A favorite activity of celeb mags, when they aren’t detailing Taylor Swift’s boyfriend du jour or the imminent break up and/or marriage of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, is to haul out photos of older actresses and to shriek “More beautiful than ever!” “Never ages!” “What is her Secret?” “These Older Actresses Get Hotter Every Year!”
A favorite subject is Goldie Hawn. In photo after photo, throughout the years, she flashes before our eyes. An adorable and hot twenty-something. An adorable and hot thirty-something. An adorable and hot forty-something. An adorable and hot fifty-something. An adorable and hot sixty-something (67, to be exact).
So it may come as a shock to some of us to have seen the latest photo of La Goldie in all her natural 67-year-old glory. Sans personal make up artist. Sans personal hair stylist. And most of all, in the moment, as opposed to fixing her facial expression to be camera-ready. (If any of you have ever been out in the world and pass by a mirror unexpectedly, you may know what I mean).
Let’s get real here. Goldie Hawn is a great looking woman. But she isn’t a great looking 30-year-old. She is a great looking 67-year-old. She has “good bones.” She works hard to maintain her body and she has, at her disposal any number of cosmetic procedures to help keep her face in line and her lips out of line. But age is age. And cellular structure, whether it resides in the bodies of the most humble or the most famous, obeys natural law. It is oblivious to how famous, how rich, how entitled, how desperate we may be.
By elevating Goldie Hawn (and Demi Moore and Sophia Loren and Helen Mirren) to a category that defies natural law is to demean the age that they are. Can we just acknowledge that Goldie Hawn is a great looking woman, period, without comparing her to a chronological age she left in the dust decades ago?
And while we are at it, let’s bring this down to Real World level. Let’s compliment/support each other, not by saying inane things like, “You look ten years younger than your age!” but instead to “You are a fabulous looking women.” If I hear one more woman tell me that everyone she knows thinks she looks ten years younger than her age, I might spit.
Now back to the photo that started all the fuss. It’s Goldie, looking like she is headed to or away from the gym. She is wearing a form-fitting tank top (I stopped wearing those in 1992). Her hair is long and healthy (Damn her). She is looking down (never the best view of anyone’s face, over age 12). Her facial sags and wrinkles are on full view. Give the woman a break.
Now Husband is enamored of taking photos of me, in the moment, that would put Goldie’s photo to shame. He thinks it’s funny. I think his camera is on borrowed time. I have no issue with morning hair (which does defy natural law) or seeing my face without make up (it’s how it looks most of the time, anyway.) I do have an issue with seeing myself without a smile on my face. I’ve noticed that the older I get, the bigger my smile is in photos. This means that either I’m happier with life as the years go by, or that I’ve realized that smiling is a natural face lift. Or maybe both.
Here’s to you, Goldie. You rock. If I hit the gym regularly for two years and spend hours pumping iron, will I be able to wear a tank top like yours at age 67? Alas, I’ll never find out. I’m too lazy. But I will keep reminding myself to walk around with a perpetual smile on my face.
Say “cheese.” Just don’t eat it.
jotsfromasmallapt
December 5, 2012
Move over…I’d like to sit next to you on your couch. I’ll refill my coffee cup thank you very much. Pass the biscuits. Please.
Now…let’s talk about those smiles.
So smiling here….
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
Oooh, now wouldn’t that be fun? A couch about a million miles long, filled with women over the age of 50, eating, laughing, and solving all the problems of the world.
cindyricksgers
December 5, 2012
Well done! She IS great, and great-looking, and you addressed this topic beautifully. Thank you!
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
Thanks, Cindy! It’s a message I keep putting out there. The media just has to jump on board.
The Sandwich Lady
December 5, 2012
Goldie should have told the photographer to stand on a chair and shoot down at her…immediately gets rid of the extra chins. She is still a great-looking woman and not just “for her age.”
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
I always look forward to going to the dentist. As soon as the chair goes back, I wish I had a photographer standing by.
Patti Winker
December 10, 2012
No. That’s just the point. It’s not about getting the right angle… it’s about being real. None of us like unflattering photos BUT they are just that – unflattering photos – NOT who we are.
mercyn620
December 5, 2012
Three cheers for reality! I destroy lots of my hub’s pictures of me because I look awful – he has a habit of taking too-close-up pics. And I never looked good in tank tops.
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
Yes, three cheers is right. We can’t love ourselves unless we love everything about ourselves (except morning hair).
Hippie Cahier
December 5, 2012
Here’s what I’ve been wondering about that picture: One of my favorite things about Goldie is that she has always been Goldie — honest, down-to-earth, take-her-or-leave her. Surely she’s aware of the fact that any time she’s outside of the blankets on her bed, someone’s pointing a camera at her. What I wonder is whether she knew this was going to happen and let it. If so, I think it makes me admire her even more.
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
Good thought, Hippie. I didn’t think about that. But I love the same things you do about her.
morristownmemos by Ronnie Hammer
December 5, 2012
This reminds me of the photo of Hillary Clinton with the accompanying story about how she appeared on public without benefit of makeup or hair stylist. The comments came back negative toward the article and positive about Hillary’s natural appearance. Maybe is time to face reality and get real about looks and age.
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
Yes, I wrote a post about the Hillary flak, and a lot of women responded. https://lifeintheboomerlane.wordpress.com/2012/05/10/hiliary-clinton-face-off/
SocietyRed
December 5, 2012
I fell in love with Goldie when I was a teenager watching her on Laugh-in…but, who didn’t? I second what Hippy Cahier said; Goldie knows what’s going on in the limelight. I love Goldie! I always will!
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
Yes, yes, and yes!
Lisa Wields Words
December 5, 2012
Words to live by. I’m going to work on that smile and worry less about what will happens as time settles in. Thank you for this.
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
You are welcome. We can’t stop aging, but we can stop perpetuating the myth that not aging is a good thing.
avadapalabra
December 9, 2012
AMEN TO THAT!
Emily Cannell
December 5, 2012
Ha- can you imagine having a grandmother that looks like Goldie? Rock on Goldie.
