January 2009

women-in-adsA real woman vs. a model. Photo credit: FaceMe

Deeply disturbing women and body image facts:

1. The average American woman is 5’4” tall and weighs 140 pounds. The average American model is 5’11” tall and weighs 117 pounds. The photo above, although taken in the Netherlands, demonstrates this pretty well.

2. The average size of the “ideal” woman, as portrayed by models, has become progressively thinner over the years and has stabilized at around 20% below the average weight. This thin ideal is unachievable for most women. A 1995 study found that three minutes spent looking at models in a fashion magazine caused 70% of women to feel depressed, guilty, and ashamed.

models Models in New York. Photo credit: Christopher Peterson

3. It is estimated that 40-50% of American women are trying to lose weight at any point in time.

4. One out of every four college aged women has an eating disorder.

5. Almost half of all women smokers smoke because they see it as the best way to control their weight. Of these women, 25% will die of a disease caused by smoking.

models-fashion-showModels often smoke to control their appetite. Photo credit: styleserver

6. At age thirteen, 53% of American girls are “unhappy with their bodies.” This grows to 78% by the time girls reach seventeen.

7. In a sample of male and female high school students, girls had higher body dissatisfaction scores than boys on all measures. Girls reported magazines as their primary source of information regarding diet and health. Boys reported their parents as their primary source of information. These are the typical messages girls can expect to get from women’s magazines:

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8. A majority of girls in a 1999 study (59 percent) reported dissatisfaction with their body shape, and 66 percent expressed a desire to lose weight. Only 29 percent of the girls were overweight.

9. At 5’9” tall and weighing 110 lbs, Barbie would have a BMI of 16.24 which is considered severely underweight. Because of her ridiculous proportions (39” bust, 18” waist, 33” thighs and a size 3 shoes!), if she was a real woman, she wouldn’t be able to walk upright – she would have to walk on all fours. Note that the target market for Barbie Doll sales are girls ages 3 to 12.

barbiePhoto credit: Angelina

10. Nearly 11.7 million cosmetic surgical and nonsurgical procedures were performed in the United States in 2007. Women had nearly 10.6 million cosmetic procedures, 91% percent of the total.

Sources: Cosmetic Surgery Statistics, National Institute On Media And Family, About Face, American Academy Of Pediatrics, Get Real Barbie Fact Sheet, Taft College

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Photo credit: ekai

This is a guest post by Dan Miller, a real-life friend of mine who writes about philosophy, religion, physics, artificial intelligence and virtual worlds in his blog Artiphys. In this post, Dan is responding to my recent post on Ageism. Dan thinks “aging gracefully” backfires in today’s culture and argues that there’s nothing wrong with using the tools available to us to slow down the natural aging process.

The sense I get from your post, and from the majority of responses, is that it is somehow unseemly for someone to fight the visual process of ageing using surgery, or techniques such as Botox. Instead, we should gracefully accept God’s chosen aesthetics of age, and admire our craggy faces and sagging skin with the delicate acquired tastes of an aficionado.

Of course, we don’t live in that world. Instead, we live in a world that idolizes youth and youthfulness, and physical beauty as some sort of special achievement, and worthy of exceptional praise. In such a world, looking old is not just an issue of looking “bad” — it’s also a label. If you’re old, you are not only not beautiful and desirable, you’re also uncool, over the hill, washed up, and should do the polite thing by just fading away to Florida or a long cruise, or some other acceptable playground for the unfortunately aged.

 

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Photo credit: notinponce

But what if you don’t think that way about yourself? Surely we’ve all seen the spectrum of attitudes to age — from the mid-40’s balding overweight fellow who is already counting the years to retirement, to the spry, energetic grandmom who loves to play with the kids, does watercolors, blogs incessantly, and generally enjoys life with the enthusiasm of a 12-yr old.

