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The Fabrication of Female: Fighting Back, Being Real

By Suzanne Blons January 18, 2025 Lifestyle

“I’m sorry for being here.”

It is the ultimate statement of disempowerment; to apologize for not meeting society’s or someone’s expectations.

Trouble is, society’s expectations are whack-a-doodle.

Specifically, everywhere I turn, older women feel they are not beautiful, capable, and valued. What happened to the recognition and respect of a traditional matriarchal role in the family, communities, and society at large? When did we become useless and outdated?

How can we influence positive change in our self-perception and in the perceptions of those around us when our insane culture says the opposite?

Stupid Celebrities: I’m 60, Look 20, and You Should Too

Demi Moore, age 61, showed up at a Hollywood event looking about 30 years younger and the media went into orbit. Reporters, in a frenzy of besotted and unhinged devotion, said something like this: “OMG, how did she do that! She looks amazing! Who is her plastic surgeon, what did she drink (The Substance, maybe?) that’s incredible she must now be the example of beauty in every movie and play a woman half her age!”

And every woman watching stuck her head in the toilet. Yet again, we are not enough.

How can any woman compete with what amounts to either an unavailable substance that you probably have to sell your soul to get a hold of, or a plastic surgeon witch doctor who does injectable by-pass procedures that no one without a trillion dollars can achieve?

Then there is Pamela Anderson, who, in a blaze of brilliance, went without makeup to a Hollywood event and those same reporters held their head in their hands and doubled over screaming in an act of devastated worship. “Look how gorgeous she is with no makeup! OMG I’m in love with her strength and courage to stand up to Hollywood norms!”

If I went to an event with no makeup on, I’d be systematically catapulted out the back door.

Are We Bi-Polar?

We want perfection (even if it’s fabricated) to somehow reach the unreachable standards of the ever-shifting beauty ideal, but we want to be liberated, independent, and taken seriously without a lot of effort. Having said that, how many personal trainers, dieticians, nail technicians, hairdressers, makeup artists, and certified Botox injectors are standing at the ready for every supposed flaw to be eradicated at a moment’s notice for poor Demi?

What level of fabrication and insanity are we talking about here and why the constant attack on aging? Why can’t we age, why do we have to be fake to be accepted?

Men Are Women, Men Can Have Babies, Women Are Men and Don’t Argue with Me

My oldest daughter’s best friend is transitioning into a man, and his boyfriend is transitioning into a woman. I honor and respect the dysmorphia of not feeling at home in your body and how much having changed your appearance and gender helps you feel yourself. I cannot imagine what that must be like and how consequential it is that current technologies can help those who have experienced this.

Having said that with compassion and respect, all of this brings up an important question.

If we are to support other ideas of what is a ‘woman’, but in our support we then minimize the traditional form of it, is that reasonable? What happened to valuing the archetypical woman who cares for her family, cooks real meals, attends parent-teacher meetings, and dyes her hair purple when she retires?

What happened to the enormously valuable role that a traditional female plays in society, and why are we subjecting that to subgroups, even when that subgroup plays a valuable role in empowering specific people?

What happened to altruism for ourselves and our granddaughters who might choose a more traditional life? Why, if men can be women and men can have babies, does that somehow minimise or even nullify biological women?

Perhaps I could again highlight Hollywood. The quantity of films where the female lead kicks-ass, wields a weapon, and leads the men has exponentially expanded. Movies where a traditional woman is represented are not only unavailable, but seen as dowdy and oppressive. There are exceptions, but they are rare. Everywhere I turn, the conventional family is subliminally degraded and along with that a time-honored display of feminine contribution.

So, let me get this straight. A man can be a woman, have babies, and a woman can use a machine gun without a second thought (or emotion), but a woman cannot be a stay-at-home mother in a classic marriage and devote herself to her children.

Again, my head is in the toilet.

I Don’t Matter, You Do

One of my heroes is my grandmother, Mildred (we called her Mickey). She cooked over a wood stove, grew her own fruits and vegetables, cut the head off the chicken for dinner, and raised 3 boys with little to no help from my grandfather. She was tough, loving, and knew how to give you a piece of her mind. And, boy, did she make a mean apple pie. I can still smell it.