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
Beyond cool.
muddledmom
December 5, 2012
You are so right. We should all tell each other, “You look fabulous.” Age? What is that? I can’t even remember it anymore anyway. And thanks for reminding me to smile. A natural face lift. Love it!
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
You are welcome. The other day I was telling someone that I was happy that I had a good year real estate-wise. They looked at me and said, “But why aren’t you happy about that?” When I said I was, indeed, happy and asked why they thought I wasn’t, they said, “Because you weren’t smiling when you said it.” Wow. What a great remindder for me.
chlost
December 5, 2012
Yes, we need to own our age, and be thankful for every day that we wake up (with a smile on our face). It is the unrealistic expectations set up by the media and celebrities that gives us “real folks” a negative outlook on aging.
Look in the mirror and say “you look fabulous! and mean it.
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
YES!
ryoko861
December 5, 2012
You know what makes these actors look fabulous at their age? High paid trainers, dieticians and lots of air brushing. Photoshop helps, too! I’ve seen Goldie without the makeup. It’s a painful sight! Angelina hasn’t hit 50.
The key to help keep your double chin in check? Watch what you eat, drink lots of water, fresh fish, vegetables and fruit, exercise and stop smoking/drinking. But that’s boring. I love me some Pepperidge Farm Cherry Turnovers and Friendly’s Jubilee Ice Cream roll!
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
I just finished some coffee Haagen Dazs, my drug of choice. Yum. I do think a lot of celebs have naturally good bone structure and good body proportions. Otherwise, they wouldn’t have made it so far in a business that depends so heavily on outward appearances. But, yes, we all have the responsibility to take care of ourselves. All the cosmetic surgery, airbrushing, etc can’t undo the damage some people do to themselves.
The Itty Bitty Boomer
December 5, 2012
You’re A Great-Looking Woman!
xo
Renee Fisher
December 5, 2012
Thanks, Itty Bitty, and the same to you!
ldsrr91
December 6, 2012
Sadly, we all get a turn in life, eh?
I am scratching parts of my body I have not seen in five years and I am only 65.
Good post, great stuff.
DS
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 6, 2012
Thanks, DS, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane!
Lynne Spreen
December 6, 2012
I am so happy to see this post. For me, it all pivots on the concept that she is, right now, a great-looking woman. Can anybody imagine how cool it would be if our culture celebrated such a thing? I mean, without the caveat, “at her age.” Given that she has all the reasons you identified to be proud of her body, one can imagine everything ELSE she has in her mind: her fabulous career must have given her a ton of wisdom, satisfaction – and great experiences to chortle about. I imagine she can recall diving naked off of certain yachts with certain celebrities in secret places in the Med. But back to my point: what if we could value all the great stuff that comes with age instead of always hanging the millstone of youth on it?
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
As usual, Lynne, you have expressed yourself in such a thoughtful and powerful way. We would never clarify anyone’s looks by saying they look great for a Latino/black/white/whatever. So why do we do it with age? And, yes, Goldie (and millions of other women of a certain age) can celebrate the wisdom and the perspective that this time of life affords, even if we haven’t spent time diving off yachts with celebs in the Med. Damn. I would like to try the yacht-diving, though.
Snoring Dog Studio
December 6, 2012
I admit here, publicly, that I gasped out loud when I learned that the woman in the photo is Goldie Hawn. I’m, and most of us are, stuck in the past with images of what our celebrities used to look like. Now, sadly, when photos of older celebrities are posted, it’s done to humiliate them. We get stuck in this place of eternal youth and when the reality is shown to us, we can barely handle it. This country doesn’t celebrate age in women. Men are allowed to age publicly (unless you’re Mickey Rourke). Even when magazines feature older women in ads, like Diane Keaton, the message is that makeup can hide the scourge of age.
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Yes, and that’s a whole other area. The media certainly does its share of this kind of damage, and then we,ourselves, buy into it. It’s tough, given that for eons, a woman’s looks determined her ability to acquire a good partner/husband. But as we move past economic dependency, surely we all deserve to be more.
windupmyskirt
December 6, 2012
Fantastic post. I too am bothered by this type of ageism. You might like to read my take on the subject. http://windupmyskirt.com/2012/04/29/a-certain-age/
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
First off, your blog name is great. I thank you for visiting LITBL. I have been honored in the past to have been Freshly Pressed several times, and I know from experience that it is a bit overwhelming. I try to answer all the comments. When the tsunami settles down, I will read your post!
segmation
December 6, 2012
Have you changed your mine and decided to put on the tank top after skipping the cheese?
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
No, dammit, I not only ate the cheese but the chocolate and the ice cream.
segmation
December 6, 2012
Whoops! http://www.segmation.com
obliviontimebomb
December 6, 2012
Aging gracefully means to accept that you are your own age.
I think that it’s something neither the media nor those in that industry can /all/ manage.
It’s shameful, really.
Healthiness is what will get you looking naturally beautiful, no matter how old it is you get.
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Well said.
irtclothing
December 6, 2012
Lol, some of these comments are hillarious
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
My followers are way funnier than me.
pegoleg
December 6, 2012
I just saw an article extolling how wonderful Goldie Hawn looked, and she does. I hope to God nobody ever follows me around with an extreme close-up zoom lens – that’s just, plain cruel.
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Don’t invite my Now Husband over for dinner.
denmother
December 6, 2012
I really enjoyed this post. As a woman in her forties I’m entering a stage in life where I’m not only very conscious of my age (unfortunately), but conscious of and curious about how society views middle aged women. I address both the pressure and the subsequent criticism of slowing down the clock on my blog in the post “An Open Letter to Lance Armstrong.” I’m wondering what your comments might be if you have a chance to give it a read. Excellent post. Thank you!
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
You are welcome and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane. I will read your post but may not get to it for a day or so. Being Freshly pressed is an honor and an onslaught.
denmother
December 6, 2012
So I’ve heard:-) Enjoy the ride! Congrats.
