For many years, as a young woman, I saw myself everywhere in advertising, on TV shows, and on the front cover of magazines. But as I grew older and had children, that all changed.
By the time I was 40, the goalposts had shifted entirely. I felt like I had started to slip slowly into invisibility.
As my kids moved into their teenage years and became their own people, it seemed that the more visible to the world they became, the less room there was for me.
Watch: Deborah Hutton shares her advice for her five-year-old self. Post continues below.
I recently had an experience where I was quite literally overlooked by a retail worker. I was standing at the counter in a large chain store with something in my hands to purchase when the store assistant called the very attractive, much younger girl behind me forward to serve.
It was as though I wasn’t even standing there. Unfortunately, I was buying a gift for someone that was only available at that store, so I had to suffer the embarrassment of the store assistant saying, 'Oh, I didn’t see you there,' when they clearly saw me waiting there to be served.
The older I become, the less I see myself everywhere - especially in popular culture. It feels a lot like when we used to say to young girls that you can’t be what you can’t see.
Top Comments
Besides, it was always the middle aged white men who controlled everything anyway. Young white women are granted an illusion of power because those men want to see them, but it was never really worth anything.
"Old stale and male" is a term that exists because those institutions still run everything. Similarly "Karen" specifically refers to a white woman who is using her power to drown out the voices of minority groups. "OK Boomer" means the same. They're literally all tropes that exist because of the power middle aged and older white people wield in our society.