Thursday, September 12, 2013

You're Not Pretty Enough: Excerpt and Giveaway



The thing about You're Not Pretty Enough, storyteller Jennifer Tress's alternately hilarious and searing memoir, is that it's not really about being pretty. In fact, save for the argument with her then-husband that the book's title comes from—uttered unbelievably (except totally believably) in the midst of discussions about his inattentiveness and infidelity—prettiness doesn't make much of a star turn at all. Yet that's exactly why I found it valuable, because the thing about not feeling pretty enough is that...it's not really about being pretty either. It's about being enough

When Tress launched her website, she'd titled it You're Not Pretty Enough because of that stinging exchange with her then-husband. She soon noticed that search terms that landed people at her site were those of people looking for comfort in the midst of feeling...well, not pretty enough. And so in addition to compiling her personal tales, which showcase the best of what storytelling has to offer, she conceived a mission: Get women talking in a more thoughtful manner about appearance. (Lo and behold, that's exactly the mission I've got here! You see why I'm pleased to feature Tress.) I asked her to expand more on the "enough" part of "you're not pretty enough," and this is what she had to say:



"'Enough' is such a weird qualifier, isn’t it? But it’s one that we use a lot when describing our dissatisfaction with ourselves or with others. Whether it be good enough, smart enough, or pretty enough—it’s all about feeling 'enough.' That we’re whole, we’re valuable. It reminds me of that old skit from Saturday Night Live with (now Senator!) Al Franken as Stuart Smalley: I’m good enough, I’m smart enough, and doggone it…people like me!

Based on the work I’ve done through the You're Not Pretty Enough website, I’ve found that not feeling 'pretty enough' is often the entrée into self-esteem issues because it’s the easiest/laziest way we assess ourselves and others (which is reinforced by media and other cultural standards that we compare ourselves to). On the positive side, I also believe that beauty matters very little to most people, and to some, beauty doesn’t matter one bit. The key is for beauty to matter very little to ourselves. I want to share with you a message someone posted on the Facebook page that demonstrates this point. She says:

One statement you said has changed me. You said, "...It's the easiest and laziest way we assess ourselves." I had never thought about it this way before. I got up every morning to scrutinize my physical self. My state of mind would depend on how good I felt I looked. I'd obsess about it all day. And ultimately felt I didn't measure up, therefore I was unlovable. I was getting sick of myself. I started to walk by the mirror without looking. Then I watched the ABC story online. [Jennifer appeared on Good Morning America to talk about the "not enough" syndrome.] Never for a minute had I stopped to think to assess the things that make me, me. It does take time and effort to assess myself for other qualities and to become a better person. It's so simple. I wasn't ready, I guess. Or I was just being lazy. The next day after this mind-blowing revelation, I looked in the mirror. I saw me and I actually loved what I saw. I had been faking it for so long. I was brought to tears. Yesterday, the quality I reminded myself of is that I'm kind. Today, it's that I'm smart. In time and with some effort, from now on I will always love what I see in the mirror. 

Coming back to my own experience, I don’t think my ex was saying I wasn’t pretty, he was saying I wasn’t pretty enough. And the problem with that is I took that word 'enough' and ran with it: enough for who? For him? For society? It was the first time I really considered whether I was pretty “enough” and luckily—by simply focusing on things I like (reading, connecting with people who cared about me, doing a good job at the things I invested my time in like work, etc.)—I was able come out the other side and know: I’m more than enough.


Below is an excerpt from You're Not Pretty Enough (also available on Kindle and other outlets), and Tress is offering a signed copy to two readers. To enter, answer the same question I asked Jennifer in the comments by September 25 at 11:59 p.m.  EST, and we'll select two winners: What does the phrase "not pretty enough"—as opposed to "not pretty"—mean to you?


*     *     *     *     *

The background: When I was 16, I fell head over heels in love with Jon Bon Jovi based on seeing the “Shot Through The Heart” video. I didn’t know who this guy was, but I needed to find him and meet him because I was sure once we were face to face he’d feel the same way about me. As luck would have it, a huge radio station out of Cleveland, Ohio moved its broadcast operations to my small hometown and on a dare I went there one night to meet the DJ on hand and plant some serious seeds to get me closer to Jon. It worked. One day the DJ contacted me and offered to take me to the concert in a limo (with some contest winners) to meet the band back stage. I had 8 weeks to prepare…


Operation “Make Jon fall in love with me” included the following steps:
  • Lose seven pounds to get to 125
  • Find the perfect outfit
  • Identify all the different scenarios that could occur
  • Determine and practice a response to all scenarios identified
Step one would be easy: skip the cafeteria pizza and do some of my mom’s Jane Fonda tapes. Step two required an inventory of my closet. Nothing outfit-wise struck me as just right, but I did have a white leather jacket that fit me perfectly and a pair of low, but sexy white pumps. I just needed a dress. A trip to the mall would fix that, and I found a light pink sleeveless number that went down to my knees and hugged my curves. Done.