Michelle
December 6, 2012
Awesome- this is so true and well written! I hate standing in line at the grocery store and looking at all tabloids of mean-hearted photos of celebrity women on the beach with gigantic zoomed-in circles pointing out the tiniest flaw with their flat abs. Let’s all just agree to be smiling and happy and quit the malicious tactics to make ourselves feel better for Pete’s sake! So glad this got freshly pressed! Good job!
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Thanks Michelle, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane. Yes, when I go out now, I attach red arrows pointing to all the places on my body that buldge, sag, droop, and mock me. That way, everyone can see exactly where they are.
Michelle
December 6, 2012
LOL! What a good idea.
moosenoose
December 6, 2012
Great post! I know exactly what you mean. People seem to be obsessed with pointing out a time when somebody looked ‘better’. I’m only 35 yet constantly get reminded by work colleagues that I’m no longer a ‘spring chicken’ and don’t have the size 10 figure and youthful skin I used to have. Who cares?! It’s my life not theirs and anyway, they don’t look so bloomin’ perfect either! Everybody ages, it’s nature. We’d all look a bit freaky if we were plastic a’la Joan Rivers!!
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Oh my. I am so sad that this happens to younger women as well. Do we all have to look like 12-year-olds? Except now I will get a comment from a 12-year-old, telling me that people tell her she’s no 9-year-old.
Pete Armetta
December 6, 2012
Maybe you’re just saying the HELL with the camera, here I am, as I am! The only way to be. This is delightful and made me smile throughout. I think we ought to collectively love Goldie for who she is and exactly the WAY she is. That’s how I see it. 🙂
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Thanks, Pete, and welcome to Life in the Boomer Lane. Yes, Goldie is perfect, just the way she is.
guylainesimonegamble
December 6, 2012
Great post! However… when I saw this picture of my favorite actress Goldie Hawn… I don’t believe it’s actually her in the photo! ?
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
That is Goldie, I’m sure. She’s a fabulous woman of any age.
Franco
December 6, 2012
Good post. We spend too much time thinking about other people’s appearances, and talking about age as though it’s something we can escape.
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
That’s what always amazes me, that we act as though the aging process can somehow be avoided. And really, it should be celebrated.
benzeknees
December 6, 2012
I love your point of view & I am going to try really hard to change the way I compliment people in the future. I’ll say “You look great” instead of “You look great for your age or you look 10 years younger.”
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
HOO-RAY!!!
Ellie at Emerald Pie
December 6, 2012
Great post. It is so true. Youth is seen as the ultimate goal when it is the one thing we are always moving further away from. So many beautiful actresses and celebs have ruined their natural beauty by having procedures done to look forever young. i think Goldie looks great.
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane, Ellie. Yes, we give lip service to the glories of aging but we chase youth. I have nothing against cosmetic surgery if, like contact lenses and hair color, it makes people feel better about themselves. But when it is used to perpetuate “youth,” it’s a losing proposition. Yes, Goldie looks great.
SocietyRed
December 6, 2012
Boomer! I knew this get the spotlight! Congrats!
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Thanks, Red!
free penny press
December 6, 2012
I think she looks Fab for almost 70.. Lotta women at 40 would like to look this good..
Great post and congrats on being FP.. well deserved!!
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Thanks, and agreed. She is great looking.
hiddinsight
December 6, 2012
Great post! I love your take on aging 🙂
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Thanks, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer lane.
nextphasemom
December 6, 2012
Great Post! I am so smiling right now. Thank you for this 🙂
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Thank you, and thanks for stopping by.
The Temenos Journal
December 6, 2012
Very well said. Ugh…can you imagine having to stare back at your self in every raw moment of your life. Good grief. 😦
WOOT WOOT for Goldie.
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
No, I can’t imagine. I have a tough enough time with Now Husband and his photos of me. Goldie rocks.
Living By Olivia
December 6, 2012
I was just thinking about this today at the grocery store when I saw this! I’m with you and she looks amazing and shouldn’t be afraid to show!
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Thanks, Olivia, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane!
muddledmom
December 6, 2012
Congrats on FP! A worthy read even the second time around.
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Many thanks. It’s always a bit overwhelming.
wildjuggling
December 6, 2012
Excellent post. You speak the truth and it is very refreshing.
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Thanks, and welcome to Life in the Boomer Lane.
life is a bowl of kibble
December 6, 2012
Hunny this is way too good! I too love Goldie,
wrinkles and all.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks. Yes, Goldie will always be Goldie. Thank goodness.
gracefully50
December 6, 2012
Here here! Enjoyed your post!
Renee Fisher
December 6, 2012
Thanks much!
Grumpa Joe
December 6, 2012
We should all have two photos on our desks at all times. One will be from our twenties and the second of our current self. I venture that the likenesses might be there but the look will be totally different. We are what we are.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
When I look at photos of myself in my twenties, I sometimes think, “Wow, you were great looking. What were you worried about?” Now, at a higher weight, etc, I think, “You are fabulous, babe.” I guess that’s some kind of progress, right?
Betty Londergan
December 6, 2012
I got so MAD when I saw this photo on the cover of some trash mag at the checkout counter with some snide comment — and I am so HAPPY you chose to write about it! Yeah, this is what 67 looks like when you’re’ not tarted up and photo-shopped and good for her for being the real beauty she is … Wow, have you ever caught yourself on your i-phone when it switches around to view you instead of the world?? scary!!! The older I get the more I think that just assuming you’re adorable and cute is SO much better than ever looling in a mirror to get confirmation/denial of that !! :Love the way you rant, Miss Renee!!
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
So funny that you used the iPhone example. I just got an iPhone and I was taking a photo and that happened and I just about shreiked in horror at what I saw. But had iPhones been out in 1810, when I was in my twenties, I think I would have done the same thing. So yes, I assume I am adorable and go about my business. Makes life so much easier.
Kathryn Baughman
December 6, 2012
I won’t lie, I miss the image of Goldie in Overboard. However, in that movie I had the delight of seeing her ritzed up and down-homed down, so both perspectives have stuck over the years. I may only be 33 (such a ripe old age I know), but even I have seen my fair share of “Wow, you don’t look quite the same as you did ten years ago.”
