It has been said to me: "You can't compete with all those 20-year-olds out there." Lately I am fully comfortable responding: "No. I can't. And I really don't want to." This is a comfort born of a lot of struggle and continual nourishment. Most experiences of my growing-up years contained implied competition. If my friend looked good, that somehow meant I looked less good. If that boy dated her, it meant he wasn't dating me. If I lost weight, that meant someone else's body didn't look as good.
Now I see how ridiculous this is. I am trying to spread this message to other women around me, but it is shockingly difficult. "Listen," I said to a friend of mine, "If you are at a party, dressed to kill and feeling confident and a beautiful woman walks into the room, that does not make you any less beautiful. You can acknowledge that someone else is attractive, or smart, or talented -- and the magic is that it does not take away any of your attractiveness, intelligence or talent."
My friend nodded, and looked skeptical.
Last week, I was around a woman I have known my whole life, and I expressed some frustration about not having any clothes that fit and she cut me to the core, saying, "Stop bragging about how skinny you are."
Last week, I was around a woman I have known my whole life, and I expressed some frustration about not having any clothes that fit and she cut me to the core, saying, "Stop bragging about how skinny you are."
I'm fed up with keeping quiet about how wonderful I am because I fear the consequences. I am not in competition with 20-year-olds, or with anyone. I am making a resolution now to tell everyone I know how wonderful, talented, and beautiful they are as often as I can. Because since when do kind words become boomerangs that come back and cut me at the knees? If they are boomerangs that return, then they return with strength to build me up. I'm starting now.
You (yes YOU) are lovely and amazing. Pass it on.
You (yes YOU) are lovely and amazing. Pass it on.
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