Culture As a teen, I let my good looks define me – now, at 44, I feel invisible

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Someone once told me that middle-aged women make the best spies.
(Article, archive)

The invisibility that descends in your late thirties is the perfect disguise for espionage. Who expects a 44-year-old mother of three to be a spook?

Full disclosure, I am not an undercover agent. But I am a mum in her forties with three kids, and feeling invisible is my new normal.

It wasn’t always this way – in fact, quite the opposite.

As a teenager my looks felt like a superpower. I wasn’t model quality, but from the age of 14, I realised that my appearance was valued by society, and I let it define me.

Back in the 90s, it was perfectly normal for women and girls to be judged purely on their looks. If you were lucky enough to be deemed ‘attractive’ then it opened doors.
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As a teen, I let my good looks define me – now, at 44, I feel invisible
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By Rowan Atkins

Saturday 30 Jul 2022 10:00 am
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Someone once told me that middle-aged women make the best spies.

The invisibility that descends in your late thirties is the perfect disguise for espionage. Who expects a 44-year-old mother of three to be a spook?

Full disclosure, I am not an undercover agent. But I am a mum in her forties with three kids, and feeling invisible is my new normal.

It wasn’t always this way – in fact, quite the opposite.

As a teenager my looks felt like a superpower. I wasn’t model quality, but from the age of 14, I realised that my appearance was valued by society, and I let it define me.

Back in the 90s, it was perfectly normal for women and girls to be judged purely on their looks. If you were lucky enough to be deemed ‘attractive’ then it opened doors.

Rowan Atkins 17
Looking a certain way made my life easier (Picture: Rowan Atkins)
Not just the obvious ones like choosing a boyfriend or drawing attention in the street. I remember feeling that my family were proud of how I looked, my friends were admiring and even my teachers were respectful.

Sometimes I saw other women being ignored or disrespected because they weren’t classed as conventionally attractive, and I felt uneasy. But I never imagined it would happen to me.

Looking a certain way made my life easier. I got served quicker and treated more kindly. Lost train tickets weren’t a problem, queues were sometimes skipped, extra understanding and help came my way, mostly from men, but sometimes from women, too.

This heady, pleasurable feeling of influence seemed to require very little effort, apart from make-up and the right clothes. It made me feel desired but also powerful and in control.

I began to rely on my looks so I could thrive in different situations. They felt like a quick route to affirmation and confidence in a teenage world where, despite promises of gender equality, female objectification still reigned supreme.

One night I was struggling with mountains of A Level revision – I always found academic achievement much harder than looking good – and I remember confessing to my mum that I wanted to be a model rather than do all this studying.

In reality it was never an option – despite numerous attempts on my part, no agencies actually wanted me – but I was desperate to use my looks as a shortcut to success.

Another day, I was upset about a bad essay mark, and cried on the shoulder of a girlfriend. ‘You even look beautiful when you cry,’ she said, her eyes dancing with amusement rather than sympathy.

Her words made me feel like an object being observed rather than someone who just wanted empathy.

At university I lacked the banter of my friends, but my looks got me noticed, establishing a status, of sorts. My heart leapt when someone called me ‘dream girl’ at the pub where I served pints, despite the sexual intent of his gaze.

In my small, 90s domain, where conforming to traditional beauty norms was a ticket to social acceptance, I felt palatable and wanted, even if that had an unwelcome helping of sexualisation attached.

Harsh criticism of women’s looks was an everyday norm in the press, films, TV and day-to-day life during that decade. As I saw girls and women reduced to their sexual appeal, I shuddered at my own good luck.

Yet I knew, deep down, that my own ‘girl power’ was short term – fed by insecurity and sexism. I could have anything I wanted, do anything I wanted, as long as I looked a certain way.

Fast forward 12 years. At 30, I’d had a baby, forged a career in PR and survived some big relationship break-ups. My appearance wasn’t what it was but there was still some validation up for grabs.