For the last two steps, I would need to imagine all the possible ways Jon would act. For instance, if he was cocky, I imagined myself saying, “Think of all the fans who support you. You would be nothing without us. NOTHING!”  I couldn’t really imagine him being anything but lovely, but one had to prepare. I practiced my responses in the mirror until I felt I was ready.

And then the day came.

I got dressed, teased my long, permed, and frosted hair to the sky, and stepped out to enter the limo as an eighties goddess. The contest winners were two female friends in their twenties who were as psyched as I was, and we were accompanied by Cat and another DJ, Rick Michaels. The mood was giddy as we jammed out to music on the thirty-minute ride to the Richfield Coliseum on a warm May day.

Several groupies were gathered around the area where the band buses and VIP guests pulled up. Suddenly, everyone in the limo took notice that from the waist up I looked exactly like Jon, especially with hair, leather jacket, and shades. Cat suggested that I pop out of the moon roof and give the groupies a show.

“You think it’ll work?”

“Try it.”  The girls in the limo egged me on.

“OK…”  I jumped up on the seat so that my top half was showing and raised my hand with my three middle fingers folded down and waved my pinky and thumb in the classic “Rock on!” sign. The groupies went crazy. When the limo parked and I got out—obviously no longer a man, they started shouting, “FUCK YOU!”  

Heh, I thought. I’m about to meet my soul mate, so fuck YOU!

We made our way through the melee near backstage—sound guys and wires were crisscrossing us—until we arrived in a large holding room with about fifty other radio station representatives and various guests. I could hardly deal. My skin was crackling with excitement, and I sat with my hands underneath my thighs to keep from biting my nails. 

We waited. For over an hour, we waited. I barely spoke to anyone because I was there for me, and I wanted to be inside my head preparing.

Cat, noticing my tension, said, “You know, I don’t want you to be disappointed if it’s just Tico who comes out.”  Now, I loved Bon Jovi for the sum of its parts, and one of those parts was the drummer, Tico Torres. But I had not come this far to just see TICO. No fucking way. As this thought bounced around my head, I became more anxious. But then I looked down the long hallway that led to the holding room, and there was Jon walking toward us. I grabbed my camera.

It sounds cliché, but it really felt like everyone disappeared, and it was just me and him, separated only by a hundred yards. No one had noticed him yet, and I watched him walk toward the room, as if in slow motion, dressed in tight leather pants and a cut-off shirt. He was smaller than I expected—maybe five-eight and thin—and he looked tired. I could feel tears well up, and I pinched myself on the thigh to get it together. 

When he entered the room, several handlers marshaled him over to us. Apparently, as the concert sponsors, our group got first dibs. Cat and the others stood up, but I remained seated, frozen, and he stopped right at the base of my chair, shaking their hands, looking down at me, and smiling. He started to tell a funny story that I can no longer remember, and I sat there, mute. All that practice down the drain! Cat, noticing my catatonic state, decided he should step in.

“This is my friend Jen.”

“Hey, Jen,” he said, smiling warmly and extending his hand to the one that was holding the camera. Instead of simply moving the camera from one hand to the other, I dropped it and shook his outstretched hand with my mouth wide open. I didn’t even say hi. He looked at me with an expression that read Am I crazy or does she look like me? and then one of the handlers told us it was time for Jon to move to the other groups, but not before pictures were taken.

“Anyone want me to take a photo with their camera?” asked the female handler, and I momentarily regained my consciousness to hand her mine.

We stood up in a group—the concert winners to his right and me to his left—and I felt him put his arm around my shoulder. I managed to wrap my arm around his waist and willed my molecules to remember his shape so I could replay it later.

The handler took some photos with other peoples’ cameras, and when she got to mine, she said “Honey, it’s not working.”

“Huh?”

“Your camera. It’s not working.”

“No, did, um, did you try…”

“Honey, I can’t make it work, sorry,” and then she gave it back and began to corral Jon to move to the next group. I looked at him, trying to think of something brilliant to say to make him stop and realize I was not just his female, mute doppelganger.


Who is who?


“Don’t worry,” he said over his shoulder as he walked away. “The station can get you a picture.”  And then he winked at me and walked on. I sat down on the chair again and watched the other groups as they showed off their gregariousness. Stupid talkers! Stupid me! 