Although the comments themselves do not bother me (I’m quite accustomed to the idiocy of the average human these days), it galls me that anyone who KNOWS me would even bother to make such a comment. I was almost positive my “If you don’t like me the way I am you can sod off.” temperament and behavior were enough to reinforce the fact that such comments are a pointless waste of air.
I blame the media as well as society for being media-driven sheople. Doesn’t it bother anyone that in the human species women are supposed to look oh-so-perfect to attract a mate, while in nature it is the males who do all the preening and colorful displays? For being the “superior” race, we sure managed to get the natural roles back asswards don’t you think?
As for Goldie, I’m simply glad there is at least one celebrity out there who could give a fig less if the camera catches them being … well, themselves!
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
I love your comments, Kathryn, and it’s fascinating to me that even very young women can come up against the same kind of thing. And, as you said, historically, a woman’s physical appearance may have meant the different between a good or bad match. If I could change anything, I’d start by all of us owning our age, never telling anyone they looked younger than their age as a compliment, and never accepting anyone telling them they looked younger than their age as a compliment. If anyone said to me “Well, you don’t look like you did 10 years ago,” I’d say “Thank goodness. And thank you for noticing the wisdom amd maturity I’ve added to my face.”
lucilara30
December 6, 2012
Well she is a celebrity and she has to sell image and I’m pretty sure that with some makeup and nice dress she must look amazing.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Yes, she does look amazing when she is red carpet-ready. We all have different looks, depending on where we are and what we are doing. And all of them are equally great.
Cancer in My Thirties
December 7, 2012
Love this — nice job! Wonderful message!!
Congratulations on being FP’d… You deserve it!
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane.
foroneplease
December 7, 2012
super cool post..and Goldie Hawn, absolutely!! 🙂
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, and agreed!
bodhimoments
December 7, 2012
This is why I don’t like the habit people have of advertising their age. Immediately you start hearing how you look younger than that. Another thing I hate is, when people judge our behaviour by our age. “at her age, she should know better”… So here is a wide smile from an ageless mee to and ageless you, and three cheers to Goldie Hawn, in all of her ages…..
Congratulations on being freshly pressed.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Interesting take on the age thing. You do have a point. Would that age would never even come into any conversation. But if it does, I want to own my age and not take it as a compliment that I look like something I’m not. Tell me I’m a great looking woman, period, not a lookalike woman of a younger age.
bodhimoments
December 7, 2012
Yes, let us own our selves, body and soul, and love that as is!
Jackie
December 7, 2012
Thank you for this. I must admit I was drawn to this cover too, only to see a picture of the beautiful Adele as well, looking lovely as can be without her hairpiece or her makeup and the magazine acting like she was a hell banshee. Fame and fortune must be nice, sans the pressure to not step out of your house without 2 hours with a personal stylist first.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
That is, indeed, something that comes with the fame territory. It never used to be that way. In past years, we cared about what “famous” people did, rather than how they looked. We all thought Elizabeth Taylor was the most beautiful woman on the planet. No one was hiding in the bushes, hoping to snap her while she was putting her trash out. But maybe the paparazzi will create the opposite of what they intended, that these people will smile and say “Yes, this IS what I look like when I’m taking the trash out. And aren’t I fabulous?”
vandysnape
December 7, 2012
Well said ! It is the same case when I see headlines like “Stars who had gone ugly over the years”. I mean they are humans after all. Ageing is a part and parcel of life. Anyway great post ! At last someone’s said what I’ve been thinking !
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, Vandy. And that’s exactly why I love to age. Every minute that I age means I am still here, loving and breathing and laughing and writing and wearing cute shoes and complaining about my hair and devouring books and travelling….
aquarianmist
December 7, 2012
The aging process cannot be avoided and is a fact of life on the blue planet. Seems to me you know how to grow old gracefully and in my book that makes you A REAL WOMAN.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
I thank you for your comment, and I thank you for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane.
Amirh
December 7, 2012
Love this post so much. Thank you for saying all that you’ve said. I’m deleting “for your age” from my vocabulary. I have a friend who constantly tells stories of how so-and-so-said she looks much younger than her age (I’m almost 65 and she’s a year younger) — “I never would have guessed!” Who is to say what any age is supposed to look like? It is what it is, isn’t it? 🙂
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, Amirh. Yes, I’d be tempted to ask the friend just that: What is any age supposed to look like? It looks like who and what you are, period. I want to be the best example of the age I am, not an imitation of another age.
Light Friday
December 7, 2012
A great post 😀
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane!
Mountain Gypsy
December 7, 2012
There are two things that you can’t change: Your age and the weather. I’ve seen much younger women celebs without makeup and been just as shocked ( or disturbed ).
At 56, I do what I can to look my best with a little bit of makeup, make sure my wild hair is tamed, my clothes are clean and the weather report is checked before I leave the house. I feel terrific on the inside and don’t hesitate to smile at people, or laugh, or crack a joke. It’s me, I’m here for as long as life will give me and I don’t want to waste a single moment worrying about how other people think I look. My life will never circle around a celebrities life, they are a much smaller number than the rest of us. Let them have their world of luxury, glamour, excess and money. They’re still gonna get old, skin will sag, hair will thin, weight will change and their age will show – just like the rest of us.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks for your comments, MG, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane. I love your thoughts. The bottom line is that life is too precious to waste even one second on obsessing about things that not only can’t be changed, but should be celebrated. It means we are here, we are alive, we love and we are loved.
OyiaBrown
December 7, 2012
Reblogged this on Oyia Brown and commented:
Well said
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, Oyia, and I am honored about the reblogging!
Red Toenails
December 7, 2012
Too cute and congrats on the Freshly Pressed!
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, and oooh, your blog name reminds me that I need a pedi, asap.
Kathryn McCullough
December 7, 2012
Amen, Renee! There’s always that thing called gravity. I’ve been so out of the blogging loop of late, forgot how much I missed your posts! Congrats on FP, my friend. You always make me smile!
