sharon
|
108.61 | He was a figment.... | TLE::D_CARROLL | The more you know the better it gets | Fri May 18 1990 12:24 | 11 |
| Sharon>I know plenty of women who, when you talk to them,
Sharon> are very particular about how they want a man to look
Doctah> Me too.
So tell us, Doctah, what *are* the particulars of how you want your men
to look?
:-)
D!
|
108.63 | form vs. function? | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Fri May 18 1990 13:37 | 8 |
|
re:.58
for some people it is.
re:.59
i'm sorry, i can't quite figure out what you're saying. could you
try again?
|
108.64 | i love to cause trouble at 7:15pm on a friday | MILKWY::JLUDGATE | Die Rainbow Die | Fri May 18 1990 20:14 | 11 |
|
.59> I disagree. I think men have fewer things on their checklist.
but ...
how many of the things are physical, and how many are mental and/or
insubstatial? something that would take a while to learn, as opposed
to seeing and hearing in the first five minutes? (this is referring
to men's checklist on what they are looking for in a GIRL)
|
108.65 | form vs. function, take II | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Tue May 22 1990 13:05 | 47 |
| Joe,
Something is a _form_ of oppression if it in itself is oppressing.
Although many women might contend that they find the social pressure
to be "beautiful" oppressive (= "harshly, tyrannically, or unjustly
burdensome", to paraphrase my desk dictionary), I personally would
consider that an overstatement of the pressure I've felt.
If f(a) = b, we say that b is a function of a. This is, loosely, the
sense in which I assumed you were using "function of oppression":
oppression is the input to the equation, and social pressure on women
to change their appearance is one of the direct results.
I think that women today are less oppressed than they were, say, 60
years ago. Yet the pressure to change one's appearance is still strong.
In a sense, I agree with you; I think that the pressure to groom oneself
elaborately began because of the oppression of women: a women's "power
of attraction" was one of the few powers society allotted her. But what
I was trying to say in .55 is that I think there's another force at work.
Perhaps "this is not conincidental and is a function of oppression" would
have worked as a blanket truism 60 years ago, but if we are to take that
as the case today our notion of who the oppressors are and who they are
oppressing must change. Although the pressure to appear "young, thin,
firm, and exqusitely groomed" comes from men in some sectors (network
news, for example), I think the most pervasive pressure comes from women
themselves. That is my personal experience, and every newsstand in
America will provide you with a measure of corroboration for it.
Pick up a copy of Cosmopolitan, Ladies' Home Journal, Glamour, Seventeen.
Are the editors male or female? Who is writing the articles?
The politics behind network news anchors and airlines are not the real
influences on the impressionable minds of the next generation. Mom, Dad,
and peer pressure are. Peer pressure comes from what's being said and
done in "other peoples' houses", and what's seen in movies and magazines
and on TV.
To put it differently, ask a girl who bought her her first lipstick, or
who first polished her nails or curled her hair, and 10-1 she's not going
to say 'my Dad'. If she bought it herself, or did it herself, ask her
why. Chances are it had something to do with "the girls at school".
And if you ask them I'll bet it didn't have much to do with _their_ Dads,
either.
Sharon
|
108.66 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue May 22 1990 13:52 | 10 |
| re .65 -
What difference does it make whether the writers/editors of those
magazines are male or female? Plenty of women buy right into the
dominant, male point of view. Women were the ones who got their
daughters to bind their feet in China, and I believe clitoridectomies
and infibulations tend also to be performed by women. But who are/were
these things being done *for*?
Dorian
|
108.67 | | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Tue May 22 1990 14:50 | 22 |
|
All I'm saying, Dorian, is that you can't look at the group that
is not being oppressed and say that they, by definition, are doing
the oppressing.
I think a lot of people perpetuate things because they're insecure.
They want their children (and anyone else, for that matter) to be
"just like them" because otherwise they might have to face things
that "might have been".
That is not at all the same thing as saying that men *require* women
to wear makeup and shave. If the bulk of the pressure to do so comes
from *women*, not men, you can't then double back on the men and insist
they *require* it!
Reminds me of that commercial for Stove Top stuffing where the woman
was *positive* that her husband would prefer potatoes with chicken.
Why is it so threatening to think that most men really *don't care* too
awfully much whether their lovers look like Christie Brinkley or not?
Sharon
|
108.68 | | HEFTY::CHARBONND | Unless they do it again. | Tue May 22 1990 15:15 | 22 |
| re .66 Who are these being done for ?
My opinion, most fashions are for young singles, in pursuit of
other young singles. Face it, once you're married, you're not
buying fashions, you're buying furniture. The silly part is that
all the singles are being bombarded with images of what they
should look like, how they should act, what they should own,
*none of which* prepares them for what life is like after they've
attracted a mate. Like for instance, "Shop for real value" and
"Be yourself". How can you be yourself when your trying to be
someone else's dream ? (Remember the movie, "Perfect" ?)
The whole fashion industry isn't aimed at women, or at men,
but at the insecure, those who don't know who they are, or aren't
comfortable with themselves. Don't know if more men or women fit
in that category, or why. However, the belief that "If you don't
have a perfect mate, you're nobody" sells a lot of merchandise.
*If* women are raised to lower standards of self-esteem,
might they not be more susceptible to such sales pressure ? Thus
accounting for the much larger marketing effort for women's
fashions ?
|
108.69 | | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Tue May 22 1990 17:00 | 17 |
|
re. 68
Very well said.
I notice that once I had a family, I started not to care too
much about fashion (not having time and $ to care). I have a
lot more confidence about myself than when I was single. (I
probably look ok if my husband married me!!! My kid doesn't
care how I look, she'll always love me!!!)
But, I think it is nature to try to look nice to attract.