Cat patted me on the shoulder in a way that said, “Buck up, kid,” and joined the other DJs. I slumped. When Jon made his way out, that was our cue to leave. Cat escorted me to the place I needed to go to get to my seat, and I turned to hug him. We stayed in touch for about a year, and even though I never got that photo, I’ll always think fondly of him.

When I got to my seat, the opening band was playing—I can’t remember if it was Cinderella or Tesla—and my mom and Margie were there. My mom’s face lit up immediately and then toned down slightly when she saw my face.

“How was it?”

“It’s over. I met him and he didn’t fall in love me!” I howled.

“Oh, honey. Why don’t you just…you know…try and enjoy the show?”

I sat in my seat, disgusted with myself, and cried and cried and cried. I didn’t cry at school, but I cried at home. After a couple weeks, I had to move on.


*   *   *

In the early 2000s, some friends convinced me to go to a Bon Jovi concert for nostalgia’s sake. I demurred at first, but they told me to get over myself and come with them. Just before the band came on at the sold out area, I wondered, What am I doing here? I still like him. He seems like he’s a serious man. He does a lot for charity and is married with kids to his high school sweetheart. He’s hardly ever in the tabloids and has been able to maintain popularity and relevance over the span of nearly thirty years. In fact, I admire him. But really, What am I doing here?

And then the lights went down, a guitar started playing, and he walked out on stage flashing a perfect smile on that beautiful mug.

And I was sixteen again.



11 comments:

  1. This must be a great book.

    What happens if I take the pledge?

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  2. Is that really a picture of the author!? Wow! (I wish I had been a teen in the 80s! Alas...).

    Her relationship to Jon Bon Jovi is similar to my quest to get Tom Hiddleston to fall in love with me. I just hope I am not struck mute when I meet him (though I probably will be). T.T

    [ What does the phrase "not pretty enough"—as opposed to "not pretty"—mean to you? ]

    To be labeled as "not pretty" is considerably more definitive than "not pretty enough". The enough part allows room for the person to try and reclaim whatever pretty there is left to have. When you're just flat out not pretty, there's a feeling (and understanding) that you can't overcome that and you're kinda screwed.

    But I think that's where my analysis ends because I've never - personally - created a difference between the two ideas. For me, I've known I wasn't pretty since childhood, and privately couldn't wait until I was a teen so I could hit puberty (and then I'd be so attractive and all the boys who were mean to me growing up would feel bad!).

    That didn't happen. I didn't blossom into this tall, curvy Goddess who could command a room. I just stayed small, thin and flat-chested (similar to the physique I had as a kid)and that was that.

    To me, not being pretty/not being pretty enough are really just the same thing. When you're not pretty (or for some people, feel that they're not pretty), there's a scramble to redefine yourself in ways that make you comfortable. The whole Body Love "movement" is about this very thing: how do we talk about beauty so that it includes more people (though it still necessitates beauty as a key component to healthy living, which I disagree with).

    To not be pretty already implies that you're not enough in some capacity because as a culture (both global and nationally), being considered beautiful by other people is considered a cornerstone of life. If you don't try to make yourself pretty, or if you don't talk about yourself as if you're a pretty person, then people think there's something wrong [with you].

    This is something I've encountered in my life when I describe myself as ugly. I lack any sort of fundamental prettiness, but I also lack any desire to pursue prettiness for the sake of prettiness (and self-esteem is comprised of the Self, which is more than just the body). But people are routinely uncomfortable - often demanding to see my picture to confirm my self-talk (as if their opinion about my body is more important than my own. It's not) or some other nonsense.

    The very act of not being pretty already suggests that you're not enough - which is why some women mostly focus on their smarts or accomplishments if they don't think they're pretty. It's a way of making up for that. For me, it's about realizing that you are enough, even if you're not pretty.

    So I guess to me, the phrases don't really mean anything. I just operate from this space of already knowing I'm not pretty [enough] so then the question becomes: what's next and how can I not let that stop me from pursuing what (or who) I want?

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  3. 1. I need this book!
    2. I have had a crush on Jon Bon Jovi since 8th grade!
    3. The phrase "not pretty enough" makes me cringe! I (luckily) have never had it directed at me (But if you ever do a post on when ignorant folks say someone is not "Black" enough" I'm your girl). But, what it boils down to is someone else's preconceived notion of beauty being projected on to you. I used to have a friend who was plus size. Before she did the gastric bypass, she was hilarious. I think she felt she had to be. To make up for not being smaller. But, what people need to realize is that there is only one them. THAT is what makes them special. They are their own type of beautiful. Not pretty enough is certainly not worse than not pretty at all. If you are made to feel totally devoid of any sort of attractiveness... I don't think you are sitting there wondering the same things as someone who is made to feel mediocre.