Hugs,
Kathy
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, Kathy. Are you busy with the TV project? I, too, have been out of the loop. I still post but I have been too busy with my real estate business and with travel to be able to read anyone else’s posts. But I always imagine you doing great things. xxoo
Valentine Logar
December 7, 2012
Here is to beautiful women over 50! You handled this wonderfully, thanks. I rarely wear make-up, to much trouble and frankly it simply highlights all those wrinkles that have settled in for good. I wish someone had told me back in the day, if you wear more than a B cup DO NOT BURN THAT BRA you will regret it, but I was the first at the bonfire now my bras are industrial strength. I am forever grateful to the woman who invented spanx, I hope she becomes a billionaire a billion times over.
I am all for that mile long couch.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, Valentine. I’m laughing. Oh boy, let’s talk about bras. I was actually thinking about writing a bra post. I’ve gone from B to C to D in my adult life. Now I wear a minimizer, but all that does is squish everything down. I’ve written about my horror story about wearing Spanx to my son’s wedding. Never again.
Raven Style
December 7, 2012
Love this
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, Raven!
TGVA
December 7, 2012
Great post. Love seeing women age gracefully in reality instead of fighting it with a delusional mindset. Hair is one of those age challenges and definers so many women have a hard time with. There are so many beautiful women with wonderful hair in silver, white, and grey. Colour is a great thing but so is the natural and it looks great. I am looking forward to changing colour of my hair and then one day plan to die it to neon blue for season. smiling with you 😉
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Oooh, I do like the idea of neon blue. Can you imagine all the older women walking around with crazy hair colors? On the other hand, now I’ve just gotten an image of the Capitol in the Hunger Games film.
jmgoyder
December 7, 2012
Wonderful wonderful wonderful post!
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, Raven!
Joe Owens
December 7, 2012
I think it is a form of cruelty, the way the media has conditioned these people in the public eye to chase perfection. It is the nature of life that our skin and features lose the battle over time. Personally I don’t want to see before and after or know who has had what done. Let people be people and enjoy what they offer us.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Yes, yes, and yes!
Tori Nelson
December 7, 2012
So I’m 25 and that photo of Goldie is Vogue cover compared to what I look like most days. I hate the “for your age” idea. From what I can tell she’s a healthy, happy woman regardless of her age.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Hey, Tori! Yes, she is adorable and hot. Her sex appeal has always been about who she is. That will never change. But, you my dear, are adorable and hot as well, for the very same reason.
yomicfit
December 7, 2012
Amen sister!
antoinettemsmut
December 7, 2012
As a 30 year-old woman, it’s, “You lost weight.” I gained ten pounds, people still said to me, “Oh, you look like you lost weight! You look great! You have lovely skin!” (I have rosacea!) The worst is when it’s said in front of kids. It’s not you look happy, or healthy, the best thing you can compliment a woman on is either her youth or thinness.
Great post by the way. Thanks for sharing.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
You are welcome, and these are great comments. Antoinette. Thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane.
thoughtsalone
December 7, 2012
A genuine smile and confidence look great on anybody regardless of age or gender 🙂
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Amen.
The Sandwich Lady
December 7, 2012
You rock! I always knew that. Now the world knows it too. Congrats on being FPd.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Hey, thanks!
candidkay
December 7, 2012
Applause, applause. And maybe while we’re at it, we can ask the organizers of women’s “health” conferences to disinvite plastic surgeons. When we start to think of going under the knife to look younger, as women’s health, we’ve gone seriously off track.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
I have nothing against cosmetic surgery, but I do find it strange to have a cosmetic surgeon at a women’s health conference. What on earth does plastic surgery have to do with health?
rkutchjm
December 7, 2012
Entertaining, funny, well written and thought provoking means I like it, a lot!!
Great way to make a blog a worthwhile endeavor. Please keep up the great work.
Rob
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, Rob, and welcome to Life in the Boomer Lane.
writingfeemail
December 7, 2012
Great post and a positive message. Why do we keep trying to look twenty or thirty when we so obviously are not? And why does Hollywood keep giving the elderly female role to young women they have given ‘creative’ hair and makeup to? Seems like those roles should go to the Goldies of the world.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
The entertainment and modeling industries keep getting farther and farther from reality. Now, even the “beautiful” people aren’t as beautiful as the images of them that are recorded on film and in print. It’s like we are up against a standard that no human could possibly achieve.
Teresa Silverthorn
December 7, 2012
The further you rise, the harder you fall…
If humanity wasn’t so enamoured by “appearances” – this woman may never have been famous.
It’s natural, that by her appearances now – the reverse is experienced.
fireandair
December 7, 2012
Please. The ground is practically littered in southern California with pretty people who are unable or unwilling to do the work needed to sustain a career like she has. I live here. I’ve never seen to many staggering gorgeous restaurant waitstaff anywhere else on Earth.
If Hawn was willing to work that hard, why shouldn’t she take advantage of anything she’s been given? Should she not follow her ambitions because she’ll make insecure women feel bad about themselves?
No one whines about basketball players who only get to follow their dreams because Nature endowed them with freakish height. They still have to work for what they get. (And they’re also MEN, which means you’d never think to snipe at them.) Nature endowed Hawn, as it did many other people, with beauty and an appetite for hard work. Good on her.
We all have advantages and disadvantages in life that we can make the most of. Which of your advantages have you built a life on?
Orange Pumpkin
December 7, 2012
Hello, very well said and very well written, wish I could write like you.
We as women and just as people should stop looking to age and looking young as if is it the most important thing in life, it’s not really! It always confuses me, when someone asks me if I don’t use makeup and I say “Never used it!” – people look at me as if I had just said “I killed someone!” ah ah ah we should not care whether you use it or not, it’s your choice, just don’t jugde it!
We should be proud and embrace getting old, as long as we have an healthy mind and body that’s what counts!
And besides, who are others to say that you don’t look good or look good?!?
We all look good is our way!