Now suppose you’re one of those forever-young types, but you happen to live in Hollywood, and your profession is tied mercilessly to your looks and the perception people have of your appearance. You are photographed constantly, in high-def, and examined for signs of decrepitude. Is it so terrible in that situation for you to choose to do what many others (your competition in some sense) do, and improve your appearance using the available tools? Or do you have an obligation to take yourself out of the race and let the young turks have a chance at the brass ring?

We don’t disparage people for getting hip replacements just so they can ski or play tennis a few years more. What if you’re approaching 60, but you still feel frisky, and want to be able to appear in a way that makes it easier for you to integrate with people whose perception of age is so deeply marked by society’s expectations? If it’s OK to take the risk of surgery to do athletics, why is it off-limits to have surgery to expand your options in terms of relationships?

I see this issue as something like trans-gender. If someone feels like they’re a woman trapped in a man’s body, and they will be happier looking like a woman (not usually a particularly attractive woman, as we all probably realize) — I say, that’s fine. That’s self-realization. And I see using surgery or Botox to look youthful as something along the same lines. Of course it can go too far (Joan Rivers, Michael Jackson) — but so can anything.

 

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Jocelyn Wildenstein, the “cat woman”, took self improvement through plastic surgery to the extreme. Photo credit: feastoffools

There’s a big difference between a tasteful, subtle chin lift and the stretched-rubber-skin look of someone who just doesn’t know when to quit. I just don’t see the philosophical justification for saying it’s all terrible and hypocritical, and anyone who makes that choice is somehow guilty of some moral or ethical transgression.

I for one have little respect for nature’s (or God’s, if you prefer) idea of ‘graceful ageing’. Besides the looks part, the last year or two of life for most people I’ve known who didn’t die suddenly is nothing but a disgusting, shameful form of degradation and loss of dignity. That drives my feelings about euthanasia, but that’s for a different post. The basic point is, why take our nature as given, and refuse to improve upon it, if improvement is actually possible? We generally accept things like tattoos, body piercing, high heels, makeup and so on — is this really that different?

Much of what we do regarding our appearance is far from healthy (and I confess this goes more for women, but that seems to be a given in our society). I don’t care all that much about my appearance, and perhaps that’s because I’m a guy, but I’m sure going to use whatever I can get my hands on to prolong my quality of life and vitality. I think there’s an argument that one’s appearance is part of that equation.


Over to you now. What do you think? Are you in favor of “aging gracefully,” or do you agree with Dan that there’s no reason to accept nature’s aging process if we have the tools at our disposal to fight it?

woman-laptopI first “met” Stephanie Foster when she discovered one of my posts on Stumbleupon a few months ago. We’ve been following each other ever since, but it took me a while to realize she makes money online – as much as $5000 per month – from her websites.

This is significantly more than the average ANNUAL revenue for U.S. blogs ($5000), which is actually skewed by blogs in the top 1% who earn $200k+. The annual MEDIAN revenue for U.S. blogs is $200.

Stephanie’s websites are not high-profile. She doesn’t have 100,000 subscribers or millions of monthly page views. You don’t need any of these things to make money online. You do need to pick a good niche, work hard, be highly disciplined and ignore naysayers.

While numerous “make money online” so-called “experts” are claiming to make 6 figures and trying to scam people into buying their useless products, Stephanie actually makes money online, from her home, quietly and consistently.

Stephanie has agreed to answer a few questions.

What is your professional background?

I started working at home my last year of college, doing medical transcription. That’s what got me interested in the work at home field as a whole. Everywhere I went, when I mentioned that I transcribed at home, people would ask me how I got into that.

When did you start your websites?

I did my first site as a website design class project on a free hosting service, answering the question of how do you get into medical transcription. I figured I could kill two birds with one stone – credit for the class project and something to refer people to when they kept asking me the same questions over and over.

I started Home with the Kids in September 2003. I had decided to expand on the whole work at home concept because medical transcription is really not suited to everyone. It took me a while to realize that I could be earning money from the things I had been talking about for free. I eventually took my medical transcription stuff off the free host, updated it, and added it to Home with the Kids.

