An Ode To Victoria’s Secret

 

Oh, Victoria…

You really do know my secret.

 

You know what I like to wear when I curl up with a good book…

VS-Reading

 

 

 

and the way I pack too much in my suitcases and have to smash them closed by sitting on them.

VS-suitcases

 

 

You know exactly how I like to break in a new pair of Chucks when I get them…

VS-chucks

 

 

and how my navel is sensitive and needs to breathe.

VS-navel

 

 

But what really makes me feel like you know me, is how you seem to take personal snapshots of how I am in my bedroom and put them on the page.  You know the secret, dirty things that women do when they are alone and know no one is watching… the things we don’t ever admit to doing – like digging crust out from under our big toenail, or squeezing that weird zit we found under our left boob… or how when we put on a nice underwire bra, we just can’t help but run our fingers through our hair…

and make the kissy face.

VS-KissyFace

 

 

Victoria, you know me all too well.

 

JenniChiu

 

 

 

*Let it be known that I receive the Victoria’s Secret catalogue in the mail and will probably continue to do so.  What can I say – I’m a sucker for good fiction…

and 34″ inseams are a Godsend.

VS34-inseam

 

VS-ReadingPin.jpg

 

 

No One Told Me Motherhood Would Turn Me Into This.

 

My feet changed sizes when I was pregnant with my first son.  People don’t tell you this – at least no one told me.  Sure, I expected the swelling in the last trimester, but I didn’t expect my feet to get bigger by a half size and NEVER GO BACK.  So now I’m not only stuck with pre-mom clothes that don’t fit, but I also have an entire closet full of awesome shoes that make my toes bleed when I try to wear them.

With pregnancy does come lustrous and full hair, though.  Both times I was pregnant, I also had a thick luscious mane of hair.  It also sprouted up in unexpected places… like my toes.  The hair then fell out in mass quantities, though, after I gave birth.  I lost most of my hair around the forehead and above the ears – which caused my ears to stick out through my stringy, no-time-to-wash hair.  I have yet to lose the hair on my toes.

It was also winter the first time I was pregnant and none of my jackets would close around my midsection.  My mother-in-law took pity on me and bought me some warm, cape-like things that I still have to this day in my closet.  I never in a million years thought I would own cape-like things as part of a regular wardrobe.

Motherhood itself took a totally different toll on my body.

I realize that since I first became a mother four years ago, I’ve spent an obscene amount of time hunched over.  My upper body is folded forward to accommodate the baby strapped to my chest, or in my arms, or the child riding piggy back.  I’m also constantly bent over scooping up toys, wiping up spills, and kneeling over a bathtub.  Put all that together with the weight of holding two human lives in my hands, and I’ve lost a full inch off my height.  I’m getting shorter and shorter as the days go by – I’m sure of it.

Taking off that extra baby weight is also hard… especially when breastfeeding makes me absolutely ravenous.  Plus, I get up around 5 am and eat breakfast.  Then after I’ve fed everyone else, packed a lunchbox for preschool, gotten my son dressed, made it back from school drop off, and put the baby down for a nap – it’s 9 am and I’m hungry again so a second breakfast needs to be had.

My powers of deduction are pretty good, and I think it’s pretty clear what has been and is happening to me.  I just wish someone would’ve freaking warned me about it before hand.  So, that’s what this post is for.  This is for all the future mothers out there.  Lots of people tell you about the spit up, the diapers, the lack of sleep, the strength and wisdom you never thought you were capable of.

Well I’m here to tell you what they won’t.

It’s possible that motherhood will turn you into a Hobbit.

 

image from Wiki Spaces

 

*  Stringy hair.

*  Shoe-less, hairy feet.

*  Ears that stick out.

*  Ill-fitting clothes.

* Short.

*  Needs a second breakfast, second lunch, and second dinner.

*  Walks around in capes.

Your welcome.

Beautiful, and…

As a girl, my hair was not the color of Barbie’s.  My eyes were not the color of Barbie’s.  My boobs were not… they were just… not.  Moreover, I didn’t walk around on my tip toes all the time.

