Friday, May 22, 2020
An alternative path to self-acceptance
An alternative path to self-acceptance This post takes place in Beverly Hills. Iâm just going to tell you right now that I go there to get Botox. If anyone is surprised, Iâll be surprised. The path to self-acceptance is paved with injectables. Step 1: Try to change yourself. I was going to write a big post about how Iâm confessing to getting Botox and then I thought better of it, that it would make me look too old. Then I thought maybe itâll make me look rich. Because honestly, Botox is really expensive and itâs not just Botox but also fillers. I donât even know what the brand is. I just go to the dermatologist and say âmake me look younger.â Well, actually itâs not the dermatologist. It was the dermatologist in West Hollywood but then she found Jesus, which I am not opposed to. After all I married a guy who dumped me because hes a Born Again Christian and Im not. Jews in general are not militant about religious decisions because if we were, most Jews would not qualify as practicing Jews and then the religion would be .02% of the world instead of 0.2% of the world. So my dermatologist found Jesus. Fine. But then it wasnât fun anymore to talk with her about bulimia. Bulimics are like alcoholicsyou never stop being one even if you are not practicing at the moment. So while she put needles in my wrinkles, weâd talk about how nice it is to come home at the end of a hard day and throw up. But then she found Jesus and we had to talk about that instead. Step 2: Deflect self-criticism onto other people. And then she got a divorce. And she has twin girls, and I know you already know what I think about divorce. But besides being immature and selfish and awful for the kids, divorce is so boring. All divorces are all the same. So all we had to talk about was how much she hates her ex-husband. I nodded sympathetically because, after all, Iâm depending on her to make me young and I donât want uneven lips. But if I were single Iâd date him. So now I donât go to a dermatologist. I go to a nurse practitioner. I like talking to her. She put fillers on the bridge of her nose so glasses dont slip off. But I donât notice her wearing glasses. I asked where else people get fillers. She said there are lots of places to put fillers but the most surprising one she has done is knees. If you are a movie star and the director tells you your knees are sagging and you donât have time for surgery before filming starts, then you can do fillers to fix your knees until you have time for surgery. She says, âThe best thing is to do surgery proactively so the sagging never happens. I slip back to thoughts of dating my ex-dermatologistâs ex-husband because hes a plastic surgeon. Step 3: Focus on demographic trends instead of personal tendencies. This is a good time to tell you that I think nurse practitioners will revolutionize health care. Doctors hate being part of a system that is inefficient, litigious, and rife with liars and cheats. Doctors want to go off on their own, but the skills that made them ripe for medical school make them terrible for entrepreneurship. So doctors sit where they are, in their hospital-affiliated jobs, moping about the system. Nurse practitioners, on the other hand, are corner cuttersafter all, they didnât go to medical schooland they are great entrepreneurs. They will change how medical care is administered 85% of the time. Because most medical care is not in a hospital. We can do things differently. Nurse practitioners will lead the way. For now, itâs in Botox. I like my nurse practitioner for Botox. So I was in Beverly Hills for Botox but I was early, so I wandered around feeling fat and poor, because that is the only way anyone can feel in Beverly Hills. How rich you feel is relative to your surroundings. If I had enough money to buy clothes in Beverly Hills I would not be shopping myself. Iâd send my stylist. Which makes me certain that every single person walking the streets of Beverly Hills feels fat and poor. Well, maybe the stylists feel less fat, but they feel more poor so it evens out. I took this picture at Cartier. Isnât it cool? They curled paper clips into gorgeous shapes and hung them in a spotlight so the shadows spell phrases like, To be irreplaceable you must be different. I became inspired. I went into a glasses store because Melissa says my glasses are bad. She told me to go on Warby Parker and get better glasses. Step 4: Buy things. I said okay because I want to be cool and I know Warby Parker is cool. I never actually knew they sold glasses. I didnât know you could buy glasses online. I think I thought it was pens. You know, Parker? But then it turns out that you canât get bifocals on Warby Parker. And of course then I feel like Iâm going to die if I canât buy anything on Warby Parker because who wants to say they are too old for Warby Parker? So I buy frames for the Farmer. He refuses to wear new glasses. Melissas frustrated sigh rings in my ears. So, I walk into the glasses shop and say, âMy assistant says these glasses arenât stylish. I tell him my assistant because I never know what to call Melissa. Friend seems too casual and distant to me. I want the guy to know that Iâm talking about someone Iâm really close to. The guy is tall dark and gay so I trust him to dress me, and he says, âYour glasses are on trend for your age,â and then he shows me a photo of Diane Keaton or someone who looks like her, wearing the exact cat-eye glasses I am wearing. The woman in the photo looks like she needs fillers. Then the guy says, âYour assistant must be in her 20s.â I say, âYeah, she is.â He says, âI bet this is what she wants you to wear.â And he hands me glasses that are exactly what Melissa wants me to get: Square, heavy frames. I send a photo. Call her to get approval. She says, âWhat brand?â âI donât know.â âAsk him.â I ask him. Itâs Oliver Peoples. âGreat,â she says. âBuy those.â And she tells me only a Gen Xer would not know the brand of glasses they are trying on. In the past Iâd have told her only a Gen Yer would care. But today I am tired of being old and I am willing to be a brand whore because in the era of Gen Y, thatâs what being young means. Step 5: Accept shortcomings, one narrow arena at a time. In order to write this, I had to call Melissa to find out how to get something to write with on the laptop Iâm using because thereâs no Word and thereâs no Internet to write in WordPress or gmail. âCommand space bar.â she tells me. Do you work closely with people twenty years younger than you? Because if you do then itâs certain they bemoan your technical skills behind your back. If you know what they say then you are a step ahead of your demographic. I know, for instance, that Cassie and Melissa canât believe how often I call someone instead of texting them. But itâs hard for me to hear because I was the girl so ahead of everyone else that I got paid $75/hour from a Fortune 50 company to launch their website by hand-coding HTML. I was the Lewis and Clark of online technology. Ten thousand years ago. Now I am the Lewis and Clark of bringing Botox to rural America. Melissa says, âWhy arenât you posting?â âI dont know. I hate the pictures I take.â âYou sent me really good pictures.â [This is Melissa talking as my photo editor.] âStop paying people to take pictures of your life. Only you can take pictures of your life. Only a Gen Xer would pay someone to take pictures of their life.â I think of all the Gen Y wedding pictures that annoy me. âWhat about weddings?â âThatâs the only time Gen Y hires a photographer. Go look at the photos I edited. Youâll be happy. Itâll make you want to write.â Okay. Send me a link. âSend you a link? What are you talking about. Theyâre in the Picassa folder.â âI canât do shared folders on my phone. â âYou mean you canât do shared folders anywhere.â âShut up.â Iâm sending you my favorite one in email so that you want to write a post to put it in. I check email. The photo is good. I am happy that I can take pictures like Gen Y even though Iâll never be as technically competent. And to be honest, itâs harder to admit to that than to admit to Botox.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.