How much do you make? What are your sources of income?

My income ranges from $1000-5000 per month. The AdSense income is the biggest part, but some months I’ve done very well with other programs, breaking $2000 in a month in affiliate referrals. While Google AdSense is a major earner for me, I’m trying to dump it so that I have more control. I also do a little bit of ad selling, mostly featured links in the Direct Sales Opportunities directory on my site. It hasn’t been the focus for me that many say it ought to be. That’s just not one of my specialties.

Do you have any tips for getting started with making money online?

Of course!

1. Just do it. Don’t worry about making mistakes: I’ve made plenty of mistakes along the way and that’s OK.

2. Pick a topic you enjoy. Do not pick a topic solely on what you think you’re going to earn. You probably won’t earn that much for a long time. Keep at it and you might just get there. But if you aren’t enjoying what you’re doing, it’s probably not going to work so well. I’ve tried that path. I have a site on credit cards, and while it earns a little, it really has not been worth the time for me. Yet that’s one of the fields people talk about as having great income potential. It does, but it’s a tough one to excel in. My top two sites, on the other hand, are fun for me to work on and bring in more money.

3. Focus on one marketing tool at a time. If you’re blogging, for example, how are you going to promote your blog? You can do blog comments, article marketing, buying ads on related sites and so much more to start getting your traffic. Study that type of marketing as you build up at least the basics of your site or blog. You need something to be sending the traffic to.

It doesn’t really matter if no one reads your posts for the first month or two. Visitors aren’t generally impressed by a single page unless you’re selling just one item and that’s all the page is for. A site or blog that is growing is more attractive for most topics.

Start your marketing as soon as you think your site is ready for visitors. Just work that one marketing skill in the beginning. You’re better off mastering one marketing technique than jumping all around and understanding none of them. Once you’ve mastered one you can pick up another.

4. Do a lot of reading as you get started, and ask a lot of questions before you start any home business. Every single one has its pitfalls, challenges and scams. Even my original career, medical transcription, has plenty of scams.

5. Do not assume it will be easy, no matter the promises made by any person or website. Most of the earnings you see are the exception, not the rule. I earn an adequate living, lower than the best, but better than most who run their own websites.

6. Involve your family. If your children and your spouse aren’t supportive, it’s just that much harder to get things going. I’ve had to deal with naysayers even when I was a medical transcriptionist. My mother-in-law took years before she believed anyone could earn enough money from home for it to be worthwhile. It wasn’t until the first time I had a check higher than my husband’s paycheck that she really believed. But because I kept at it I was able to support my family even when my husband was laid off for six months starting last January.

7. Learn to identify work-at-home scams. I write about new scams periodically. There’s a work at home scams section on my site, as well as blog articles such as Keeping Your Ethics as You Work at Home. There’s also a forum where you can ask questions if you’re ever in doubt about a work at home opportunity.

Scams are actually very easy to spot online. I think it’s the anonymity combined with how cheap and easy it is to get started that brings them out in such hordes. I rarely name names when I talk about scams, not only because I can get it wrong sometimes too, but because they change names so often that it would be a waste of my time trying to keep up with most of them. Better to know the symptoms and to have your B.S. detector set on high.

Keeping up with a home business, even one you love, is a lot of work. But being able to accomplish so much while always being there for my kids has been quite worthwhile.

Thank you, Stephanie, for your tips on how to make money online.

As I said, this woman is worth following. She obviously knows what she’s doing.

Photo credit: r3v

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Cosmo magazine’s board of directors has recently voted to change the magazine’s name to a new name that would better reflect the true nature of its content:

“Cosmo Magazine – The Modern Woman’s Guide To:

1. Completely giving up your own personality and pretending to be someone you’re not because otherwise your man might leave you.

2. Being a whiny, insecure idiot who does everything in her power to get emotionally closer to her (presumably) reluctant man.