Two more children later and I’m happily married, aged 44. I have a freelance writing job, a group of friends I treasure, I love gardening, interiors and fashion, but a big slice of my identity, of how I see myself and believe others view me too, has disappeared.

Gone are the wide-eyed stares and general approval. I get those dopamine hits elsewhere – at work, with my kids, husband and friends. But the loss of validation is tough. Like many women, I allowed my body to define me and underpin my sense of worth.

Those girls and women whose careers are built around looking a certain way, their sexuality commodified, must feel this loss even more keenly, particularly if it is removed publicly or they are shamed for it.

Although my ‘fading’ might be more private, it still hurts. But it has forced me to understand that the world values me for much more than just my appearance.

And that’s the message I’m determined to pass on to my seven-year-old daughter. If she asks, ‘do you like my outfit?’ I say yes, but it’s her story writing, her subtraction skills and her speedy running that I focus on. I want to show her that there are so many ways to be successful and gain recognition as a female – it’s not just how you look.

I’m relieved that sexism in society is slowly shifting. Although women are still criticised for not being ‘hot enough’, those reductive attitudes are called out more often.

Singer Billie Eilish and actors like Carey Mulligan and Nicky Clark are leading this change, challenging entrenched sexism and ageism in the entertainment industry.

I want my little girl to know that she doesn’t have to look airbrushed or perfect to feel valued. Most importantly, I want her to know that she can – and must – be herself, with all the complexity, the feistiness and the many talents that involves.

Learning to love yourself for everything on the inside and not just the image on the outside is an important life lesson for every girl and one I wish I’d learned much earlier.
 
it seems to me like these women fundamentally misunderstand the situation and how it relates to 'gender equality'

if there ever is gender equality, none of these women will get any of the gratuitous amounts of ass kissing, preferential treatment, and special opportunities that they all feel entitled to, which this article decries losing.
 
it seems to me like these women fundamentally misunderstand the situation and how it relates to 'gender equality'

if there ever is gender equality, none of these women will get any of the gratuitous amounts of ass kissing, preferential treatment, and special opportunities that they all feel entitled to, which this article decries losing.
If we ever figure out how to make waifu dolls real a lot of women will quickly figure out how invisible most of the population actually feels every day
 
Looking a certain way made my life easier. I got served quicker and treated more kindly. Lost train tickets weren’t a problem, queues were sometimes skipped, extra understanding and help came my way, mostly from men, but sometimes from women, too.
Being treated like a woman must sound so nice. Wish I knew how it feels to be treated like a woman of attractive status while still looking like a twelve-year-old.

Unfortunate implications notwithstanding.
 
Instead of being sad that she's no longer a looker, she should be happy that she went through a large portion of her life operating under the comforting delusion that she was attractive.
 
I'm 36 and I don't look anywhere near as good as I did at 19. I was hot as fuck at 19, now I'm just out of shape and have a slight salt and pepper thing going on with my facial hair (I have no kids thank christ, so I don't have a lot of gray hair). I don't really have any wrinkles and most people assume that I'm 24-25. When they find out that I'm 36, they make me get out my license. I still get ID'd for a lot of things. Good Ukrainian genes I guess.

I don't work out or anything. I would start if I didn't hate fitness & gym culture as much as I do, but I hate that shit and hate everyone's gay obsession with it and how people LIVE to give their hard earned money to gym facilities. I'm surprised that I look as good as I do at 36 because I did a lot of hard and fast living in my twenties and early 30s (used a lot of speed for years) and in other people I work with who I was in ROTC with in high school, they look like they're 53 because they did a lot of hard and fast living as well, so I'm not sure how I still look good and am capable of dating 20yo girls.

I guess that's just the male privilege of being "distinguished" as you age or whatever.
 
I'm going to buck the trend of the thread and say she was pretty alright in the photo booth shots. Those nose freckles are pretty cute! Not a 10/10, but even she acknowledges she was never going to be a model. That, and you couldn't see her choppers which don't hold up to hi-res photography.