Without Mickey, my dad wouldn’t have become the amazing, kind, and committed man that he is. She was adored and valued, even if grandpa never really saw her. I’m not saying those days were better, on the contrary, I am saying we are throwing the baby out with the bathwater. As a single mom with two grown daughters, my goal was that they become self-sufficient, strong, and clear minded women who can make good choices.

Now that I am on the other side of that momentous task, who am I? Am I valued as an older woman with a wealth of life experience ready to share what I know to those around me? Or, for example, would a company rather hire someone with less life-experience that will do the job for not only less money (because they are younger), but with less pushback.

Because I will push back, I have learned my value.

Which begs the question, why as a society are we compulsively devaluing the bedrock of our children’s support system, and systematically telling them not to follow in our footsteps? We are telling them they have options, but not the option to be regular. They can fabricate (or define) their sex, their gender, and their appearance with the applause of others, but these options also can communicate the “you are not enough as you are” message.

A qualifying statement: this isn’t about sexual orientation. It’s about the minimization of a classical female archetype. Love whom you love, create the life you were born to live. I applaud authenticity at every level, what I do not applaud is the obvious discredit of the traditional family.

Love the Mirror

What can we do?

For starters, pull your head out of the toilet, and eat a cheeseburger (or something like that). Then go to the mirror, look into your eyes and repeat: I love you (your name), about 20 times. While you do this, put both hands on your throat, because the throat is not only where your voice is located, it is the center of change in the body. Find your voice, find your love. While self-love is not a catch-all solution, it is a starting point in developing personal value.

The world is trying to tell you that you are not valuable, and it is a lie. The only way out of this debacle is for each one of us to give voice to values like equality, justice, and of course, love. No one can tell you who you are, but that doesn’t stop them from trying.

Let’s Reflect Together:

Why do you think we are so willing to backtrack on our own personal values because we are not meeting supposed expectations? Because we are not ‘fabricated’ enough? If you found your voice in this moment, what would you communicate to those around you? Can you love all and in turn be loved and accepted by those same people? What does equality for females look like now?

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Farrel Lewis

As a 71 year old widow, I do have a few thoughts about this subject as well. I for one am tired of being mocked by the likes of Lea Thomas and Dylan Mulvaney. There is a beauty and power of women being women, and that spotlight is being taken away from us. Our ability to have children makes us unique. Also, and I am going out on a limb I know, I wish more women would embrace letting their hair go gray, and that includes the woman at the top of this article. I stopped dyeing at age 54 long before it had become a movement. And if you think it makes you look old, the opposite is true. I get compliments on a regular basis from both men and women. That isn’t the reason why I let my hair go natural, but it is still nice to have people make positive comments on my hair.

Suzanne Blons

Hi Farrel, Thank you for your comment. I agree about the “influencer’s” you mentioned, as it is stupefying that these personalities are applauded while the “real” women in society are degraded as being old and worn out. As far as the grey hair idea, I agree in part. I’ve been in the beauty industry for like a million years and what makes one woman feel beautiful makes another feel culturally compromised. Botox is a great example of this. I won’t use Botox because it feels like injecting self hate to my face. On the other hand I color my hair because I like how I look. No matter what, it’s important that a woman is true to herself and not judged by society either way.

cheri

Love your comments about the grey hair thing…I’m 78 and do not have grey hair as of yet…I do highlight my hair because its a dull looking brown..Women can look just as attractive with the grey..

Janel

Farrel, thank you for saying that. I went natural as well. I don’t spend more than 5 minutes getting ready (showering, dressing, hair) and rarely wear make-up. I find make-up on an older face (wrinkles) takes away from our external beauty. I think real beauty is within anyway.

Shellie

I agree with much of your comment, I don’t really follow ‘influencers’ either.

I did let my hair go natural, it’s a combination of silver and white, and is nearly waist length. I get a Lot of compliments, too, and one lady even asked one day if my hair was real! LOL

Terry Stevens

Amen, sister. You nailed it.