3. Giving men as much pleasure as you can in bed while ignoring your own needs.

4. In general, making men and their needs the center of your universe.”

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A quick look at a few choice Cosmo Magazine covers from recent months yields the following brilliant pieces of advice:

1. Forget about being yourself. You need to give up your own personality and adopt whatever traits and behaviors will make him like you

“50 things that will make him worship you”

“The girlfriend habit that will deepen his love”

“Girlfriend traits guys find freaking awesome”

“Chick behavior that baffles the hell out of guys”

“The girlfriend habit that he’ll love you more for”

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2. His pleasure comes before yours

Surprising advice, considering women are far more likely to have trouble climaxing than men.

“10 things guys crave in bed”

“The hottest things to do to a man”

“The moves a man craves in bed”

“Hot new trick to intensify everything he feels”

 

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3. Be a clingy insecure idiot whose life’s mission is to “get closer to him”

“A kind of cuddling that can bring you closer to him”

 

4. Men cheat. Just accept it.

“Why guys cheat: fresh insight”

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Ewww.

mother and childI believe that parents have the power to build their child’s self-esteem. They also have the power to shred it to pieces. Sure, lots of it is nature, but nurture plays a big enough role that we should take it very seriously and do our best to help our children love themselves.

Building our children’s self esteem is important, because a person who loves himself is more capable of loving others than a person who doesn’t. A person who loves and respects herself will not allow others to abuse her. There’s nothing I want more than for my daughters to love themselves and accept themselves just the way they are.

These are some of the things I try to do in order to make sure my children grow up with a high self esteem.

1. Tell your children you love them every day.

2. Hug your children every day.

3. Don’t dismiss their dreams for the future. My oldest wants to be a writer when she’s a grownup. She writes beautifully, but part of me wants to tell her how hard it is to make a living as a writer – that she should write as a hobby and find a “real” job. Instead, when she talks about how she will write books for a living, I listen, smile, and tell her how happy I am that she loves to write so much and how talented I think she is.

4. Tell them they are perfect just the way they are. Reinforce the idea that people have a unique combination of talents and strengths and that there’s more than one way to be smart, beautiful, or successful.

5. If you have a daughter, it’s very important to counter the media’s message that the most important thing about a woman is her looks, and that beauty has a very narrow definition. Avoid criticizing your own body in front of your daughter; avoid buying women’s magazines; when you read a book or watch a movie that presents women as needing a man to rescue them, tell her that while a man can be a great life companion and partner, she doesn’t need a man to rescue her: she can take care of herself; talk about the media, advertising and photo retouching; point out to strong female role models and let her know she can accomplish anything she puts her mind to.

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Photo credit: IkonikPhoto

6. Focus on your children’s strengths and encourage them to develop those instead of focusing on their weaknesses. J.D. Meier elaborates on the idea of focusing on one’s strengths in his article Three Myths About Strengths and Weaknesses.

7. Try to truly accept your children just the way they are. It’s not easy. Most of us have an ideal in our head and we would love to mold our child into that ideal. We feel this way because we love them and want to protect them. We believe that certain qualities or pursuits or preferences, such as being good in sports or being an outgoing person rather than an introvert,or being straight rather than gay, will make their lives easier. But it is our job as parents to accept them just the way they are and accept that they can be happy even if they don’t fit into the mold.

8. Make sure they know they can always reach out to you, no matter what. My mom told me, years ago, that I can always come to her, even if I think I did a terrible thing, even if I completely messed up, even if others will judge me and hate me and kick me out of their lives – she will always be there for me.

9. Encourage them to show respect and compassion to others and to avoid judging others or being mean to others. A person who treats others well feels good about himself. Those who are cruel to others are usually deeply unhappy.

10. Listen – really listen – to your kids. I read somewhere that during conversation, most people begin to form the answer in their heads while the other side is still talking! This certainly happens to me often with my kids because I tend to assume they want advice. But in many cases, they don’t. They just want me to listen.