Barbie was everywhere.  My friends had Barbie.  Barbie was on the TV.  I wanted to be Barbie.  Barbie WAS BEAUTIFUL.  One of my favorite shows growing up was The Facts Of Life, and Blair was the pretty one – she looked like Barbie.

As I got older, I tried to cling less to the image of Barbie, knowing that it was impossible to change my ethnicity.  I was a ballet dancer, thin as a rail, and had fairly clear skin.  As a teenager, I started to feel beautiful because people around me told me I was.  I was also lucky enough to have the body type that qualified as a “hanger” and began modeling, and walking the runways at a young age.

I was given ridiculous amounts of money to show up and be beautiful.  And if I wasn’t beautiful, I was sent home.  My outsides were worth a lot.  The travel and the money – it was a tremendous opportunity, and I am grateful for it.  I didn’t realize the impact it would have on my self worth until later.

After high school I went to a performing arts college, and felt confident in the talents that got me there.  The very first day we had to do monologues in front of the freshman class.  A boy, who later became a very close friend, said to me that day,

I’m sure your monologue was very good, but I was too busy looking at your legs to hear a word you said.

Later, I went to work professionally as an actress.  A director once said to me,

When you first step out on stage, just stand there – don’t speak for five whole seconds.  The audience needs time to look at you, because they’re not going to expect you to have something to say.

There are many times when I feel I’ve surprised people with something to say.

The word “beautiful” has made me feel special.

“Beautiful” has made me feel privileged.

“Beautiful” has made me feel hated.

“Beautiful” has made me feel small.

When we tell our daughters they’re beautiful, what are we really saying?

The words that we often use to describe our little girls are “pretty”, “cute”, “beautiful”, “gorgeous”.  I got the message early on that what people liked about me was on the outside.  Society and the media have told me, and the women around me, what is “beautiful” and what is not.  Then the finger gets pointed, and we are told who gets to have “beauty” and who doesn’t.  The box is a tiny one, and you either fit inside it or you don’t.  Throughout my life, I’ve felt beautiful… then not enough… then beautiful… then not.

Being tall wasn’t enough because I wanted blonde hair.  Being skinny wasn’t enough, because I needed bigger breasts.  My environment taught me that i would probably never be enough.  No matter what skin color, hair color, weight, or bust size – if you’re a woman,  your self esteem has taken many hits because of your appearance.  It will never be enough because we can’t fill the inside with the outside.

Yes, it’s a problem that most women we see in magazines do not represent the common body type.  Yes, it’s a problem that “beauty” is being defined by people who want to sell us things. Yes, we need a re-definition of beauty… a real-definition of beauty.

But it’s more than that.  The small problem is that we’re being bombarded as women with what “beautiful” is.  The bigger problem is that we’re being taught it is all.  The value placed on the outward appearance is disproportionate.  It’s also heinously limiting as a woman.  It effects how we see ourselves, it effects how society sees us, and it effects how the men in our lives see us.

A woman’s voice carries less weight in law making than her breasts do in the selling of liquor.  Limiting women to their outsides is the first step in objectifying them.  That leads to taking away their voices, and taking away their choices – the current war on women is proof of that.  I also believe this mode of thinking is what can lead to the dehumanization of women – to violence against women.

Beautiful is not a dirty word, or at least it shouldn’t be.  Every woman wants to feel attractive.  As I sit here, with my face scarred from postpartum/adult acne, and my extra belly skin flapping in the wind, I wouldn’t mind hearing the word beautiful.

I’m not saying we shouldn’t use the word.  I’m saying we should watch how we use the word.  I’m also saying we should build on it.

Every girl wants to be told they’re beautiful.  Every girl is.  They are also more.

I encourage you to tell the daughters, sisters, mothers, and wives in your life that they are beautiful.

But I challenge you to consistently tell them they are beautiful, AND…

 

 

Because being born female shouldn’t be so limiting.