Thank you for the very well written words. Keep up the good work 🙂
Go Jules Go
December 7, 2012
Yeaaaaaa Freshly Pressed, Renee!!! Congrats!! I was totally with you up until the ‘no cheese’ part.
k8edid
December 7, 2012
My mother died at 42 from colon cancer. She had been heavy for many years but as the cancer ate away at her, she became slim (before she became gaunt, of course) and people (who didn’t know) kept congratulating her on her amazing weight loss. “You look so much younger” they would say…
I’m with Jules. Pass the cheese.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
To Jules: Funny you should say that. Since writing this post, I did consume a humongous melted cheese sandwich with bacon. To Katie:Ugh, how sad that people would say that.
fireandair
December 7, 2012
I’ve always been disheartened by people’s reactions to pictures of celebrities without makeup or photoshopping. I’ve seen photos like this and my reaction has always been, “Hey, they’re people just like the rest of us, and not only that, but normal people look a lot better than we think!” Everyone else’s reaction always seems to be catty, vicious laughter and, “Look how UGLY she is! Good!”
*sigh* Give women a reason to feel better about themselves, and they’ll refuse it. They’d much rather feel worse about someone else.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
So true. It’s sad that some people can only feel good about themselves when the “icons” are seen in an unfavorable light. As you say, we are all people. We all age in roughly the same way. I say let’s celebrate aging. It’s a hell of a lot more fun than complaining about it.
annewhitaker
December 7, 2012
This is a terrific post. Thanks. Let’s try and bring some honesty to bear on life’s inevitabilities, shall we, and try to face them with some grace and a lot of humour? Here is my take, from my column called “Just Let Me Get Old, OK?”: http://anne-whitaker.com/books/ ( don’t quite know how this title happened to that post – probably creeping senility!)
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
Thanks, Anne, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane. Being Freshly Pressed is an homor and bit overwhelming. I will read your post, but it may take awhile!
annewhitaker
December 8, 2012
No problem Renee. I’m returning to sign up to your blog! I think we speak the same language….
Amirh
December 7, 2012
Reblogged this on In the Spaces Between Words and Images.
aflashymess
December 7, 2012
I am approaching my mid 20s, and I am ever so fearful of aging. After reading this post, I realized how much I do give older people credit and admiration. Why compare ourselves to what was once was? Embrace the age.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
And it’s good to learn this in your twenties, rather than in your sixties or never. One of my closest friends died of breast cancer when we were 47 years old. From that day on, I have been giddy with joy for each year I have on the planet. In a lot of ways, life keeps getting better.
speaker7
December 7, 2012
Congrats for your freshly pressage. I wore make up a few times. Once when I was 12 and the other times when I was in school plays, but have since left it behind. Luckily the paparazzi cares little about my face and body, but it’s about time we just let people be and allow them to age like we’re suppose. Frankly I like Goldie’s face compared to the weird plasticine faces of others.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
7, you absolutely don’t need make up. But you could use a nose and bigger feet.
Jean
December 7, 2012
So that is Goldie Hawn? Or? Anyway I shouldn’t comment about her: I stopped wearing make-up at all for my full-time job in the past 5 years. And in 2 months, I will turn ..54. I haven’t yet coloured my life so far.
And right now I work with a number of men and women daily who see me up close. And other women around me, some of them don’t wear make-up. Or maybe some mascara. I stopped noticing. It’s their personality, stories and actions that I notice more now.
Yes, it does require mindful eating. However I don’t count calories. I just stopped buying certain foods for home. And instead “bad” foods are eaten outside of home at restaurants and cafes.
There is nothing wrong with exercise because a healthy body and mind, never goes out of “fashion”. I don’t have a tv and have only gone to a theatre movie once in last 2 yrs. ..So maybe I’m just clueless over time to the media messages.
Renee Fisher
December 7, 2012
You have a great attitude, Jean. I love that you wrote “It’s their personalities, stories and actions that I notice more now.” That’s what it’s all about, isn’t it? Relating to people for the positive energy they create around them. That is what we are grateful for and what take away with us.
Jean
December 7, 2012
I think I had a typo in my email…anyway.
Speaking of dynamic boomer women, who have been lifelong advocates…for social justice: Here is Buffy Ste.-Marie, a Cree native Indian singer from Canada who I saw perform last year. Yes, that hot body is 71 yrs. old.
But she very outspoken and stands “tall” for marginalized folks.
http://cyclewriteblog.wordpress.com/2012/03/17/buffy-sainte-marie-a-life-of-song-and-social-justice-activism/
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
Thanks for this. I was a huge fan of Buffy St Marie’s music back in the 60s and 70s, then followed her activism. I’m happy to hear she is still performing and still out there, advocating for social justice. Can you imagine how the world would change if we turned our energy outward, instead of inward.
breebarkley
December 7, 2012
Well said.
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
Thanks Bree, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer lane.
Lynette d'Arty-Cross
December 7, 2012
You are completely right – Goldie is a great-looking woman, regardless of age. A good point and an excellent post!
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
Thanks, Lynette, and many thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane.
artisticmilestone
December 8, 2012
Love this topic. Looks wise, everybody is scared to get old because people can be very judgmental, wish everyone would think like you do, there’ll be less stressed and depressed people on earth. Congrats on being freshly pressed!
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
Thanks, and thanks for your comments. Can you imagine how powerful we would all be if we used our energy to change the world instead of trying to change ourselves?
djtoasterbiscuit
December 8, 2012
Thank you for this post!!! Reassuring & uplifting.
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
You are welcome. It’s a topic that is important to talk about.
Emily Cannell
December 8, 2012
Very worthy of the positive attention- and the FP! Congrats!
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
Thanks, Emily!
Tar-Buns @ Here and ThereSa
December 8, 2012
Hey! Someone I know being honored with FPd!
Women are so hard on themselves regarding appearance – and, on other women. Time for an attitude adjustment. Sadly, I’m not holding my breath on the media changing their focus any time soon.