Others animals do that, we are just spending a whole lot
more.
Eva.
|
108.70 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue May 22 1990 17:27 | 20 |
| re .67 -
> All I'm saying, Dorian, is that you can't look at the group that
> is not being oppressed and say that they, by definition, are doing
> the oppressing.
Not by definition; but by golly, you can look around you and figure out
that they are.
> If the bulk of the pressure to do so comes from *women*, not men,
> you can't then double back on the men and insist they *require* it!
You can double back and say that men strongly pressure them into it; and
one of the ways they do this is to make women internalize this pressure so
that women apply it to themselves and to their daughters.
Suggest you take a look at Susan Brownmiller's book Femininity...
Dorian
|
108.71 | further comments | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Tue May 22 1990 18:47 | 17 |
|
re:.65
thanks for clarifying.
i certainly agree with you that the issue is more complex than the
mere vagarities of fashion. and, frankly, my observations tend to
corroborate yours that it is as often as not women giving each other
flak, rather than men. the complexity i posit here, however, is that
women as a class, while- agreed- in an improved situation from 60
years ago, are still in many regards a vast 'underclass'. and, like
many underclasses, become instruments of their own oppression due
to the incredibly deep, yet subtle, messages of unworth that pervade
our society.
i don't know whether that means 'appearance tyranny' is oppression
in 'form' or 'function'. i do know that it is wrong.
|
108.72 | small and somewhat skewed sample | WMOIS::B_REINKE | treasures....most of them dreams | Tue May 22 1990 20:07 | 13 |
| in re .71
I would definitely agree that women do give each other a good deal
of flack about dress etc., and talk about women behind their backs
who don't dress well. However, it is my impression it is because
they regard each other as competitors for male attention and they
put down or scorn those who chose not to compete or fail to compete.
Remember the relatively unfashion conscious egalitarian (and engineering?)
types that inhabit womannotes are not terribly representative of
the world at large.
Bonnie
|
108.74 | neither judge nor jury | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Tue May 22 1990 20:58 | 12 |
|
re:.73
in so far as men in general seem to be doing relatively little
to change our society such that men and women are more equally
valued and in general might be considered to profit in some ways
from this state of affairs, i would say, yes, men are ultimately
responsible. but the only point i was trying to make (which,
incidently, contradicts neither bonnie nor sharon) is that
undervalued people do what might be considered, out of context,
to be odd things to compensate for their sense of unworth.
our society values men and undervalues women.
|
108.75 | Clear and powerful. | DELNI::POETIC::PEGGY | Justice and License | Mon Jun 04 1990 13:49 | 29 |
| I am not sure if this is relevant or not -
The pressures I received as a young girl and into my early
twentys was from males not females. I dressed as I pleased
to some extent and received flack from the boys my age about
it (to the point of extreme insults). At school the teachers
and the administration people insisted on dress codes that
I tended to try to get around (this was in the days before
one could wear jeans to school).
If a woman is not attempting to match the "ideal" image of
femaleness she is likely not to get positive feedback from
the males around her - this does not mean that she is told
to wear certain clothes or act a certain way. No, it is
much more subtle - lack of attention or notice of her even
being female. This is oppression.
Being told to wear nylons and heels is telling one how to
behave to keep the "master" happy. This is like telling
someone who wishes to be a software engineer to not admit
to knowing or using COBOL.
_peggy
(-)
|
Out of step and out of tune
|
108.76 | Clarify, please... | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Thu Jun 07 1990 15:27 | 6 |
| Referencing: 108.75
HUH????????????????
-Robert Brown III
|
108.77 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Colorado Rocky Mountain high | Mon Jun 25 1990 19:08 | 3 |
| re .76 to clarify .75 ... what didn't you understand?
Dan
|
108.78 | it's competition | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Wed Jun 27 1990 15:41 | 7 |
| I would have to agree wholeheartedly with .72 - mothers teach their
daughters to wear makeup in order that they can COMPETE for the
attentions of males. It's competition that keeps women striving to be
beautiful. Because that is what has worked for many generations. This
is not rocket science - women strive to be what is the current model of
beauty in order to attract men. Because it works.
|
108.79 | rather be natural than made-up | HUGS::KRISTY | Rock-n-roll Woobie | Thu Jun 28 1990 21:33 | 4 |
| Hmmmmm I don't wear make-up at all and am trying to instill in my now
7-year old (going on 27) daughter that she is beautiful the way she is
and doesn't need to wear make-up. Guess I'm one of the 'ugly' women of
the world.
|
108.80 | the opposite | WMOIS::B_REINKE | treasures....most of them dreams | Thu Jun 28 1990 23:36 | 9 |
| Kristy
rather
you are one of the very beautiful women of the world
much love
Bonnie
|
108.81 | positive sign | STAR::BARTH | | Fri Jun 29 1990 14:09 | 11 |
| I just received two catalogs in the mail; one called Together, from
Spiegal, and another from a French clothing company whose name escapes
me right now. I was struck by the natural appearance of all the models
used in both catalogs. I think most of them wore a little bit of
makeup, but it was very subtle. The women were also not as
"traditionally" beautiful as most catalog models. They actually looked
like real women to me. I found it such a refreshing and wonderful
change. I plan on ordering some of the clothes, and hope that more
ads follow suit.
Karen.
|
108.82 | Being unique!! | 20862::PILOTTE | | Fri Jun 29 1990 14:16 | 8 |
| I love makeup and I love fashion. The main reason is because I can be
original. I do not want to be like everyone else, therefore I play
with makeup and go 'conservative' some days, 'punk' others, etc. Clothing
and makeup are so much fun and versatile that you can have your own
style and look like no one else in the world! To me being individual
is beautiful.
Judy
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