A Fine Whine
You may have read my previous blog where I was having a meltdown over having to spend several beach days with Ex-Miss Peru. Well here is what went down and what I came away with over those few days. Hold on tight to your tiara, this is going to get rambly...
Miss Manifestation of my Insecurities arrived not long after we had got
there and yes, she is pretty. But in a very normal way. "Ahh, that is
refreshing isn't it?" I thought to myself, "a Miss Whatever
that is not seven feet tall, spindly thin and pricked full of silicone. Wow,
things must finally be changing in the world of Miss Whatever pageants."
It turns out things are not changing in the world of Miss Whatever pageants.
That evening, as we all chatted about this and that, she began to tell us about
her experience.
At 17 she was told that if she wanted a shot at the crown, she would need a
a nose job, boob job and liposuction. "You are far too fat!" they
told her as they looked her up and down from every angle through squinty,
judgey eyes.
There were people who could organise for that to be done, they told her.
She could be sliced and sucked and stuffed for free.
Fortunately, this perfectly lovely young thing had the backbone to tell them
that she was not really that invested in the whole idea of a cubic zirconia
tiara, and if it meant plastic surgery, she was out.
They conceded. And she went ahead and won - sceptre drop!
Bravo Ex Miss Peru!
But this whole body image thing seems to be one step forward and two steps back type deal.Once crowned she faced a lot of pressure and found herself exercising and dieting obsessively to lose 9 kg.
While I am hardly surprised, it is just absolute nonsense is it not? Even
the most genetically blessed women are not enough, we have to turn ourselves
into some kind of weird, charactature of a female to be acceptable.
Happily, few of us really harbour a desire to join a beauty pageant (I think
most people feel that it is a fairly outdated thing), but that certainly
doesn't mean that we get to avoid messages about what a woman is 'supposed' to
look like.
I went to bed, my heart angry about the crazy standards we internalise at some
point, in some way, growing up and feel we need to adhere to to feel worthy.
I drifted off to sleep planning to plaster my 7 year-old daughter's walls
with posters of RBG, Sam Kerr, Misty Copeland, Malala, Angela Merkel, Rachel
Maddow, Laverne Cox and Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz....
The next day came the inevitable...pool time.
I had expected to be filled with anxiety, to feel self-conscious and to be
convinced that everyone would be thinking to themselves what a heifer I was in
my fancy new one-piece. Like, "Nice try Rach, you can buy all the pretty
swimsuits you like but it ain't going to hid that paunch and pudge."
And they may have been thinking something along those lines - who knows? But
also, who cares? I didn't. Which was a delightful relief.
Instead of feeling self-conscious and like I was playing mutton to her lamb.
In fact, I felt great. In fact, I felt confident and competely happy with
myself.
Because, I do happen to quite like myself.
I am capable of empassioned and fascinating conversations - I read, I know
stuff.
I am no longer afraid to speak my mind (in my twenties, I was far to worried
about being perceived as "nice" to really say what I thought).
I can stick up for myself and for others - I have developed some sass and
smarts along the way.
I have been knocked down a time or two, but I have hauled myself up, dusted
myself off and reapplied my lipgloss without becoming hardened by those
experiences.
I have lived and have a depth of experience to dive into and draw upon.
I have also observed and noted the nuance and grey that exists in the
world when it comes to others' experiences and have great compassion, empathy
and admiration for what people live through.
I have not one, not two, but three awesome children, who are all so
completely different from each other, but equally incredible peoplings.
After a false start on the partner front, I have an incredible person to
share my life with - someone who is the funniest, kindest, most caring (and
sexiest) person in the world. He makes me feel like superwoman every day.
I can speak two languages fluently, plus some German when I am drunk, sukoshi Japanese hanashimasu and
ballet words in French.
I have a bachelor's degree, a postgraduate degree and a masters degree.
I have found a profession that I am perversely passionate about and
reasonably successful at.
I am bolstered by friends and family who do kind, creative, inspirational
things in big and small ways.
I am a glorious tangle of a person at 40 - as we all are probably.
And if the spirit of waistlines past descended and offered me the chance to
rewind and go back to 21, I wouldn't.
Twenty-one was fun. It was so much fun.
But 40, I can promise you, is better - with or without a broader bum.
By Rachel Moore
You are awesome. And an inspiration. And I'm grateful you're my friend x
ReplyDeleteAnd this is why my life goals are you 🥰. You have always been, are and always will be my the definition of MILF, not only in the sexy way, but Mother I'd Like to Friend. You are an exemplary teacher, mother and companion. Never change 😘
ReplyDelete