Congrats on being FPd! Enjoy the ride 🙂
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
Thanks, and yes, the media isn’t going to come around anytime soon. So, it’s up to us to change the conversation about aging!
gatesitter
December 8, 2012
So glad I found you. I’m new to this blogging thing and this is the first time I’ve gone to fresh pressed. Love your subject and how you covered it. As childern we can’t wait to grow up and around thirty we start worrying about ageing, so that leaves one decade when we are satisfied with our age, yikes! Had my 70th b’day this year and was so excited about it, now I can be my goofy self and not have to pretend to be an adult all the time…one of the perks of ageing. 🙂
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
Thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane. I love that you are excited about turning 70. We should all celebrate every single birthday (every single DAY) that we are here. Why waste even one minute of life’s precious time?
on thehomefrontandbeyond
December 8, 2012
wonderful post and you gave the right message at the right time for me–thank you–I am glad you were freshly pressed so I could find you
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
Thanks, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane!
patinaandcompany
December 8, 2012
“If I hear one more woman tell me that everyone she knows thinks she looks ten years younger than her age, I might spit.”–I second that!! How goofy.
Also, the practice of photographers to deliberately take photos of women looking their worst (rarely, if ever, of men) is just so rude and classless, and a message to all women and girls that we are only worth what we look like.
Great post!
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
Thanks, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane. I used to have a friend who would tell people she was 10 years older then she was, just to hear them tell her how fabulous she looked. I thought it was so funny, I starting doing it with adding 20 years to my age.
patinaandcompany
December 8, 2012
Must have been hilarious to see the reactions.
balancefitnessusa
December 8, 2012
Age is nothing but just a number if i told you my age you would not believe…. Have i found the fountain of youth probably. Do i have secrets ofcourse i would not be a woman Ha ha. Enjoyed this Thanks for sharing.
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
Thanks for visiting life in the Boomer Lane. I actually wrote a post about the Fountain of Youth. Congrats on finding it!
Connie T
December 8, 2012
I am sure they tried to take a bad picture of her just to publish it. I try to take pictures of myself but most of them turn out awful. She does look great when she tries to look great. She looks good like that picture too. I always look bad in those pictures they take at Sam’s Club and Costco. Driver license photos are not the greatest either.
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
Oh my, I could write an entire post about driver’s license photos and Costco photos. You could blackmail people with those.
changeme10
December 8, 2012
Wow, I didn’t even recognize her!
We all change and we should all be prepared to come to terms with our appearance. Great post!
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
Thanks, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane. The aging process tells us we are alive. isn’t that reason to celebrate?
changeme10
December 8, 2012
oh absolutely!
wordswithnannaprawn
December 8, 2012
Oh hurrah for posts like this!! About 6 months ago I decided to stop having my hair coloured dark to cover the bits of grey coming through (so my little Gravatar pic actually needs updating). This was the last time I had it coloured over and I felt a bit like I had ‘Lego’ hair, you know, kinda like a wig stuck on?! It just doesn’t look right with aging skin somehow. My hubbie told me he loves me for more than my hair colour (extra Brownie points for him!), but my hairdresser and a lot of people in my age group have been reluctant and sometimes hostile to my choice. That was something I hadn’t expected at all, it’s like we are all supposed to just keep up this fakery together to perpetuate some myth about how we should be looking ageless in today’s society. I actually have a little giggle when I see some more grey coming through, it’s like I’m putting two fingers up at the world and daring them to judge me! I’m working as hard as I can in my forties to be happy with whats on the inside; I don’t want to be continually defined by my looks anymore 🙂
Renee Fisher
December 8, 2012
I have several friends now who have gone au natural. Most look much better with the grey. I don’t know why other women wouldn’t support that, unless they feel threatened by it. For me, the bottom line is color/don’t color. Do what is right for you and celebrate yourself.
BT
December 9, 2012
The number of responses on this indicate how big a deal aging is. How about we look at it as a transient thing like all things? More fundamentally, faith teaches us that we are really spirit that lives in a body only temporarily. Our worth and beauty is eternal.
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 9, 2012
Youth is, indeed, transient, and aging is a natural phenomenon. What isn’t transient is the value we give to others, and that’s what makes us beautiful.
marylouharris
December 9, 2012
Love Goldie and her wonderful comedic acting. From the Laugh-In days to now, I’ve always had the sense that she has always been a very bright woman managing her life her way, knowing the difference between image and real life.
Jenny's Serendipity
December 9, 2012
Great post! Well done….
Michelle Reale
December 9, 2012
Awesome. Simply awesome. So glad I found you!
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 9, 2012
Thanks, Michelle, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane.
nrhatch
December 9, 2012
Goldie = a Golden Oldie! 😀
rosemarychristlerenaud
December 9, 2012
I agree, more support for each other as women, forget about age. We all do our best.
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 11, 2012
You’ve said it all in that first sentence, Rosemary. Bravo to you!
narcissista1
December 9, 2012
Such a great post and comment thread. I think this photo of Goldie is one of the best things to happen to women this year simply because of the realness. Thanks for writing this.
Becca (narcissista.me)
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 9, 2012
You are welcome. And yes, agreed!
nmartinez1938
December 9, 2012
Lost my wallet at a bus stop one day with return ID in it. Got a call; “I found your wallet with your wife’s picture in it.” We arranged a return meeting and I never told him it was a picture of Goldie Hawn.
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 9, 2012
Hilarious!
desertmoonwoman
December 9, 2012
I will age gracefully, and if I could afford a mini lift, in all honesty I would do it. I do everything I can at this point to look great, I take belly dance classes, I go to the gym faithfully, I still go to the makeup counter to learn new tricks to assist an aging face. When I worked at an Assisted Living facility, I was amazed at the women, facing the end of their life, still putting on lipstick and having their hair done, and they looked beautiful, As a society we are living longer, the new 70, I will not go there, but I will not give up!
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 9, 2012
I believe that we all get to be the best we can be, and we express that in so many different ways. I have no stuff about anything people choose to do. And I know what you mean about the women in the assisted living. I think they are fabulous.
bagaskawarasan
December 9, 2012
yeah old is gold……………..
floydsmithjrandtheattitude
December 9, 2012
Relax. There`s nothing wrong with getting older. The one thing we all do is we don`t change our habits and mind sets when our body changes. Pay attention to what your body is telling you and obey it. you`ll be alright.