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Photo credit: KellyB

11. Be available. I work many hours each day in front of the computer, and I often work when my kids are home, but they know they can always approach me and talk with me and I will always drop everything, turn my back to the computer and listen to them. If you work outside the home, dinnertime and bedtime can be great opportunities to spend time with your kids. I start bedtime routine 30 minutes early each night, because my kids love to prolong it by talking with me, asking me questions, asking me for another kiss and another hug.

12. Be polite to your children. If you won’t use this tone with a coworker, you shouldn’t use it with your kids.

13. Allow them to make their own decisions as often as possible and as appropriate for their age. Children have very little freedom and very little control over their lives. Whenever possible, give them the freedom to make their own decisions. Even if it’s small decisions such as deciding what to wear or what to eat, and even if you need to present a few choices they can pick from, it will still empower your children to be able to make those decisions. It is also important to never do something for a child that they can do for themselves, even if you will do it better or faster.

14. Teach your children they can do anything if they really want to. Teach them not to be afraid of failure and to avoid perfectionism. I frequently point out my own mistakes and failures as a way to show my kids that I am not perfect, that nobody is perfect, and that failing at something is not the end of the world.

15. Never put them down, mock them, point out their flaws, or make fun of them. It sounds obvious, but even the best parent can get frustrated and exhausted enough that they put their kids down when the kids make a demand that seems stupid or unreasonable. One of my kids is afraid of spiders. We do have spiders in our house once in a while. As much as it’s frustrating to me, as much as it seems unreasonable to be afraid of a small (really small!) spider, I remind myself that this is a very common fear; that it’s very real for her; and that if I keep my calm and show her time after time that I am not afraid, while removing the offending spiders from the house, chances are her fears will eventually subside (although she might never completely stop being afraid of spiders).

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Photo credit: Stinkie Pinkie

16. Encourage your children to be adventurous and to try new things. It’s very natural for a parent to feel protective of her kids and to try to prevent injury. But there’s a fine line between setting limits to protect them, and being so overprotective that they become afraid of trying new things. One of my daughters broke her arm a couple of years ago while playing at the playground on a climbing wall. She was on a play date: I wasn’t even there when it happened. But today, when we took them to a different playground and she climbed a tall climbing wall, I was shaking. I had to remind myself that this is a great milestone for her. For several months after healing from the accident, she refused to climb tall climbing structures.

17. Teach them not to worry about what others say or think about them. My youngest, who is 7 years old, often asks me “do you think the kids will laugh at me if I do/ wear that?” I‘m teaching her she should ignore others’ opinions and criticism. I like to wear bold red lipstick, and one day she told me one of her friends said it’s “weird” that I wear lipstick “every day, not just for parties.” I responded, “Well, I like it. It makes me feel good. I don’t care what other people think about it. If they don’t like it, they don’t have to look.”

18. Give them as much freedom as possible to play and explore. We live in a world where kids are not free to roam the streets the way they used to. But even with the limitations we have put on ourselves as parents, even if we don’t tell our kids to “go outside, play, come back in time for dinner and don’t get into trouble,” we can still send them to play outside in the backyard; we can still encourage free play and using their imagination as much as possible.

19. Acknowledge their efforts even when they don’t lead to accomplishments. “I was happy to see you working so hard on that project. Glad you enjoyed it.”

20. Start a tradition of taking each of your kids out for a special one-on-one outing once a month, or a few times each year. I recently took each of my kids on a special “date” for their birthdays. We went to a coffee shop and ordered hot chocolate with whipped cream and cookies. Spending an hour together, just the two of us, enjoying the food and talking without interruption or competition from the other sibling, was priceless.

Photo credit: Robert Whitehead

How To Pick Up Girls

by MomGrind

How to pick up girls:

how to pick up girls

“Here, for the first time ever, is a manual completely devoted to the pick up.

Now you can get the kind of girls you’ve always wanted. Not ugly girls. Or fat girls. Or girls with dumpy legs. Now you can pick up beautiful girls! Girls with luxurious golden hair and soft rounded breasts. Girls with long sexy legs and pretty eyes and sensuous lips.

