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Monday, June 30, 2014

Learning "Beauty"

When I was a little girl, I believed that my mother was the most beautiful woman in the world. I was convinced that it was true. It's easy for me to remember what that felt like - the awe and admiration I felt towards my mom - it feels like her hugs and smells like her perfume.

Even now, I know that my mother is beautiful.

The problem is that no one believes me.

Society tells us to love and respect our mothers. That young women should look up to their mothers as female role models. We should try to live up to our mothers - except in the areas where she herself falls short. And for most women, they will never live up to society's standard for beautiful. I know my mother and I certainly do not - and I learned that from my mother.

As a girl, I would watch my mom get dressed and put on her make up. I would mimic her motions in the mirror with my pretend make up. Before ballet recitals, she and my grandmother would do my hair and put make up on me; it made me feel special and loved to have their attention as they made me "pretty."

As I grew older, I learned how to make myself "pretty." My mother and I would get dressed together and do our make up and hair in her bathroom. All the while, my mother teaching me what beauty means as she would comment on my appearance. Giving advice such as:
"We both have big hips and thighs, and let me tell you, you're going to constantly have to watch what you eat and work out because all of your fat will go straight to your hips and butt and that is never attractive."
"I think you're so much prettier when you're tan. But never dye your hair blonde it would look horrible with your complexion."
"Wear more concealer to cover all of that acne."
"You'll be so pretty when you're thin."
"Wearing that much eyeliner makes you look slutty. Why are you wearing such dark lipstick?"
"If you're really comfortable showing off your legs, I guess you can wear that skirt. I know I wouldn't be comfortable."
"Are you wearing a bra? I just don't understand how you're so flat chested."
"Why are you wearing a push-up bra?"

And the list goes on. Of course, I never really thought much of her comments because I'd heard her say similar things about herself. I figured it was part of growing into a woman. My mother helped teach me insecurity and self-judgement.

While I looked up to my mother and found her beautiful, she worried over her appearance. No matter how beautiful I found her, she would never see herself the way I saw her. As a child, I did not find her fat; I found her warm and comforting and would wake up in the mornings and crawl into her bed to cuddle. I still think she is prettiest first thing in the morning with bedhead, remnants of eyeliner and mascara that refused to wash away, and in a baggy t-shirt. Of course no magazine would ever deem my mother at 9 am on a Saturday beautiful. They'd tell her to brush her hair, put on a full face of make up, and to consider hitting the gym more often. As I consumed trashy magazines and TV, I heard, what seemed to be the world, telling me that my mother was not beautiful. That I was not beautiful. As I watched my mother get ready for dates, I learned that the mom I saw on a daily basis was not beautiful enough for hetero-male attention. As I watched my mother date assholes, I heard them tell her she was pretty, but she could be prettier.

And she heard it, too.

As my mom battled with her insecurities, I battled my own. I learned how to hate my body from someone I found gorgeous. I slowly stopped seeing my mother and myself as beautiful. When I looked at my mom, I saw an overweight, aging woman. When I looked in the mirror, I saw a pudgy thirteen year old. When my mom dieted, I dieted with her. When my mom worked out, I worked out with her. It was mother-daughter bonding.

However, as an easily impressionable teenager desperate to be pretty and liked (because in my teenage brain the only way I'd ever be worth anything would be through beauty), I went farther than simply eating healthily and working out for fun and health. While my mom kept dieting and exercising safely, I went to the extreme. I stopped seeing our diet and exercise as "bonding," it became a competition. My mother became my competition. So I cut more calories, ran longer, and eventually became thin. While I started as a pudgy 8th grader that needed to learn about healthy eating and get more active, I ended as a thin, obsessive high school graduate. Before, my mom would say, "You'll be so pretty when you're thin." But when I was seventeen and went down two jean sizes in a month and a half, her previous sentiment transformed into "But you're already so thin..." Now when I talk to my mother about my eating disorder, she says that she knew something was wrong, but she never did anything. While I never push on why she never acted, I feel as if I know the answer. I think her inaction was because she saw me succeed at being "pretty." Where she had failed, I had succeeded. While she had soft curves and took up space, I had sharp edges and size 0 jeans - the 0 as empty as my stomach.

I don't blame my mother for my eating disorder. Eating disorders are far too complicated to "blame" on any single factor.

However, I do point fingers at the current standard of beauty. It taught my mother and me that we are not beautiful on our own. It taught me that my mother was not beautiful just as it taught my mother that she needed to make me beautiful. This beauty standard told me that I was not supposed to aspire to look like my mother no matter how pretty I found her.

All children find their mothers to be beautiful because mothers are beautiful - for mothers. Society tells us that our mothers are beautiful but they are not beautiful women - they are not the beauty to which we should aspire. We are taught not to love our curves, our touching thighs, wrinkles, or our bedhead. There's no high school class teaching us to see beauty in someone's laugh or passion or generosity. When I come across an article on "how to play up your best attributes" I know it's going to tell me how to draw attention to my tits or ass or if it's a more "enlightened" author it will talk about my smile or eyes. That article isn't going to tell me how to show off my great sense of humor or intelligence. Even though my mom thinks I'm funny and smart, society tells me that it really just doesn't care.

But what if our mothers were the standard for beauty? Surely then we would be less shallow about beauty. My mother is beautiful not simply based on her outside appearances but also from her comforting, her tenacity, and her spirit.

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