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I used to be attractive, how has this happened?

283 replies

Unattractice · 24/06/2024 16:08

I used to be attractive. Not mind blowingly gorgeous but I felt attractive and had attention, I would get dates easily. Men were interested. I left the house feeling like I looked good.

I have an 18 month old. She sleeps so it’s not about lack of sleep. But I look awful! Honestly, my hair won’t take dye properly anymore, even at salons it comes out looking the same and still dull. My skin is darker with more brown patches. My make up won’t go on nicely. My face looks smaller but also saggier. Literally months before i was pregnant I look entirely different. I could make myself look good. I look shit now no matter what I do? Why?! Surely it’s not just childbirth?

OP posts:
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Devilsmommy · 24/06/2024 16:16

Oh I feel you. I have a 21 month old and I'm 100% certain that I never used to look this haggard and shit. I've always been pale skinned but fuck me I look like a bloody vampire now. And after little one being a terrible sleeper for the first year I just can't seem to shift that look of absolute exhaustion even though he sleeps through the night now. I'm 37 and I'm pretty sure I look about 100😅

TipsyKoala · 24/06/2024 16:23

Same. Since having children 10 years ago I look 20 years older.

BingoMarieHeeler · 24/06/2024 16:25

It’s not childbirth, it’s pregnancy. When they say your body is never the same again, they don’t just mean the size of it. I have 3 kids and the first gave me continence issues, the second gave me an autoimmune disease and the third one took my looks.

YouJustDoYou · 24/06/2024 16:27

Kids did that to me too 😅

solosleeper · 24/06/2024 16:32

Yep I relate. In my case I've also put 2 stone on too which is just excellent. It's not really the weight though, i could lose that if I tried. It's the ageing. I'm so much more wrinkly. My face sags. I feel grey and haggard. And I'm not even 40 yet!!!!!!!
I do think sleep deprivation has a lot to answer for. I always find that my make up seems to slide off and my hair never feels nice after a particularly bad night.
No advice but solidarity!

TigerOnTour · 24/06/2024 16:34

It's definitely having a child. The general lack of rest and the toll of pregnancy, birth, sleep deprivation and chasing around after a kid.

Also, I think one ages a lot between 35 and 40.

Newgirls · 24/06/2024 16:35

are you sleeping? Eating ok? Drinking loads of water? All that can be hard when looking after a baby

yourlittleworldfallingapart · 24/06/2024 16:36

I think it's partly the contrast with pregnancy hair/nails/skin and post partum, and the cumulative effect of sleep deprivation. I am 2.5 years in with a non-sleeper and I look fucking dreadful.

I have thrown money at the problem with dental work, Botox, highlights and regular eyebrow waxing.

I'm fat too but I can't bring myself to do anything about that beyond a twice a week slow jog.

It's shit and demoralising but I figure everyone ends up looking old eventually, it's about just trying to look the best you can given your age and stage.

randoname · 24/06/2024 16:40

Ah you younguns!!
I’m probably 30 years older than you and feel more attractive now than toddlermom years. There’s a sort of doughy out of kilterness isn’t there.
Flowers because knowing you’ll feel great in 30 years probably isn’t much comfort. But it doesn’t matter Flowers

BottomlessBrunch · 24/06/2024 16:43

So I had my kids in my 20s and honestly looked dreadful - I'm early 40s and genuinely look better now than then.

Combination back then of not enough sleep, too much sugar, takeaways/ready meals as too tired to cook and not enough proper exercise. Plus I really hated having young children.

Wish I could show before and after photos.

Life is so much better now they're teens. (Still busy and comes with stresses but I'd take this era over the baby and toddlerhood one any day!)

takealettermsjones · 24/06/2024 16:50

It's the trenches of young kids! I look dreadful too. I think all we can do is cling to health as best we can and then revisit the looks thing when we're serene, uncaring 40 year olds (that's the plan anyway). I'm trying to drink more water, drink less alcohol, eat more fruit, eat less salt, wear sunscreen, and remember to take my sodding vitamins - in the hope that I'll emerge on the other side with something to show for it all. I'm not holding my breath though 🤣

SpidersAreShitheads · 24/06/2024 16:53

Have you ever watched the birds in springtime?

When they're building their nests their feathers are full, glossy, and their colours are bright. By the time their fledglings have left the nest, their plumage is drab, feathers are missing, and they just look as if they've flown through the proverbial hedge backwards.

Every time I see the knackered-looking blue tit fly past my kitchen window I think " I remember that feeling."

You might think you're getting good sleep but you may not be sleeping as deeply as before. Looking after a toddler is EXHAUSTING. There's no "off" switch. You're always ready to spring into action. It's not just about the physicality of it, it's the mental drain too. That's why so much is written about the need for self-care - which many of us just laugh hollowly at.

Don't underestimate what it takes from you to raise a child. How much of yourself you are giving, perhaps without even realising it.

And of course, there's pregnancy.