Yes, now you can get the kind of gorgeous, delicious creatures you’ve always seen, always wanted, but never quite knew how to meet.”

[Psst guys. It's not too late. The book was first published in 1972, but you can still order it here.]

Image credit: jbcurio

empty pocketHeatherB of BlogHer feels guilty about spending money during the recession.

My take: she shouldn’t feel guilty about spending, IF her emergency fund is well-funded.

When Heather says “I haven’t been worried and I’ve been one of those fortunate people with an excellent job and great benefits with no sign (KNOCK ON WOOD) of losing any of the above in the near future,” what she SHOULD be saying is “I haven’t been too worried because I’m one of those fortunate people with an emergency fund that can carry me through six months of unemployment.”

Who Needs An Emergency Fund?

Everybody needs an emergency fund. You need to be in a place, financially, where you can handle unexpected expenses such as the car breaking down, the roof leaking, an unexpected tax bill or an emergency medical treatment that’s only partially covered by your insurance.

You also need to be in a place where losing your job, which is more likely during a recession even if you think your job is “safe,” does not mean losing your home, racking credit card debt, or tapping into your retirement account.  Once you get on the credit-card-debt path, it’s extremely difficult to pay it off and build wealth. Tapping into your retirement account before retirement is a very bad idea since you will pay penalties, and taxes at your income-tax rate. A home equity line of credit is also not your best bet these days, since it might not be worth as much now because of falling home prices.

Even if you think you can’t afford to set aside money right now, you need to find a way to do it.

How Much Money Should I Keep In My Emergency Fund?

Most experts say you should have enough set aside to cover three to six-months’ worth of living expenses. Does that sound doable? It is if you build it slowly and consistently. No one says you need to do it all at once. Contrary to what you may think, you don’t need a huge income to be able to save. Being able to save is a result of careful planning and disciplined execution. It has nothing to do with how much you make. Plenty of people earn a high salary but spend it all on luxuries and end up in financial ruin when emergency strikes.

How Can I Save For An Emergency Fund? I Don’t Have Extra Money

Yes you do. The best way to start an emergency fund is to track your spending for a month, figure out where you can cut back and direct that money to your emergency fund. For example, if you spend three dollars, five days a week, on a Grande Latte at Starbucks, this little indulgence adds up to about $800 per year. We make coffee at home using a French Press and freshly ground Illy coffee beans. It’s fresh and tasty and costs a fraction of what we would pay for the very mediocre coffee served at Starbucks.

If you indulge in a weekly $20 manicure, or in a monthly $200 shopping spree, your annual savings could be even higher. Other areas where you can probably save are magazine purchases (especially stupid women’s magazines), cable TV (we pay for the basic plan. Several of my friends gave up cable altogether), giving up your land line and using just your cell phone, eating out less often, and shopping around for cheaper car insurance. We saved almost $500 per year when we switched our car insurance.

Where Should I Keep My Emergency Fund?

Keep your emergency fund in an FDIC-insured money market or savings account. You’ll get a very low interest rate, but your principal will be safe and your money will be accessible if and when you need it.

What If I Already Have Credit Card Debt? Should I Pay It Off First?

Experts are divided on this one.  While some say you should have at least a $1000 cushion to avoid being forced back into more credit card debt if an emergency happens while you’re still paying your debt, others think credit card interest is so high, you should do everything in your power to pay down credit card debt first.

According to Kiplinger, the best answer lies in separating good debt from bad debt. It’s almost always a good idea to get rid of credit card and other high-interest loans before you start setting aside cash. However, you probably don’t want to accelerate mortgage or student loans at the expense of saving for retirement.

Earlier this week my car wouldn’t start. It was good to know that the only worry I had was the hassle of taking it to the car shop and paying to fix it. There was absolutely no question of where would I get the money to fix it. This is exactly what emergency funds are for.


I am not a financial adviser. The information provided here is general in nature. Prior to taking any action, please do your own research.

Photo credit: stuartpilbrow