Wednesday, October 5, 2011

No Makeup, NO TRUST?

I always felt that people treated me differently when I adorned makeup. I was never a glamour queen. I stuck with the basics, mascara and blush. Still I could sense I was treated differently.

Rebel that I am, this annoyed me! I wanted people to like me for who I was, not what I looked like. So, I tended to wear little or no make-up. A tool of trust. A filter of sorts to weed out the insincere and bring closer those who really cared for me.

Funny how things work out. According this this study, I was getting quite the opposite result. People were actually weeding me out!!!

The story...
No Makeup, No Trust? What Your Makeup Really Says to Others

The study...

Sunday, October 2, 2011

500 Years of Women in Art

Here's a video composite of 500 years of women in art. The video is beautifully done. I find it interesting, however, that there wasn't a wrinkle to be found!

Enjoy!

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Frozen Faces

Just a little freaked out over all of the frozen faces on the tube...

My grandmother was a down to earth woman. She traded places with her brother when it came to chores. She would head out to plow the field with her father while her brother took her place cleaning in the house.

She taught me how to oil the furnace, mow the lawn, trim hedges and make cinnamon buns. I often wonder who ended up with her trusty oil can. I hope they appreciate how important it was to her. It kept the wheels turning. It soothed the aging parts of the machines that endlessly served her. She knew the value of her appliances having grown up in the age of hauling water and burning wood for heat and cooking. So, she always did her due diligence maintaining her luxuries.....her furnace....her lawnmower....her old wooden wagon with metal wheels. Her tools were simple, a hammer, a screwdriver, a hatchet, a wrench and her oil can.

Similarly her dressing table held a jar of Noxema, a powder puff, a bar of soap, a rouge, a lipstick and a perfume. She had some gray hair, many wrinkles and some stray facial hairs. Her face expressed her mood. It lifted and broadened when she laughed and it contracted and drooped when she was sad. You knew where you stood with my grandmother. You could read her face. You could see the joy when she looked at you. You knew without being told how much she loved you.

She was perfect as far as I can remember. And when I look in the mirror and see that same stray hair on my face, I smile. I see my grandmother. I feel the love.

Today I find myself confused as I watch the older women on the tube talk about tragedy and tell jokes all the while their faces remaining expressionless. I hear their voices, but I just don't "feel" their message!!!

And, I wonder what effect this is having on our young girls???


Tuesday, August 9, 2011

We all get old. Nothing lasts forever.


Check out this talented photographer, Lee Jeffries. His black & white images are gorgeous and thought provoking. Thanks to Diane Richter, for bringing it to my attention :-)

We all get old. Nothing lasts forever.


Saturday, June 25, 2011

How to Talk to Little Girls?

I am not sure I wholeheartedly agree with this article. However, it has great merit and truth.

As a child I can't remember being told I was pretty, etc. I am not saying it didn't happen. I remember more of my brothers telling me I was too tall, or my mom saying, "Pull your hair back. It makes your nose look long." or " Your ears are sticking out." It made me shrink away instead of standing tall.

The world around us has predetermined our fate as women judged on beauty. It is in nature all around us. The birds & the bees so to speak practice the same tactics. Humans are really no different except in awareness and in our empowerment to change.

So I won't hold back my compliments to little girls. I will tell them they are beautiful. I will tell them they are SMART, CLEVER and all around AMAZING!!! I will enjoy their faces as they delight in their beauty inside and out!

I do agree 100% with the author, Lisa Bloom, that we must encourage little girls to be more than their appearance. We do need to invest more in their talents instead or their tutus! I just don't feel it is necessary to undermine their beauty in the process.

How to talk to little girls....

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

BFF's Breast Friends Forever

Interesting post from Cafe Gratitude....

BFF's Breast Friends Forever

“Please forgive me. I love you. You are healthy, whole, complete, filled with love and light. You are beautiful just as you are. ”