We're so fucking obsessed with weight as a society that all the focus is on whether a woman "snaps back" to her pre-pregnancy weight (I'm looking at you Joe fucking Wicks).

But what we don't talk about is the long-term changes to your skin. Not just your belly. But all over. How the swinging hormones take their toll. How your hair changes after childbirth. Mine took two full years to feel even vaguely normal. How your shape can change - irrespective of weight.

Your body has grown and carried an actual human being. It's incredible when you really think about it. We focus on what we see on the outside, but stopping to consider about what happens internally really puts it all into perspective. The enormous changes a female body has to go through to become pregnant and to sustain a life can't be overstated. Hormone levels go through the roof, and then they plummet. You might end up with a new baseline "normal".

Pregnancy and childbirth isn't just about avoiding stretch marks and losing "baby weight". I found it changed my body irrevocably - some positive effects actually, my migraines almost vanished and my hair is WAY thicker than it was before. But many negatives - my upper abdomen sticks out (I carried twins), my skin is crepey, and my menstrual cycle is different.

At 18 months you're still in the midst of it. Some things will improve. Also, I'm absolutely certain you don't look as terrible as you feel 💐

Notmycircusnotmyotter · 24/06/2024 17:00

What a thoughtful, insightful post @SpidersAreShitheads

Flyrightby · 24/06/2024 17:01

My son has always slept well too and I could write your exact post.

For me, it's the relentlessness of having kids (or 1 kid in my case!) Even if they're easy.

I think the fact that weekends and holidays and even evenings used to be purely for downtime makes a huge difference. We don't have any help so every day is full on for 13 hours. Evenings are cooking/ironing/tidying up/hair washing.

Plus, pregnancy made my feet, hands and nose bigger, I grew skin tags and I just look about 10 years older than I did even 3 years ago. I'm quite shocked when I see photos from then to now!

Newgirls · 24/06/2024 17:06

I do think you will look back and think you looked lovely. I have a pic of me at that stage and yes I’m tired but nowhere near as bad as I thought

Becauseurworthit · 24/06/2024 17:07

Just hang in there and really look after yourself (and your pelvic floor 😊!). Make time to exercise (running around with the kids or walking them everywhere all counts). Eat well.

Thinking it was all downhill from having kids, I was really comforted by analysis of Park Run & 10k female stats by age in our area - women on average ran slower in their late 20's & 30's, but women in their 40's tended to come back and kick ass with the teenagers / women early 20's. And so it has proved to be. Honestly, you will feel great again, just hang in there, look after your health and enjoy the kids when they are little.

MariaVT65 · 24/06/2024 17:09

Yeah tbh from just reading your header, i assumed you had little kids.

I have a 3 year old and a baby and look like fucking shit. My greys also definitely ramped up.

TemuSpecialBuy · 24/06/2024 17:10

babies literally suck the nutrients out of you!

My granny used to joke she lost a tooth with every baby - and she had NINE babies 😵‍💫

DazedNotConfused1 · 24/06/2024 17:10

Could have written this! I have a 2 and one year old and I look terrible. Hair is dry, broken and short. Skin is aged and have a rash on my face I can’t get rid of. Makeup goes on rubbish - I literally can’t make myself look good even when I try! My body weighs the same but is all out of shape so looks rubbish in clothes.

I miss being pretty.

GlitterBall91 · 24/06/2024 17:12

I’m the same ! Unrecognisable almost !

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 24/06/2024 17:13

I feel like this and mine are 15 and 10!

It wasn’t having the children though - for me since lockdown/ having Covid during lockdown I have never felt attractive again.

I put on weight during the lockdowns (stressful wfh whilst home schooling, plus not going as many places) and can’t shed it. Also have entered the menopause.

Lostworlds · 24/06/2024 17:14

Massively relate and it’s kinda warming to know I’m not the only one. I have a 2 year old and a baby and never felt so rubbish about myself before.
Wouldn’t have said I was good looking but I felt positive about myself, now I hate pretty much everything about myself. Also the make up thing drives me insane, I do t wear a lot of make up and try have it looking natural but my skin feels so different now

TheYearOfSmallThings · 24/06/2024 17:18

What age are you, OP?

If you are 25 this is probably just a lack of sleep, lack of time to look after yourself, and partly your perception. You will bounce back when you get through the toddler phase.

If you are late thirties or older then the same factors are harder to bounce back from, and it takes a concerted effort, but you can still do it if you are determined.

Duckies · 24/06/2024 17:24

Agree with PPs about pregnancy literally sucking the nutrients out of you. I was so unaware of this and did nothing to compensate before, during or after 🤦‍♀️ so I'm belated sorting myself out.

Take a complete multivitamin and do your best in terms of the food you're eating (hard to make that a priority with a toddler).

Are you/have you been breastfeeding? Have you recently tapered or stopped? That has a huge impact on your hormones and can take a while to settle.

Tillievanilly · 24/06/2024 17:25

I think it’s exhausting having small children, trying to juggle everything. I think I look better now than when my children were small as I was so tired from running in circles plus I didn’t get much sleep!

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