Finding My Own Role Model (guest post from Joanna Charnas)
During the 1970s, many of the girls in my high school had feathered blond hair, like Farrah Fawcett, who starred in the television show Charlie's Angels and was a huge celebrity at the time. Short, curvy, and dark haired, I couldn’t relate to her at all.
I spent much of my free time in adolescence obsessively watching classic movies in art houses, among them the 1955 film The Rose Tattoo, starring Anna Magnani and Burt Lancaster. The day I saw that movie, I discovered a star I could relate to. She was dark and curvy, just like me.
This year while lunching with my stepmother and aunt, I told them I’d always wanted to look like Anna Magnani. They both immediately exclaimed, “You do!”
I was deeply gratified. I finally fulfilled my ideal of female beauty.
We can spend our lives wanting to be something we’re not, or we can set our own standards. We don’t have to fit into what’s popular. I found a movie star I could relate to, and she provided the image I strove for. I can’t believe I finally succeeded.
Joanna Charnas is author of 100 Tips and Tools for Managing Chronic Illness and Living Well with Chronic Illness.
You can read more posts from Charnas on her blog.
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