Thank you. It's exactly that: erasing our stories. To conform to something we tell ourselves is our own idea of beauty, but in reality it's one that has been ingrained into us since birth. I choose to celebrate every wrinkle and "flaw" as a tiny rebellion.
I agree! I won't lie, as someone who has always been baby faced and often gets told how young I look, I do get nervous about aging and how I'll feel when the signs are more obvious. But I just don't think it's for me. I hope individuality will somewhat return rather than this Kardashian/Instagram face that makes everyone look the same.
There’s something deeply grounding about the way you choose to honor your natural self.
In a world constantly urging us to erase our stories, your words remind me that every wrinkle, every change, is a chapter worth keeping.
Thank you. It's exactly that: erasing our stories. To conform to something we tell ourselves is our own idea of beauty, but in reality it's one that has been ingrained into us since birth. I choose to celebrate every wrinkle and "flaw" as a tiny rebellion.
Väldigt spännande läsning! Det här ska vi prata om i vår nästa "podd" 😆
I agree! I won't lie, as someone who has always been baby faced and often gets told how young I look, I do get nervous about aging and how I'll feel when the signs are more obvious. But I just don't think it's for me. I hope individuality will somewhat return rather than this Kardashian/Instagram face that makes everyone look the same.
I agree - the sameness of it is a bit terrifying. If you look younger, then maybe visible ageing will be slower for you!
In my case it’s just that will be so much to do that I wouldn’t even know where to start…
haha I refuse to "like" this comment. For readers: David is my husband, he looks 27 when he actually is...well, let's just say significantly older.