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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To find it sad young women are so ageist towards older women

30 replies

ThatNimblePeer · 19/07/2025 15:41

My job involves quite a lot of mentoring of younger colleagues, often women. I’m in my early 40s and they will typically be mid-late 20s. In general I get on well with them and enjoy the mentoring and the conversation, sometimes we’ll become friends and go for coffee. They’re definitely not intentionally being rude, but I find it very striking how many unthinkingly ageist comments towards older women they will make to me when we’re chatting in a more informal way, e.g. criticising or laughing at women in the public eye because they look too ‘old’ or supposedly aren’t looking as good as they used to (e.g. actresses), or with one we got talking about the word ‘spinster’ and how it’s still seen as so negative and she said she thought it was because people associate it with old women (so, obviously awful then!) Tbh I can remember having some of those biases myself at that age, but I feel embarrassed by them now, and I sort of thought this generation of women was seen as more consciously feminist and aware of not putting down other women. I think that’s maybe filtered through in terms of not being unnecessarily competitive with women their own age, but it seems very clear that it hasn’t filtered through to some of their attitudes about older women. I find it sad, not least because it just doesn’t seem to occur to them that they will ‘become’ those older women in the not too distant future, and very much won’t enjoy being written off when that happens. Sometimes I try to gently point that out to them, but I don’t really want to give them a lecture, and tbh it is surprising to me that intelligent young women can’t figure that out for themselves.

AIBU to think that a lot of young women still have pretty unreconstructed attitudes to older women, and to find that surprising and sad in this generation?

OP posts:
IrishSelkie · 18/02/2026 15:28

BatchCookBabe · 18/02/2026 15:20

Where did you see it? It hadn't been posted on for 7-8 months. I wonder how people come across these older threads. 😃

It came up under active. I know now to check the date!

ThatNimblePeer · 18/02/2026 15:50

FateAmenableToChange · 18/02/2026 15:11

Hmmm I've worked with a lot of young people in a university setting and that is definitely not typical. Its the kind of thinking I would associate with the uneducated, people who lack critical thinking skills, world view, and experience. Sadly its says a lot more about them than anything else. What profession is it?

Fwiw these are Russell Group graduates in professional roles (not that that's any guarantee of not saying something stupid). And they are not straight out of university but mid-late 20s. I know it's almost a defining feature of youth (in the sense of teenage/early 20s years) that you don't believe getting older will happen to you, but I do find it slightly surprising that these highly intelligent women five or more years into their career still seem to be lingering in that mindset.

OP posts:
LydiaFunnyGums · 10/04/2026 07:59

ThatNimblePeer · 19/07/2025 15:41

My job involves quite a lot of mentoring of younger colleagues, often women. I’m in my early 40s and they will typically be mid-late 20s. In general I get on well with them and enjoy the mentoring and the conversation, sometimes we’ll become friends and go for coffee. They’re definitely not intentionally being rude, but I find it very striking how many unthinkingly ageist comments towards older women they will make to me when we’re chatting in a more informal way, e.g. criticising or laughing at women in the public eye because they look too ‘old’ or supposedly aren’t looking as good as they used to (e.g. actresses), or with one we got talking about the word ‘spinster’ and how it’s still seen as so negative and she said she thought it was because people associate it with old women (so, obviously awful then!) Tbh I can remember having some of those biases myself at that age, but I feel embarrassed by them now, and I sort of thought this generation of women was seen as more consciously feminist and aware of not putting down other women. I think that’s maybe filtered through in terms of not being unnecessarily competitive with women their own age, but it seems very clear that it hasn’t filtered through to some of their attitudes about older women. I find it sad, not least because it just doesn’t seem to occur to them that they will ‘become’ those older women in the not too distant future, and very much won’t enjoy being written off when that happens. Sometimes I try to gently point that out to them, but I don’t really want to give them a lecture, and tbh it is surprising to me that intelligent young women can’t figure that out for themselves.

AIBU to think that a lot of young women still have pretty unreconstructed attitudes to older women, and to find that surprising and sad in this generation?

Let them mock, criticise and laugh. They won’t be in their mid to late twenties forever.

LifeIsShambolic · 10/04/2026 08:43

It's mostly fear I think. I know when I was in my late teens/early 20's I used to look at women in their 40's and swear that would never, ever be me!
I would never 'give up' and would always wear lovely clothes and have the best make-up yada yada yada......
Anyway, at 42 I am now the woman 20 something me would have despised! I wear whatever is comfortable rather than stylish, my make-up is cheap and (hopefully) cheerful and I cut/dye my own hair when I can be bothered.
I am overweight and exhausted (health conditions, yay!) and have minimal fucks to give.
I think we are harsh on younger women, they fear getting older (societies fault) and can see on a daily basis the way their lives are heading and in their young minds it is something to avoid at all costs. Obviously the ones too silly to keep their mouths shut need taking down a peg or two but I think most of them just think they will never be us until they are!

Riapia · 10/04/2026 09:11

I think ageism will always be there.
Although I haven’t heard the expression “mutton dressed as lamb” recently.

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