
From Stillness To Flight: On Beauty At Sixty
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Let me begin by telling you what I think I know.
Written by Karen Richards
Category
lifestyle
Date
12/06/2023
Length
12 min read
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Beauty is more than that which is seen―more than something you are or are not.
Not night and day, but dusk and gloaming, the faint echoes of light from the sun caught in the lowering sky of evening.
It’s something you do, and feel, made through an unseen alchemy―kneading a ball of stubborn dough between your floury fingers until―like the magic of yeast devouring sugars beneath a damp cloth―it rises unbidden from the darkness.
I find myself here. Six decades in. Still thinking from time to time, sixty cannot happen to me. To others, yes, of course.
Six decades means I can no longer use the word girl to describe myself and neither can anyone else, except perhaps my father. Not a miss, but a ma’am. Not a pretty girl any longer, let alone a beautiful one.
Sixty began with a surprise party three thousand miles from home held for someone who does not welcome surprises. And ended with a day of unexpected joy: dancing to songs of the 70s―James Taylor Fire and Rain, Cat Stevens The Wind―tissue paper and tears, the words of a poem my teenage son wrote for me: as willows fall and darkness seeps, my mom is standing tall, both feet. An opal necklace with two heavy stones that belonged first to my Irish grandmother―a gift from her husband at the end of the Second World War―then to my mother, who wore it for weddings and christenings through the years, resting for the first time in the hollow of my throat. Trying to fall asleep in the blackout dark of a strange air-conditioned hotel room, my husband’s hands clasping mine as we matched our breaths in the moments before our separate dreams overtook us.
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Beauty
I’m not certain at this moment whether I’ve lost or found it.
I’m neither embracing nor resisting growing older, but peeling back the complicated veil of vanity to reveal what is underneath. Retracing and returning again to the girl I once was, the woman I am now, and the girl I will always be.
A memory appears unsolicited on my Facebook feed. The familiar sandstone clocktower of the Ferry Building piercing a brilliant blue sky. A photo of me in San Francisco on the wide boulevard of the Embarcadero after a day of walking the hills from the Financial District up through Chinatown and North Beach down to the edge of the Bay. Standing straight and tall and looking directly into the camera.
I did not yet know what was to happen to me. I hadn’t settled into the person I would become, not yet a mother or a wife. The confidence in my stance rising still from a place of innocence, from unknowing, and the obstinate strength of youth.
Dare me, she seemed to say.
Am I still that girl, or now someone else entirely?
Are the other girls inside me―at three, thirteen, twenty-three―still me―Russian nesting dolls, the infant in the center cradled by later versions of herself?
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My blooming took its time
Fair infant, with the dimpled cheeks of a blonde Gerber baby. Then a cute scrappy kid, skinny and freckled, with brown hair cut tomboy short, skinned knees and hazel eyes dominating my face, taking it all in. Awkward in middle school and most of high school, muffled under insecurity, eyeglasses I hated to wear, teen breakouts, and a layer of baby fat as we called it then. An impossible distance between the girl in the mirror and the images in magazines: long-legged, thin, sophisticated and cool―Cheryl Tiegs and Margaux Hemingway―even the Charlie girl in the TV commercials. The only one I could find to relate to in those glossy well-thumbed pages of Glamour and Mademoiselle was Patti Hansen, who in her early modeling days had a round face, freckles and a wide grin.
I decided I’d rather be nearsighted than wear my glasses, stumbling through years before contact lenses of not recognizing people from a distance because I couldn’t see them.
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Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer nec odio. Praesent libero. Sed cursus ante dapibus diam. Sed nisi. Nulla quis sem at nibh elementum imperdiet.
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