Because You’re Worth It! The Medicalization and Moralization of Aesthetics in Aging Women
Abstract
:1. You’re Worth It!
“Forever youngI want to be forever young”(Alphaville, ‘Forever Young’)
2. The False Hope of the Timeless Beauty
“Will you still love mewhen I’m no longer young and beautiful?”(Lana del Rey, Young and Beautiful)
Women today begin to experience ageing around the age of fifty, and this process is considered in terms of decay and loss of aesthetic and erotic value, and not in the neutral terms of natural evolution and transformation.[33] (pp. 10–13)
From television (series, game shows), newspapers (news reports, comic strips), radio, to various forms of art (cinema, theatre, dance, painting, sculpture, literature), elderly characters are referred to in a derogatory manner, portraying them as having a health problem that weakens them in some way, as being dependent and not very competent.[36] (p. 339)
3. Fake Plastic Me
“He used to do surgeryFor girls in the eightiesBut gravity always wins”(Radiohead, Fake Plastic Trees)
3.1. ‘Chi Bella Buol Venire Un Po’ Deve Soffrire’: My Family Legacy
3.2. I Want to Look Like Me Forever: The Gullible Anthropologist
Many women think they are powerful and well-adjusted, because they do nothing against ageing, grey hair, fat, face falling off … They even try hard to be seen as feminists, against the dictatorship of beauty: but it’s all a façade! They are lazy, careless, negligent and slovenly women who don’t value themselves. They have not self-esteem and self-respect: they let themselves go, they are a real failure.(Clara, 51 years old, beautician)
Yes, I spent a lot of money on fillers and botox, and luxury creams such as La Prairie, so what? Maybe you spend more on a Chanel bag. But you get that bag of lard on your belly, which is an old woman’s [belly]. Each person decides how to grow old. You don’t want to strive to be better? You don’t want to make an effort to be better? Then don’t do anything. Then you’ll see what your life will be like: old, ugly, sloppy, alone.(Ana, 46 years old, designer)
Looking at me it’s easy to say: this woman has gone crazy with this diet, sport, aesthetics stuff. And they still say … ah, but you’re lucky, you have good genetics. Lucky? Do you know what I have? I have strength, will, constancy and the ability to endure pain and sacrifice. Not luck! Being in shape, being well groomed involves constant commitment. Vanity has a high price. But idleness, yeah, that is wasting your life.(Armanda, 54 years old, entrepreneur)
What I would like to explain to you, and what I even tell my own daughter, is that having good genetics helps, yes, but sooner or later beauty will leave you all the same, if you don’t help yourself. You age… but it is not true that against time nothing can be done. Nothing here, in my body, happened by chance: it’s pain, sacrifice, effort, regimes, and a lot of money invested. I’ve been in menopause for eleven years, but nobody believes me, and you know what? … Neither do I, because I still look like a woman of forty, forty-five. But my life since then has been a constant battle against nature. Why do I have to let myself grow old and lose this battle? I have done, and continue to do, everything in my power, sacrificing money and time just for me. If you want to, you can. And if you’re still fit and beautiful after sixty, know that you owe that only to yourself, to the work and sacrifice of a lifetime. Because life is long … but as an old person it is long, not as a young one. Preserving the body is not the frantic pursuit of “à la recherche du temps perdu”. It is more like fighting so that time leaves no marks: it is war!(Catarina, 56 years old, counsellor)
I look tired, I look sad, but I feel as if I had thirty years. Sometimes, I see my image reflected in a showcase and I think: But who is that lady? It feels like she’s not me. I don’t recognize myself. I don’t look to myself like the image I have in my mind. My ideal self is younger Cristina. My real self is who I am at present. I don’t want to look in the mirror and see my mother. I would like to see me. The young, beautiful and sexy me. The dissociation I feel is this, between what I think I am and what I appear. And then come others, and my relationship with others. Which has to do with my personality. I don’t see myself at all as a typical, traditional sixty-year-old woman. I feel better with younger people. I find younger people more attractive, physically speaking. It is consistent with my view of life, of the world, of people, with my profession as a teacher: for me it is very easy to relate to younger people. In mental terms, for me it is perfectly natural. One day you will understand: you will be old enough to don’t recognize yourself anymore in the mirror.(Cristina, 62 years old, teacher)