Suzanne Blons

Thank you Terry! It was a lotta work trying to not offend anyone TBH

Brenda

When I graduated highschool, in the late 1960s, women’s lib was just on the rise. Women whose highest desire was to get married, have children and look sfter home & family was looked upon as “less than”. Sadly, in today’s world, it’s almost impossible, financially, to live on one income so women who might prefer to homemakers (sounds like an old fashioned term doesn’t it?) can’t do so.
I’ve always thought that we, as women, need to learn to honour, respect and encourage whatever choice each of us makes, rather than criticizing each other. If you want to be a wife & mother – wonderful. A pat on the back for you. If you wsnt a high powered career – awesome. Go for it.
We struggle in society and in life because we don’t in support of each other. If we did, none would feel judged or under-valued.

Suzanne Blons

Hi Brenda, I totally agree! I was one of the women who wanted to career and ended up being a homemaker due to life circumstances. My now ex-husbands job took us to Singapore where I couldn’t get a working visa so I stayed home with our small children. I was so grateful for it and wouldn’t change it for the world. What I gave to my daughters, and myself, during that time is forever etched in my memory.

Janel

Brenda, well said.

Having said that, a neighbor took a six month maternity leave. She put her baby in day care during that time so she could go to the gym, have her mani/pedi, etc. My heart goes out to the baby.

We all get to make our choices and I do understand some women prefer to work outside the home. That was true of my own mother who was born in 1922. That was true of many of my friends (I am 76) when my children were young. Personally, I loved being with them. We went to museums, art galleries, hiking, etc. I went to work full time when they were in school.

My own daughter wanted to be at home until her child went to school. Her then spouse wanted money, an upscale lifestyle. She managed to work part time until her child was in kindergarten. She did divorce him and is raising her child as a single parent. I’m grateful to be close so I can help out.

I’m grateful to have had a choice; I don’t see that happening for women in the future in terms of staying home with their child. In time, I imagine most children will be raised by day care providers. From what I see, the parents don’t parent, they give in. So much guilt. I do see a generation of children growing up with a lousy work ethic, too many privileges without any responsibility. We all need boundaries of some sort. We are in a societal flip and the pendulum ultimately centered. Not sure I will be here to see it.

Jan

I absolutely love this! You wrote every word I think n feel!!

Suzanne Blons

Hi Jan, I’m so glad! I cannot explain how many revisions it took to get it to where it said what I was thinking, so it’s good to know it landed well:)

Shellie

Very powerful article. I listen and read information from Gregg Braden quite a bit. Stay with me here….it sounds weird, but I see the trend….he talks about what he calls ‘transhumanism.’

This is the general push toward incorporating technology into the body because, as human beings, we are not good enough. We need a chip in our hand so we can wave it over the sensor in the store and pay for our groceries, we need a chip in our head so we can think thoughts at our computer and it will perform tasks. And so on. It appeals to younger people; it’s slick and sexy, and without realizing it, they already feel ‘less than’ as mere human beings, so it’s not just older people.

In my opinion, this is not a healthy trend. We need to embrace who we are, fully and completely, before we aren’t us anymore.

Suzanne Blons

Hi Shellie, OMG you are so right! I had the privilege of working with Gregg Braden at Gaia tv where I ran the makeup department for 11 years. He’s wonderful. Transhumanism is s toxic narrative that basically says humans aren’t needed, but modified humans are. And who is making this judgement? Those whom we serve; the elites. They are dead wrong.

Janel

Suzanne, I’ve read all of Braden’s books. He is always spot on!!

Shellie

That is very cool, working with Gregg! I started Joe Dispenza’s book Becoming Supernatural with a book club group prior to 2020. We stopped meeting for that time, as everything stopped, but never started up again.

After listening to Gregg again recently, I am going to restart the meditations in Dispenza’s book, many are available for purchase or can even be found on YouTube. This may be one of the keys to reaching that fully human state Gregg talks about.

Last edited 10 months ago by Shellie
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The Author

Suzanne Blons, The Beauty Shaman, has been in the beauty industry for nearly 40 years. A former Revlon Charlie Girl, she is now a professional makeup artist and has worked with such luminaries as Hillary Clinton, Al Gore, and Arianna Huffington. Today, Suzanne shares her beauty secrets on her YouTube channel, The Beauty Shaman. Check out her store, blog, coaching, and beauty courses.

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