October 2

This morning a friend and I had a conversation about the differences between men and women in the biology of attraction. She had read about a study that claimed all men, regardless of age, “fantasize” about women in their 20s, while women typically “prefer” men their age or older. Now, one of the graduate classes I’m in is about research methods, so I immediately had an issue with how the article summarized the study, specifically the word choices and how it glossed over the actual facts in lieu of insinuating that all men are horny for young, nubile women. Because, you know, we don’t hear about that enough. In reality, the main point of the study was that both men and women are hardwired, biologically speaking, to be attracted to the age group that makes the most sense for procreating. For that purpose, men need mates who are most fertile (those in their 20s) while women need someone who can help raise offspring (not usually 20 year old men). Why we needed another study to confirm this is a different question altogether. The thing that bothered me was the effect of this article. It made my friend, who is dating a younger guy, question her own attractiveness. And not just in general, but to him. The crazy thing is that it wasn’t the first time this week that I’ve come across this issue. I watched a video the other day on Upworthy where a very attractive woman in her 60s talked about the time her boyfriend who was 5 years younger than she refused to take her to a restaurant because he was embarrassed to be seen with her in public. She was too old. Maybe he imagined himself with a 20 year old.

This isn’t a new thing. This constant worry about attractiveness. We are still fighting media pressure on getting or remaining attractive (and young) to a degree that’s ridiculous. I admit to having felt insecure some days myself, especially since I, too, am dating a guy who is younger than I am. But then reality sets in. We can’t all stay 20 something forever. And it angers me to be made to feel that aging is some kind of sin. That at some point, I will cross a threshold where I am no longer desirable or attractive. That implies that who I am is completely dependent on the way I look. Thus, I should spend a lot of time worrying about it. Well, I refuse to. I’ve already wasted too much time doing that. Instead, I trust that my relationship with my guy is based on more than looks. That the attraction is based on more than something physical, as good relationships are. Any doubt beyond that, I have to simply let go. Thankfully.

June 24

I was talking with some friends at work today when one of them (a guy) asked me why women trash talk other women. Apparently, at his wife’s place of employment, someone got upset that the younger, attractive women were dressed to impress. He said he thought most women dress up more to impress each other than they do to attract guys anyway. While I don’t disagree with his thought process, my immediate response was that the woman in question was jealous. It’s hard for a woman to realize that maybe her peak has passed. I imagine it’s hard for guys too, but let’s face it, the importance of physical attractiveness weighs much heavier on women. Do a Google search on “aging gracefully” and 98% of the images are women. Most of the quotes are geared toward women, as are a lot of the comics. And I say this not just from what our culture dictates, but what I’ve experienced personally. I dated a guy who once told me he didn’t care whether or not I found him attractive. He felt it was something he didn’t need to worry about. Of course this was after he told me I was “average” and had no qualms about pointing out the women he did think were beautiful. Which only encouraged the trap that most women fall into…constant comparison. For women, worrying about how we measure up to the next girl is almost instinctive and subconscious. Although, I do believe it has been actively bred in our society. It’s no secret that most magazine pictures are airbrushed and most celebrities have had a team of experts putting them together. Yet even though we all know this, so many of us still hold ourselves up to unrealistic standards. We are supposed to age gracefully, which means not aging at all or at the very least not looking our age. But that completely discounts every other measure of what makes a person beautiful. The heart. The soul. The wisdom, kindness, intelligence, empathy. The way they laugh, they way they smile, their acceptance, forgiveness, grace, strength…A beautiful person is so much more than a beautiful face. Of course most of us want to be physically attractive, but gravity is hard to fight. Sun damage is hard to reverse. The act of living means our bodies take a bit of a beating. Do I look at twenty year old girls and feel jealous sometimes? Yes. But then I remember that they’ll look something like me when they’re my age, if they are lucky enough. If their bodies go through childbirth and years of yard work and house remodels and exercise. Winters skiing and summers swimming. I’m thankful my body has held up as well as it has. I’m thankful I haven’t lost a limb or gotten skin cancer or any number of horrible maladies that bodies can go through. And you know what, I’m going to age because that’s what bodies do. I’ll try to hold off as much as I can for as long as I can because, well, I guess I’m just vain enough. I’m maybe not quite at the point of dressing only for comfort. But I also want my body to last as long as it can. After all, I hope I have a whole lot of years left to live in it.