My face is what I see in the mirror. My self image. My self-perception of myself depends on the face, where I see the traits of my personality that, despite age, remain the same. That’s why I make aesthetic changes to my face: to continue to correspond to the mental state that hasn’t changed, because it’s my way of being. I want to continue to correspond to myself. To recognize in the mirror the person I think I still am. To rediscover myself in the average of the person I am, between my mental image of myself and the biological reality in terms of appearance.(Maria, 64 years old)
For you to change your place of work would be complicated. The university today thinks like a corporation: they are much more willing to hire younger people, [rather] than forty-seven-year-old women. It’s like in relationships. The MILF (corresponding complete terms for acronyms: Mother I’d Like to Fuck) is no longer in fashion. Now is the time of the WHIP (corresponding complete terms for acronyms: Women Hot, Intelligent and in their Prime) And okay, the young girls. Those are an evergreen.(Simão, researcher, 31 years old)
It is like in the dating apps!—explains Isabel, 32 years old—It is worth lying about your age. Everybody lies about height, weight or age. If you’re a woman over 45, listen to me: change your age in your Tinder bio. It is better to erase something like mmm 10 years?(Isabel, 32 years old)
I would say that you should have had this concern at least ten years ago. You should have thought about prevention. The ideal was to intervene before the structure collapses. What’s more, a woman with your profession: classes, conferences, and public exposure. And divorced to boot. Look, competition at work and in love is tough! Keeping a youthful appearance is a strategy to maintain a competitive advantage, my dear.(Miguel, dermatologist)
Chiara, the face… the face is like a calling card. You can tell you haven’t used sunscreen… see these little spots? They’re not freckles, no. They’re ageing spots. For women, I always say that caring for the facial skin is an obligation. If we then want to be accomplices of the disgrace… that’s something else!(Pierre, dermatologist)
If you had asked me, I would never have told you not to intervene, even if you had made an appointment at twenty or thirty years old. It’s called prevention, you know what it is, right? You should have intervened to prevent the appearance of the first expression lines, before wrinkles create marks. And then, yes, our work becomes more difficult and we no longer achieve that result. Now we can try to treat, to attenuate: but the damage is already done.(Sofia, dermatologist)
On your face it would just be baby botox, don’t worry, or a biorevitalisation. It could even be something very soft like micro-needling. Nothing invasive. Radiesse maybe, or Sculptra. It would just be softening, you’re still yourself, but an improved version of yourself. Like you’ve had a lot of rest on holiday.(Manuel, dermatologist)
This would be to brighten, refresh the skin a little, tone it up. It’s just a few injections, it’s not hard. Here we have to replace the lost volume with hyaluronic acid… but Botox (botulinum toxin) you can’t escape: you don’t want to have those awful glabellae, which make you look angry and very masculine. Let’s put a little bit on the eyebrows to open up the eye and take away that tired look.(Miguel, dermatologist)
None of the hyaluronic acid fillers that then look all the same, all puffy. Absolutely not. for volume, only collagen stimulators so your body reacts and does its job again. These are new generation products. Like Radiesse. The name says it all, doesn’t it?(Pierre, dermatologist)
Fillers and botulinum toxin are the most common, but it is the last thing I advise. You can also use your body’s resources, your own blood. Let’s do Platelet Rich Plasma, which stimulates cell growth factors and promotes collagen synthesis. In my opinion, it would be radiofrequency before, vitamin mesolift after. And I recommend botox, hyaluronic acid and sculptra, in a unique session. In winter you should think about a good peel or ablative laser resurfacing, for those enlarged pores on your forehead, which are really awful.(Sofia, dermatologist)
4. Conclusions: Freedom of Choice and Its Contradictions
