I dye my hair and had braces as a child to correct my thumb-sucking created bucked teeth, so I've always been wary of criticising others for taking steps to enhance their appearance.
I also recognise that human nature means one (generally speaking) wants to look their best - to attract a partner, to align oneself with one's peers and to (most importantly to me, especially at my stage of life in a long-term, settled relationship), to feel good about oneself. This applies to males and females.
Looking good is and always has been important to me. I wear make-up. I enhance my appearance. I like clothes and choose them with care. I'm tall and also wear high heels.
However... as a feminist and therefore as a being who goes around without my blinkers on; who sees the world and has no wish to deny all that is apparent in unequal terms between men and women... I fully recognise the social conditioning and pressure that has gone into my thought processes and that my 'preferences' have not been conjured up in a vacuum.
I don't think I would ever get Botox, since injecting botulimum toxin into my face seems like a very slightly contrived - potentially dangerous - thing to do. However, if there was something less extreme that did the same job I can't say that I definitely would not go for it by the time I hit my 40s or 50s.
My daughter is 2. She comes into the bathroom with me every morning when I'm getting ready and will sometimes ask, 'what are you doing mummy?' My response is always - 'I'm just conforming to patriarchal standards of beauty, darling', with a smile. She has absolutely no idea what I'm talking about.
It will be years before she does. But I will keep saying it when she asks. And I will fully undestand and sympathise when the time comes for her to start feeling the need to conform to patriarchal standards of beauty. It afflicts the best of us.
I said on another thread running at the moment that it takes a really huge amount of guts to be 'the woman who does not conform'. Who eschews make-up and who never de-hairs. Who perhaps brushes their hair and their teeth but then otherwise goes out as God intended her. As men routinely do without a second thought nor backward glance. I was scoffed at by a male poster for the assertion - as I fully expected to be. But I maintain the stance 100%. It is very, very difficult to be that woman in this society.
In terms of my daughter, I will sympathise when (if?) she gets to an age to start conforming also, but I will encourage her to do it with her eyes wide open, to recognise the reasons why she does it, and to always, always question, and to do what feels right for her. I want her to challenge perceptions and mindsets - not to just role over and accept men and like this, and women are like that and it will be forever thus.
So yeah, I don't think having work done is the preserve of a certain type of women. I think we are all susceptible to it to a greater or lesser extent. I also think it will get worse before it ever gets better. But it's so lovely to have places like this where like-minded people view these decisions through a similar lens, and who question and challenge, and who recognise the societal pressure placed on us instead of rushing to deny them and stick their heads in the sand over it all.