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Authors: Stephanie Dolgoff

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“Excuse me, but you should know that what you said is really obnoxious. You don’t know me, you don’t know where I’m going, you don’t know what groups I belong to or what my priorities are,” I said (not for nothing, shifting my nylon shopping bag loaded with organic produce over to my other shoulder). “You’re going to turn people off to your cause by saying things like that.”

She protested that she asked me if I cared about saving the environment and I shook my head no, so she said, “OK, you don’t care about saving the environment.” She was simply innocently reflecting my own sentiments back at me. Right.

I said that I was saying no to stopping to chat with her, and she knew that full well. “I used to canvass for an environmental
group”—I managed not to add, “when I was your age,”—“and I know how discouraging it can be, but you shouldn’t assume you know why I’m not stopping. I’m going to pick up my children. I care about them, too.” She tried to argue but I brushed her off and continued down the street, fuming.

I felt angry. I felt righteous. And then I felt like a crazy lady. OK, like a crazy OLD lady. Why did I even bother? She was a twit and I’d likely never see her again, and there I was explaining myself to her. I didn’t like that she was a poor ambassador for Greenpeace, which does good work, but that wasn’t really it. There was simply something about her smug, poreless, freckled face that made me want to give her what for, which I am aware is an old person’s expression.

They say you really start to feel that you’re getting older when your parents become creaky or infirm. I think it’s when you begin to believe that you have something to teach snot-nosed NYU students with too much eyeliner who are exactly as likely to give a shit what you say as there is for the leaders of Palestine and Israel to hang out, smoke a bowl and come to a lovely, bi-lateral accord culminating in a giant group hug.

When I got to the Y to pick up my kids, I had a snack and felt better. Within minutes, I was drawn into looking at my daughters’ drawings of fairies and ladybugs and finding their sweatshirts and listening to their tales of school yard dramas of hierarchy and exclusion. What to give them for dinner became my most pressing issue.

But I felt different than I had before my little contretemps with the canvasser. I felt true to myself—true to some larger truth—and not a little badass.

Indeed, I felt hot. No, not hot in the way I was when I was a big-haired man magnet in my 20s. And not hot like what Paris Hilton is alluding to when she gazes vapidly toward something and declares, “That’s hot.” (The words she’d be looking for if she thought to look are “exciting,” “interesting,” “current,” “newsworthy.”) But I felt hot, as in “on fire,” “hot shit,” and “not to be messed with.” It was a different kind of hot, but the thermometer topped out just the same.

As hundreds of women have pointed out to me—when they hear the term “Formerly Hot” and think I mean that older women cannot be hot just because they don’t look as they once did—hotness comes from within. I’ve always felt that way, even as my societally defined hotness has diminished. That Greenpeace incident reminded me that there are many measures of hotness, many ways of feeling hot, and that some are much easier to access as you get older. I, for one, am looking forward to finding out about the other ways, and seeing just how hot I can be.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

There simply isn’t enough ink to thank all the amazing people who helped me channel my crazy into this book.

My husband, Paul Lipson, who did double and triple duty at home while I became one with my laptop; my girls, Sasha and Vivian, who point out my every Formerly flaw utterly without judgment and who, like most children, think getting older is thrilling; My amazing editor, Marnie Cochran, who finished my sentences in our first phone call, and my agent Rebecca Gradinger, who somehow makes me feel like her only client; my mom, Jessica Reiner, who began laughing at my jokes early and often; My dad, Anatole Dolgoff, who instilled in me the need to be heard; and Marge and Walter Lipson, for producing my husband, without whom I couldn’t have produced this book (not to mention an armoire, a bureau, three night tables and a beautiful handcrafted cutting board).

I really want to thank the
FormerlyHot.com
early adopters, including Robert Kempe, who made this book seem like a forgone conclusion as soon as the blog went up; and for making my website so fun and inviting, and then
making it even more so; for her sage blog advice; Carol Hoenig, Kimberly Gagon and others for telling me their life stories, which indirectly helped me shape this book; and Julie Stark for her legal aid.

This book would not exist but for my very own “kept women,” (and a few guys), my Formerly friends Andie Coller McAuliff, Kely Nascimento-DeLuca, Rhonda Davis, Julie Wright, Bárbara Herrnsdorf, Amy Redfield, Joel Jacobs, Ronni Siegel (the woman let me post a picture of her upper arms, for crying out loud!), Margaret Bravo, Hugh Siegel, Demetra Vrenzakis, Julie Bolt, Tula Karras, Alison Frank, Alan Blattberg, Emir Lewis, Marlene Merritt and (for letting me grill them about women’s health), Melissa O’Neal, Rachel Fishman, Lauren Peden, Pam Redmond Satran and Alexandra Marshall, Harlene Katzman, Melissa Kantor, Judy Minor, Kristin Whiting, Carla Johnston Young, Marijke Briggs, Jenna McCarthy, Heather Greene, Freddi-Jo Bruschke, Rachel Berman, Marisa Cohen, Gina Duclayan, Karen Wolfe, Bennah Serfaty, Gina Osher, Jen Levine, Michele Barnwell, Susan Paley (for going all Hollywood on my ass), Michele Nader, Hanna Dershowitz and Maryn McKenna, Jennifer Maldonado and Heidi Schwartz.

Thanks, too, to Marika Guttman for being the (beautiful) face of the Formerly, Rachel Talbot for making my Formerly video, and for allowing her 29-year-old self to be whipped into a premature Formerly frenzy in marketing my book.

Hugs to the editors who encouraged me and my writing
over the years, especially Paula Derrow, Dana Points, Elizabeth Egan, Lucy Danziger, Bonnie Fuller, and Susan Kane. It meant the difference between dithering and doing.

And thanks to you, for reading.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

S
TEPHANIE
D
OLGOFF
writes for many magazines including
Self, Health
, and
Parenting
, and blogs for
More.com
, as well as her own popular blog,
Formerlyhot.com
. She has been a contributing editor at
Real Simple
and editor-at-large at
Parenting
, the features director at
Self
, and the executive editor at
Glamour
. Among other publications, she has written for
The New York Times
, the
New York Post, O: The Oprah Magazine, Fitness, Parents, Redbook
, and
Ladies’ Home Journal
. Stephanie lives with her husband and twin girls in Manhattan.

This is a work of nonfiction, however, some of the names and personal characteristics of the individuals involved have been changed in order to disguise their identities. Any resulting resemblance to persons living or dead is entirely coincidental and unintentional.

Copyright © 2010 by Stephanie Dolgoff

All rights reserved.

Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

B
ALLANTINE
and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Dolgoff, Stephanie.
My formerly hot life : dispatches from just the other side of youth/Stephanie Dolgoff.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-0-345-52147-7
1. Women—Psychology. 2. Middle-aged women—Psychology. 3. Aging—Psychological aspects. 4. Dolgoff, Stephanie. I. Title.
HQ1206.D62 2010
305.244′20973090511—dc22       2010015092

www.ballantinebooks.com

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