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I wrote this several years ago for More.com.  It is even truer today.  And it still annoys me.  

How much will you hate me if I tell you that the word ‘reinvention’ is beginning to irritate me. Buzz words have that effect on me. Their familiarity breeds contempt, not to mention antipathy. Today in my annoyed state, I started thinking about what reinvention actually means. Is this a word that actually applies to us?

According to the dictionary (Merrimen-Webster) there are three meanings for the word reinvention:

1 : to make as if for the first time something already invented <reinvent the wheel>

2 : to remake or redo completely

3 : to bring into use again

At first I thought that Definition #1 didn’t really apply to us. I even started to write… “It doesn’t apply unless we’re getting extremely esoteric, as in reinventing the midlife woman….” Oh. That stopped me.

Reinventing the midlife woman—isn’t that exactly what we’re trying to do? To take the tired old truisms about women in midlife—what they want, what they’re capable of, what they look like, what they deserve—and make a new model. A new wheel, to continue the metaphor. One that is smooth and perhaps bound in rubber, rather than rutted and cracked and woefully off-kilter.

But that’s a grand concept, and Grand Concepts tend to give me a headache. Besides, they’re only good when you’re in grand company and since it’s just you and me here, the whole notion is just too impersonal.

Which leaves me with #2 and #3. Can I own one or both of them? Well, not really. I have a problem with “to remake or redo completely.” I don’t want a complete redoing. I don’t even know that I want a partial one. That smacks to me of a total dissatisfaction with my self and my life—which is just not, for me, the case.

And #3, “to bring into use again” also seems somewhat direr than I feel. What part of me actually needs to be brought into use again? Has something in me atrophied over the years? My ambition? No. My drive? No. So what, then?

If I really think about what I’m doing here, it’s not reinventing my self; it’s just continuing along the same plane of development that I’ve been on all along. And realizing that, I see that the only definition that applies is the Grand Concept, reinventing the midlife woman. That’s something that we do as a group, however. It’s an aggregate of each of us continuing along our same planes of development, wherever they may lead us. Individually most of us are not reinventing ourselves—no need to—we’re just evolving.

And you? What does reinvention mean to you?

Photo credit: care2.com

 

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When my friends and I get together there is one topic that hogs the conversation. It’s not politics or the economy. It’s not sex or even our families. It’s the fact that we no longer see what we’re used to when we look in the mirror and, frankly, we’re not sure what to do about that.

We’re hungry for information about all things cosmetic, even those of us who used to be above such things. Yet the usual places to find such information–the women’s magazines–are, for those of us fifty plus, pretty lean. Vogue does a women at every age issue once a year. Harper’s Bazaar does it as a monthly photo feature. More seems less focused on us than the lower end of the Boomer generations.

So quietly and behind closed doors, we’re talking to each other. What do you use? What works? What doesn’t? What’s worth the money? What isn’t? Have you tried this? Would you? Yes? No? Maybe?

MidLife-Beauty is a window onto what my friends and I are saying to each other about makeup and hair, our skin and our bodies. We’ll be trying new products and talking about old ones. We’ll go into the science journals to learn what we have to about the latest new thing and what it might or might not do to us. And we’ll talk to each other, debating the issues of beauty.

Right now, we’re writing about things we’ve found and bought ourselves. If that ever changes, we’ll make clear when there’s sponsorship involved.

MidLife-Beauty shares with MidLifeBloggers the tag line: Making the Most of Midlife Together. That means, we’re looking for your input, your questions, your comments and, for those of you who blog, your posts. Join our Advisory Committee, sign up to receive us via email or RSS.  Tell us what you think, like, hate, want, need in this site.  We’re in beta now, so we’re tweaking, revising and editing out at will.  Help us do that.

 

 

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