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Beauty is apparently in the eye of the beholder…

July 3rd, 2010

And I do not have it.

I’d like to think that I’m a natural, more classic beauty. This occurs on the days when my self-esteem has not been hampered and allows myself to concede that I do hold some sort of beautiful quality. I would not call myself polished, however. I do  not wear make-up, and I do not spend any more time than washing my hair in the morning. It’d be perfect if I lived near the sea in Greece, but not here.

I’m trying so much to focus on the inside. Unless I’m healthy on the inside, how can I ever look healthy on the outside? I don’t want to be one of those women that needs 5 pounds of make-up, especially when it some 80% that you absorb into your skin over your lifetime. I want to make sure my skin looks healthy because I’m hydrating enough. My eyes should be clearer when I’ve eaten more vegetables. My muscles should be strong from exercise to support the rest of my body.

But in American standards, I don’t think I look that beautiful. My calves are huge and muscular. You can look at them, and I think, tell that I could probably kick your ass. Same by looking at my arms. You can tell I have curves. I am hippy and definitely not rail-thin like I was in high school. Looking at my wild, naturally big and wavy hair, it seems more organic and what I thought glamorous. I keep it long to incite touch. My eyes are very sultry and telling of my face, and I’ve been told I have great lips.

But American men just don’t seem too keen on these ideals. Surveys say they like the curvy women and “real” ones, but when I observe their behavior, they check out all the rain-thin ones. I don’t understand this inconsistency.

This is what I’m encountering with my boyfriend. There are definite reasons to believe his sexual desire for me has waned. I keep trying to initiate it  but get shot down often. I even got to the point where I thought it might be low testosterone, because this seemed a very sudden change of character.

But now I’m wondering if it’s because he doesn’t find me sexually attractive. I constantly find him checking out blonde women, skinnier than I am, with very polished make-up, clothes, everything. He spends his time looking at those women. I’m not any of those things. I never have and I don’t know if I ever will. So I can’t help but imagine that he’s wondering if the grass is greener on the other side? I don’t base my entire self-esteem on his reactions to me, but damn, I do rate my sexual attractiveness by his actions (or inaction). I struggle with it every day, because I think he looks at me less as a sexual release more and more. Overall there’s just less intimacy as well. Less cuddling, less hand-holding, less kissing. But we don’t seem to be falling out. Maybe we’re just becoming more of friends than lovers? And if that’s the truth, it really fucking hurts, because I want more than that and am constantly pushing for more than that.

Hell, I know foreign men find me extremely attractive. And you know what, I consider myself a pretty attractive person. Why the hell can’t my boyfriend?

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The three entities in a relationship

May 12th, 2010

Last night I actually spouted something meaningful while engaged in conversation with my boyfriend. I said, and I quote, “There are three entities in this relationship. You, me, and us. All three need to be balanced.” He seemed to be taken in by this comment, because he fell silent for a moment and just agreed with me. But what exactly does this mean?

Me – There’s a shitton I want to do with my life. Open up my own firm, get my PhD in art theory, philosophy, and aesthetics, get in shape and better health, become a better martial artist, etc. Brian, my boyfriend, is helping me out with some of this. He tries to provide a healthy environment for me to live in, helps me work out, teaches me tai chi and such.

You – There’s a shitton my partner wants to do as well. He wants to open up his own school and practice, become a better martial artist, grow as an acupuncturist and a person. I’m helping him with his business, providing marketing sense, print collateral, and websites.   I also provide a support beam for him to believe that he can be this person he wants to be.

It’s a mutually beneficial relationship. One of us isn’t giving more than the other. The only thing is through all of this the Us part suffers. We don’t build things together, do as many activities together as we should. We don’t go on dates, mainly because we both don’t have money to be spending like that. Pretty much the only nurturing of Us that has gone on has been through moving in together and having the home look like both of us, and we make dinner together, each of us alternating days on who cooks. We do tai chi together, but right now it’s very separate. I’m doing it to get good and compete, he’s doing it because it makes him feel good. We haven’t quite gotten to the part where we do it together because we like doing it together. The motives have not stacked yet.

How do other couples solve this problem? Especially when one party is trying to contribute more to that aspect than the other? I’m wondering how to best approach this.

 

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