Face It! What Women Really Feel as Their Looks Change, The Book

Appreciating Your Value as You Age by Catherine Saint Louis at the NY Times

book_shadow

Aging is an indiscriminate leveler. You might have been a shapely bombshell who made heads turn. You might have honed your intellect and résumé and let looks take a backseat. Still, most of us will pass a mirror one day and wonder who is that stranger with the droopy eyelids.

It would be easy to dismiss worries about such an aesthetic concern as weak. But two models-turned-psychotherapists argue in “Face It,” their new guide for women, that struggling with changing looks can be no less daunting than dealing with a financial loss, a demotion at work or a divorce.

After decades of counseling patients, Dr. Vivian Diller and Dr. Jill Muir-Sukenick say that dread about growing older can spur an existential crisis of sorts. Such dread isn’t about vanity per se, but has more to do with a loss of potential and questioning one’s place in the world. It can lead to depression, alcohol abuse or sleep disorders, they say.

Yet, therapy isn’t usually on the short list of solutions for those bothered by an aesthetic “problem.” A lunchtime laser treatment or a $180 face cream is.

Dr. Diller, 56, and Dr. Muir-Sukenick, 57, are here to tell American women – no matter how stellar their accomplishments – that it’s not superficial to admit that aging is upsetting. They encourage their readers to figure out what’s driving them to have daydreams about a refined face-lift rather than scheduling one.

Read the full review at The New York Times

Related content:

The Lowdown on Aging

The Old and Tired

View Your Body As If You Were 80

Seeing Beauty in All: Over-40 Nudes

Huff Post Highlights Beautiful Older Women

Cougars: Unfortunately Coming to a Town Near You

Older Leading Ladies and the Evolution of Hollywood

Going Gray: Not a Black and White Matter

2 thoughts on “Face It! What Women Really Feel as Their Looks Change, The Book

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.