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  4. Amazing! I hadn't heard of Jennifer's blog until now, but I definitely want to hear more. She is an amazing storyteller.

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  5. The phrase not pretty enough, to me, is like a call to action. You've got work to do. You've got to make more of an effort, use this product, avoid those foods, do this exercise - then, someday, you might just be enough. If not, you just have to try harder. It can feel like you're constantly working to get "better", to be prettier, and it's easy to forget everything else you are.

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    Replies
    1. Hey Laura! Congratulations—you won one of the two copies of "You're Not Pretty Enough." (I loved your point about it being a call to action.) Send me your mailing address at the.beheld.blog at gmail dot com and we'll get a copy sent your way.

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  6. Pretty vs not pretty enough....... In my opinion, being pretty or not pretty would be in the eye of the beholder. Everyone is pretty, beautiful in their own way, inside and out. There is no preset standard. Certain actors, persons in the media are pretty to some people and not others; just like everyday people. I personally feel I am pretty but I also know there are people who would consider me not pretty, and I'm OK with that, mainly because I'm OK with me and everyone is entitled to their opinions.

    That word 'enough' leads me to ask questions similar to Jen: not pretty enough for who? for what? Is there a pretty criteria, a pretty quota that needs to be fulfilled? If so, can anyone ever fill that criteria? Who sets the criteria? Were we put on this earth to live until we become pretty enough? If we attain this 'goal', then what? It is as if voids need to be filled when you're discussing who's not pretty enough and would love to know to whom those voids belonged. Recently, I've felt not pretty enough as my estranged husband continues to carry on a relationship I knew of before our split and still not acknowledge it to me or our son. I think and have thought I must not have been pretty enough for him. Then I remember how nothing is/was enough for him - toys, cars, jewelry, electronics, compliments, pats on the back. I, or our marriage was just a casualty of his voids. I don't think any of us are here to fill voids in others, nor is our purpose to strive to be pretty enough. Let's work on being ourselves, and becoming comfortable in our own skin, prettiness be damned!

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  7. Well, I realize I am a day late, but I still want to weigh in on this question so I shall!

    "Not pretty" is cut and dry and final sounding. "not pretty enough" is like a carrot being dangled in front of a rabbit. Little does the rabbit know she's allergic to carrots but that's OK cuz she'll never actually catch it! But let's make her think she could if she really tried and that if she doesn't it's because she sucks at life.

    "NOT PRETTY ENOUGH" is a statement, a thought, a figment, a wisp, a feeling, an experience, and a reality that has haunted me since puberty.
    I am not an unattractive person but as enough balding old men told me when I was trying to do the acting thing, I'm "plain" and "would be sexier if I lost weight" and that "there are a zillion girls out there with my look" so...

    With the right amount of sleep, exercise, macronutrients, calories and make-up, I can pull of a look that many would define as "pretty" or "hot"...but that boils down to a whole lot of work on my end in effort to make the "not enough" go away. It makes me feel like I have some responsibility to the world to make myself pretty enough! It makes me feel like something is missing and that it's my fault. It's like salt in the wound. It's damning. It's a life sentence of never measuring up. It's ORDINARY.

    "Not pretty enough" holds a false hope that if I do, or say, or get, or make, or develop, or lose, or eat, or follow, "X," then I WILL be pretty (enough).

    And then what?

    That's why it's a false hope because what would change if I were pretty enough? What would my life look like that it doesn't now? Would I be famous? Would I be rich? Would I have a better education? There is that carrot again...if ONLY I had this one metric of success under my belt, the PRETTY, then my life would be.....

    WHAT? That's my question...what would life be like if we all thought we were pretty ENOUGH?

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  8. I realize I veered off course a bit..."feeling" pretty and "thinking" you're pretty is not the same as winning the genetic lottery of looks and actually being "pretty enough." But then again, looks being subjective and all, I think one's own perception of their looks is important in this querry.

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  9. When I was about 16 years old, I read this and I believed he was talking about me and I still believe it on many days:

    15%

    she tries to get things
    out of men
    that she can't get
    because she's not
    15% prettier

    - Richard Brautigan

    And I believed that was my fate and I don't get things that other women get in abundance. Because I'm not 15% prettier.

    I'm doing fairly well shedding a lot of that feeling (at 51, mind you), but some days are not as good as others.

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