“I wanna have controlI want a perfect bodyI want a perfect soul”(Radiohead, Creep)
Age can be seen mainly in the face. The body is easier to hide: it’s enough to wear the right clothes to camouflage flabbiness. For example, after forty, I recommend wearing shirts with three-quarter or long sleeves. It is necessary to hide the ’goodbye muscle’, the one that wobbles when you wave goodbye. You know, the ’bat wings’. The rest, we have no way of disguising. And the face is the first thing we see of a person, where our attention is focused. The wear and tear caused by the sun, the wrinkles, the spots, the irregularities, the loss of tone in the jaw line, the jowls, the drooping eyelids…(Catarina, 54 years old, ex-model)
I need, first of all, to feel good when I look in the mirror. I need to have moments of satisfaction—or at least prolong a moment of well-being in my most visible part, which is my face. I want to meet expectations, mine in the first place. Not other people. Is it to please my partner? I’ve never had any problems with my body. I like using my body. But there is a contradiction. I feel relaxed, but I am aware that something has changed and now I want less and less light in the bedroom…(Inês, 60 years old, teacher)
I’ve never liked old people. Imagine what it’s like to see in the mirror that I’m starting to look like an old woman myself. I don’t want to indulge in the ease of accepting old age; I want to continue to feel good about myself. To accept ageing is precisely to age. I want to grow old in a lazy way. Like those who always talk about illness, oh my god! I can’t stand it. If there’s one topic that’s completely unsexy, it’s talking about illness. I don’t want to relate to people who are completely sloppy and relaxed. They’re already beaten out of life. And I’m not like that. It’s a question of aesthetics, but also of coherence with what I am.(Cristina, 65 years old, chartered accountant)
I do tell what I do … to my daughter, my sister, you and some gay friends, who are super supportive. If someone insists, like: did you do something? At first I don’t say anything, but then, if they insist a lot, I don’t deny it at all. But I’m not the one who has to tell everyone that I do this or that. Only people close to me know. But I feel a degree of pride in telling you. I even feel a certain feminine empowerment. I do it because I want to, because I can, because I am the one who sets my priorities and because I want to feel good about myself. I do it with a lot of determination.(Joana, 56 years old, entrepreneur)
I feel a contradiction regarding telling. To my students, for example, I couldn’t tell them. We come from different historical, political and cultural backgrounds. I was born during the period of repression; I lived through the April 25th revolution, with a communist father who always taught me to take responsibility for all my attitudes, good or bad. There are many layers. The aesthetic question has to do with a whole life story. I live in a constant contradiction: is it for others or for me? But, at the end of the line… it is for me.(Sara, 60 years old, teacher)
To remain youthful and attractive brings you advantages, to be young and beautiful is not a disgrace, it is a privilege. I pity the people who don’t understand that, if you ask me. In certain jobs it is necessary to look beautiful, in others less so, of course. University, for example, is a world somewhat apart. There are women who criticize those who make aesthetic alterations because of a dimension, which I would define as ideological. Who are these people who criticize the option to get aesthetic interventions? What is their background?(Claudia, 60, researcher)
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Pussetti, C. Because You’re Worth It! The Medicalization and Moralization of Aesthetics in Aging Women. Societies 2021, 11, 97. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11030097
Pussetti C. Because You’re Worth It! The Medicalization and Moralization of Aesthetics in Aging Women. Societies. 2021; 11(3):97. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11030097
Chicago/Turabian StylePussetti, Chiara. 2021. "Because You’re Worth It! The Medicalization and Moralization of Aesthetics in Aging Women" Societies 11, no. 3: 97. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11030097
APA StylePussetti, C. (2021). Because You’re Worth It! The Medicalization and Moralization of Aesthetics in Aging Women. Societies, 11(3), 97. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11030097