A friend of my wife's has mentioned how she's become "invisible" more or less upon hitting 40. Obviously, they're not, but it must be a odd feeling of going from people eye fucking you to treating you like you're a man. Probably a monkey's paw reaction due to wishing to not be stared at, hit on, whatever else.
 
Back in the 90s, it was perfectly normal for women and girls to be judged purely on their looks. If you were lucky enough to be deemed ‘attractive’ then it opened doors.

Being an attractive woman still opens doors today, the only difference is girls today are smart enough to sell bathwater for absurd prices so that they don't have to work in the future when they decay into hags.
 
A married woman with children should probably not be admitting to the world that she desires the sexual attention of other men and is sore that she's not getting it.
 
Also the big low monkey ears aren’t helping. Anyway yeah if you’re gonna be like oh I was notably, remarkably hot, I mean look at this old pic, said old pic really does need to show you being more objectively attractive than this.

I was hot enough long ago and now am a similar age as this lady, I’m in decent shape and my husband seems to still like me. Honestly anyone married writing shit like this is insulting their husband. Keep yourself fit and neat and keep your spouse interested, you really aren’t meant to be like keeping a tally of the heads you turn at this point. If she has daughters I bet she is HIGHLY competitive with them and they need to make sure she doesn’t hit on their boyfriends and male friends. You really cannot delight in your daughter‘s beauty and self-confidence like you should when you remain in this competitive mindset.
 
A married woman with children should probably not be admitting to the world that she desires the sexual attention of other men and is sore that she's not getting it.

Yeah, absolutely. She's highly visible to her children, who apparently aren't of any concen to her compared with random hot guys eyeing her up.

She's like the crazies in That Chapter who casually hire hitmen to murder their husbands rather than just get divorced. Utterly self-centred and emotionally vacant, flirting with the undercover cop as they arrange the would-be hit.
 
This will be the the fate of a majority of millennial and zoomer women. The internet, absurd female bias in education, and federally funded girl power/empowerment campaigns have managed to delude these people into thinking they will always be highly desirable and receive the special treatment they got from ages 15-24.
 
Yeah, yeah, my shit's fucked up.
Has to happen to the best of us.
The rich folk suffer like the rest of us.
It'll happen to you!

 
Yeah, absolutely. She's highly visible to her children, who apparently aren't of any concen to her compared with random hot guys eyeing her up.

She's like the crazies in That Chapter who casually hire hitmen to murder their husbands rather than just get divorced. Utterly self-centred and emotionally vacant, flirting with the undercover cop as they arrange the would-be hit.

Do I like it when a cute 23-year-old waitress smiles at me? Yes. Would I like it if every cute 23-year-old woman smiled at me? Yes. Am I going to write a fucking essay about it and publish it where my humiliated wife will see it? Fuck no, I'm not a narcissistic sociopath, but apparently the pussy pass means me me me me me is an acceptable way to live.
 
Sometimes I saw other women being ignored or disrespected because they weren’t classed as conventionally attractive, and I felt uneasy.
I wonder if you ever said anything? Somehow I doubt it.
Now men can’t create opportunities for women and mentor them without risking the appearance of sexual harassment
I can confirm this. I’m middle aged and clearly sensible because more senior male colleagues have and still act as an informal point for me, which I’m grateful for, but they have confided that they absolutely will not do it for anyone they’re not 100% sure of, amd not any young women at all. Too risky
Would say the best spies are middle-aged/elderly men. Never noticed, anywhere. Go anywhere.
The middle aged generally, perhaps. I’m invisible, and it is what it is. I was never enough of a looker to be treated ‘special’ but I knew some who were. Back then I was not sad , but I suppose resigned, but at least I have a personality that’ll last longer than looks.
It’s actually got me through a couple of sticky and quasi legal (but not immoral) situations where nobody could believe the nice lady would do x so they didn’t press the issue. Once I’m seriously old, I may be even less inclined to play along with clown world.
 
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