James
December 9, 2012
That is why when I was looking to get married, I was looking for someone who had spunk and looked good without makeup. When your face is covered in makeup all of the time, you do not age well at all. Makeup is filled with tetrasodium a transdermal chemical that sucks calcium and magnesium out of the body. I wanted a woman who was confident to live life without makeup. I found her and have been married to her for two and a half years and we grow closer every day. Most people do need to realize the celebrities we see everyday are covered in make up. Beneath the make up is bad skin from chemicals to enhance beauty, in turn making true beauty fade much faster.
Will
December 9, 2012
Oh C’mon!
Who are you kidding?
Goldie looks like a man’s worst nightmare of a potential mother-in-law. EEEEEEEEEkkkkkk!
darlingsoffortune
December 9, 2012
well written! I agree with you on all points, but I would love to add that anything skin related, be it wrinkles, bad skin or eye sacks, is really and utterly out of one’s hands. When do we stop judging each other and try on working to be a better person?
Renee Fisher
December 14, 2012
I don’t know when that will happen. I only know we have to keep sending out the message!
Glamour143
December 9, 2012
Very well put. Thanks for saying what no one else will. Its time to just let people be who they are no matter their age.
Renee Fisher
December 14, 2012
And we need to keep saying this over and over and over and….
chicalovestravel
December 9, 2012
Great post! Happy aging
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 10, 2012
Thanks, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane!
Karen
December 10, 2012
GREAT post!
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 10, 2012
Thanks, Karen!
learnitalianforfun
December 10, 2012
Fun post!
Alaina Mabaso
December 10, 2012
Am I allowed to comment, as a 29-year-old woman who was carded buying tickets to an R-rated movie as little as two years ago?
I hate that women (and people) are so touchy about their ages. In my work as a journalist I often ask for people’s ages, and people answer with a question that is actually the worst question in the world.
“How old do you THINK I am?”
KNOCK IT OFF, people.
A) guessing strangers’ exact ages is nearly impossible
B) it totally distracts from the conversation at hand
C) what you do want, an unheralded lift to your vanity when I humor your obnoxious, middle-aged ass and say a number that’s actually 5-10 years below the age I really think you are, just to keep on your good side so we can get back to the interview?
D) I DON’T CARE how old you are, I am not judging you for your age, I just need your age for the story.
I have many close friends and colleagues who are three or even four decades older than I am who are always lamenting their ages, compared to mine. News flash: your age is one thing I value about you – you have a wealth of perspectives and experience that I do not.
Probably deserves a blog post of my own – thanks for the inspiration and for a good post.
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 10, 2012
Great comments, Alaina. And, yes, this deserves its own post!
Alaina Mabaso
December 11, 2012
Ok, with your blessing I’ll add it to the list.
Renee Fisher
December 14, 2012
Let me know when it’s posted. Longo story, but I no longer get updates on people’s posts.
Alaina Mabaso
December 17, 2012
By the way, my latest post was about tips for building a freelance writing career, and it’s Freshly Pressed this weekend, and now full of comments and questions from fellow writers. Maybe you would enjoy a peek?
Renee Fisher
December 17, 2012
I will check it out!
mintjulep87
December 10, 2012
Thank you for this!
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 11, 2012
You are so welcome!
Patti Winker
December 10, 2012
I agree. I am so terribly tired of women of a certain age being judged by how youngish they look – what decade they could ‘pass’ for. Makes my blood boil. I want a strong body that will get and keep me moving well as I age. Thank you for sharing this.
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 11, 2012
You are welcome, Patti. We have to keep saying these things over and over for anything to change.
kabe1
December 11, 2012
Great piece! I’ve just turned 40 and have been somewhat preoccupied with ageing but now I’m there, it’s fine and anyway I’m much happier at 40 than I was at 20! I definitely smile more and wider in photos now too!
nmartinez1938
December 11, 2012
I feel the same way at 75.
Renee Fisher
December 14, 2012
Ditto for 65.
Angie Z.
December 12, 2012
Ooh, I loved this! I need to tuck it away in my brain and pull it out again every few years. Or every few weeks. Congrats on being Freshly Pressed…what is this, the tenth time for you now?
Renee Fisher
December 14, 2012
Funny. Maybe the 4th or 5th. It’s like eating a pint of coffee Haagen Dazs: fabulous while it lasts, except then you stare into the empty container and wonder where it all went.
kwarren1970
December 13, 2012
Smiling makes everyone look way better
ladymaggic
December 17, 2012
I agree so much with what you have written…
Great story
From another mature also aging facefully
Smile!!
Life in the Boomer Lane
December 17, 2012
Thanks, and thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane. I’ve just started a new blog “Guerrilla Aging: Navigating the Third Half of Life” in which women can talk about the issues we all face. http://www.guerrillaaging.wordpress.com
NanaDoll
January 11, 2013
My daughter hates it that I am letting my hair go gray. That I hardly ever wear makeup. My husband loves it. Except for needing to lose weight, I am pretty content with being who I am and the age I am. And actually, I look pretty good for my age…;)
nmartinez1938
January 11, 2013
100+ i agree with you and your husband, great. If I see a woman proudly sporting here grey or mixed greay hair, if opportunity presents itself– I give them a compliment on their grey hair. It is very attractive and its not just because I’m 75. Constantly I encourage my wife to admire her mixing grey hair now. Her older sisters has salt/pepper grey and has it cut to her face, very attractive. 🙂
Life in the Boomer Lane
January 12, 2013
I have several friends who have gone au naturale. They all look great. It’s different than it used to be. Now the cuts are edgy, and people look more artsy/individual like that. One of my friends has short, spiky hair and it looks fantastic. This ain’t your grandma’s hairdo.
nmartinez1938
January 12, 2013
Your reply fits my wife’s sister to the tee. The hair trim embellishes the natural waves of her hair.