
Ten years ago, I was almost 60 pounds more than I am now.
I had cut my hair short, added a few highlights and really had this  frumpy vibe going on. I had two kids at the time, ages 6 and 2. I was  trying to be taken seriously as a good mommy and had let myself go. I  was eating a ridiculous amount of sugar. I cared way too much about what  other women thought of me. I formed new friendships with the moms from  school and they frequently revolved around food. I hated the way I  looked, but I fit in. After seeing the pictures from a trip to Disney  with my family, I wondered how I let it happen. I knew I was wearing a  size 14 and at five feet tall, it looked like I was wearing an even  bigger size. I had a double chin and knew if I didn't stop this weight  train, I'd be even bigger.
I lost 50 pounds in six months. I changed how I ate and worked out  like crazy. It was great and I felt pretty... except for a few ugly  things. First of all, one of the moms joked that if I lost any more  weight, no one would want to hang out with me. I already felt that.  There was a judgment thing going on and of course jealousy could have  been behind it. Also, people don't like when we change. It bugs them  out. It makes them confront certain parts of themselves they think they  can't change. Many times when a woman would see I lost weight, she would  tell me how they should lose weight or give me excuses why they  haven't. I never knew what to say. I'd offer tips, but the conversation  never really seemed to be about weight in the end.
The other side effect I was not ready for was that creepy guy stared  at me randomly, making me feel uncomfortable and naked. I had gone from  one person people saw -- an overweight woman -- to the cute young thing.  I had also started growing my hair longer and dressing younger, and so I  looked more my age. It was bizarre. This kind of attention was a  double-edged sword. Seeing younger guys glance my way, checking me out  at the gym, was very flattering and motivating to keep me going on the  Stairmaster.  But getting out of the car at the convenience store and  feeling someone's eyes on me in a negative, disgusting, weird way felt  awful. I didn't know how to act. I could see why someone would want to  hide their body. I didn't want to have to wear baggy clothes out of fear  and change who I was because of others. I was still trying to figure  out who I was and wouldn't know her for quite a few more years. I  actually felt like guys took me more seriously when I was overweight and  treated me like a ditz when I was thinner. The whole thing was a mind  trip.
Thank my thirties for the wisdom they keep bringing me. This fiery  attitude is me, take it or leave it.  Ladies, there is no need to  compare ourselves to one another physically, career-wise, as moms or in  any way. Work on yourself and develop a relationship with your  body-mind-spirit. This changes everything. Don't ever feel like you have  to adjust how you dress or how you are because of a man or a woman's  reaction to you. How they react, think, speak and act is about them, not  you. Men, don't objectify a woman who is dressed in a bikini or be  disrespectful because you like the way a woman looks. A woman should  never feel like she has to hide her body for fear of comments, ogling or  creeper behavior. That is never going to get a guy anywhere anyway.  Compliment a woman's intelligence, character, integrity, her heart.  Praise who she is -- that's wooing her. Tell her that her eyes are  beautiful, not her ass, or else she feels like all you want is a piece  of ass.
Now, I don't expect females who don't know they're beautiful to play a  tiny violin and feel bad for someone who feels judged for their beauty.  I see beauty in all women and don't think there is any standard we have  to live up to. True beauty comes from the inside, in a woman's  passions, creativity, successes, her true essence; it shines out through  her eyes and smile. When a woman loves herself, she gives off this air  of confidence and like a magnet, people are drawn to that.
There's no such thing as an ugly woman, in my opinion. Ugly behavior  yes, but there is something beautiful about every woman. Own that,  ladies. No apologies for your beauty, sass or smarts -- EVER. Never let  anyone define you by your appearance, be it your face, hair or weight.  You define yourself. Let's teach the young girls how to become great  women.