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Chilling
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Dressing Older Is About Wealth
Dressing Older Is About Wealth
When 28-year-old me imagined reaching Eileen Fisher status, I was actually imagining that I would have achieved the milestones that are supposed to come with late middle age: a house, retirement savings, vacation time.
I’m not sure I even knew who Eileen Fisher was in 2000.
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Pause | Mary Ruefle | Granta Magazine
Pause | Mary Ruefle | Granta Magazine
…you have discovered that being invisible is the biggest secret on earth, the most wondrous gift anyone could ever have given you.
Nope, still not liking this sentiment.
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Andie MacDowell, Still Worth It
Andie MacDowell, Still Worth It
The critical praise, some of it backhanded — Andie MacDowell can act! — reminded the actress of the year she turned 40, and colleagues asked her, as she recalled recently, how it felt to have hit an age when she’d never work again.
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Parker Posey Still Loves Generation X
Parker Posey Still Loves Generation X
You don’t find that there are many movies made with women like you in mind? There’s so many women out there that are like, “I’m like that!” They like the Christopher Guest movies. Or they’re living in Portland or Seattle or Austin or New Orleans or New York City or Silver Lake and Eagle Rock. I’d love to see the story of those people. Or people that are more like us. Because I love my generation. I love Generation X.
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Exclusive: June 2018 cover star Zadie Smith weighs in on the great age debate
Exclusive: June 2018 cover star Zadie Smith weighs in on the great age debate
I grew up in a culture suspiciously eager to convince me that an 80-year-old woman with a 20-year-old man was at the best comically grotesque, at the worst, some form of perversity, while Chaplin and his youthful loves, by contrast, were an example of the ‘agelessness’ of men. But the truth is — as I think those teenage boys suspected — age exists for us all. It comes to you whether you believe in it or not. And I am now very grateful to be in a body that reminds me every day of this simple human truth. Which is not to say age does not bring me sadness, that I don’t sometimes mourn for my 27-year-old self, nor miss a certain version of my face, breasts, legs or teeth. I feel all of that natural, human sadness. And I do all the usual things — exercise, eat decently, dress optimistically — in the hope of slowing the inevitable process. But there are limits to that hope: limits like the menopause, limits like the end of my fertility. And thank God for them, because hope without limit is another word for delusion.
I can’t imagine discussing Charlie Chaplin with boys as a teen, but I’m no Zadie Smith.
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Old Slightly Suburban Semi-Pro
I was recently called a “yuppie” online by a vitriolic stranger because I have enough money for a downpayment to buy a house in Portland, my hometown. Which first off, lol to using yuppie in 2018, but also I’m flattered that anyone would mistake me for young, as I am only a month away from 46. (Professional is also debatable.)
The last time I was called a yuppie was around 1999 on Chowhound when I said there weren’t any good restaurants in Ridgewood, Queens. It’s hard to imagine Ridgewood in 1999, but take my word for it.
Oh, I shouldn’t have to even say this, but people buying homes in non-hip, non-gentrified, far-flung neighborhoods in Portland isn’t the cause of rampant homelessness.
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Mind blown.
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Opinion | How to Survive Your 40s
Opinion | How to Survive Your 40s
“Forty isn’t even technically middle age anymore. Someone who’s now 40 has a 50 percent chance of living to 95, says the economist Andrew Scott, a co-author of “The 100-Year Life.”