Self-Criticism Is A
Female Flaw
My husband worries because
he doesn’t think I eat enough. I worry because I think I eat too much.
We are both aware of
exactly what I eat so why do our judgments vary so greatly?
It is partially a matter
of goals. I want to be model-thin so that I can wear the clothes I love
and look just like the glossy pictures in
the catalogs. He wants
me to be comfortable and relaxed and could care less how much I weigh
or what
size I wear. I suppose if I became humungous, he’d wince, but it would
probably
require that I be clearly obese before he noticed.
Men give out such mixed
signals. They profess their undying devotion but scan every pretty or
well-endowed female on the street and read Playboy and other soft
pornography,
delighting in seeing any woman in some level of nudity. Ask any happily
married
man and he’ll admit he enjoys looking at other women but has no
interest beyond
the occasional once-over when a female form grabs his attention.
Women feed themselves
equally mixed messages. We don’t believe in casual looks, feeling
driven to
actively compete with whoever captured our honey’s eye. We critique the
pictures he enjoys, pointing out the too-thick ankles, the
pre-cellulite
dimples, the obviously collagen-enhanced lips, or the lack of class or
taste.
Men enjoy looking at women
and are remarkably non-judgmental. They appreciate the view for what it
is and
fail to notice the minor defects we are supremely happy to enumerate.
Now if we could only learn
to look at ourselves as uncritically as men do! We look in a full
length mirror
and instead of appreciating our assets, we groan with horror at our
shortcomings. We camouflage less than perfect legs with draping pants
or long
skirts. We conceal a small bustline with
vests and overblouses. We add to our
diminutive size by tottering on
platforms or stilettos. We cover aging skin with layers of makeup and
add
extensions to give thinning hair length and volume.
But underneath, we know
exactly what we are. We stand in the bathroom and stare at the creases
in our
skin, the lines in our forehead, the swell between our hip bones. We
grimace at
every flaw and hate the imperfections of heredity, genes, an unhealthy
lifestyle, and the ravages of time.
Then we wonder why we lack
the self-confident manner of our male coworkers, relaxed and
comfortable in the
bodies fates dealt them, blissfully ignorant of their physical faults.
One day, we’ll get there -
maybe.