The unspeakable horror of dressing room mirrors!

Every year for the last 10 I have had to buy a new winter coat because the old one didn't fit anymore . Aside from the one year my thyroid went haywire and I lost 60 pounds in a matter of months it has always been a bigger size ,so you think I would be used to it.
Nope.
today I tried on every coat in my size and all I saw was a fat frumpy woman with a huge belly and they all looked horrid.
I also found to my shame that the jeans i though looked okay and wear all the time were way to tight and my shirt was nowhere near covering my belly!! it's now got me so down I don't want to leave the house :(

Replies

  • MercenaryNoetic26
    MercenaryNoetic26 Posts: 2,747 Member
    And dressing room lights are supposed to be flattering. But I know what you mean. It happens to me on occasion. Don't do it during that TOM.
  • I know this feeling all too well. When I commented on a womans shirt not covering her belly, my husband responded with "That's what yours does? I thought you knew that?" So humiliating!! Unfortunately this has spiralled a strong combination of bad feelings and bad thoughts to the point that I have anxiety about going out. I know your pain!
  • WhyDelilah79
    WhyDelilah79 Posts: 54 Member
    I can be perfectly happy about myself, then I try something on and feel like I look terrible. My skin I always notice looks blotchy under those lights. Looks fine every other time.
  • Madame_Goldbricker
    Madame_Goldbricker Posts: 1,625 Member
    An Open Letter To Dressing Rooms Aug. 9, 2012 By Chelsea Fagan

    Chelsea Fagan is a writer living in Paris. It's less pretentious than it sounds. Read more »
    Dear Dressing Rooms,

    Hey.

    Listen, I know you have a job to do and, technically speaking, you do it. You provide a place of moderate privacy in which to put some new clothes on that we are potentially going to buy, and provide maybe a chair if we’re lucky on which to store our current outfit/purse/etc. I will concede that you complete this basic service, even if you’re one of those awful rooms with the curtain that doesn’t quite close all the way so you spend the entire time kind of peeking out like “Who can see me right now? Why didn’t I wear cuter underwear today?” The problem lies not in your inability to shield us from the rest of the store, for the most part.

    And I have cleaned dressing rooms. I know how people abuse you — how they assume that, because you are “private,” you are somehow their personal flophouse in which they can throw around their unwanted clothes like some kind of human tornado, with no regard for the fact that someone is going to have to come in after them and make everything once again presentable for the next customer. (And we’re not even talking about the people who get makeup and/or sweat all over the clothes. Those people deserve the death penalty, and nothing less.) Just know that I know your struggle.

    I just don’t understand why you don’t make it easier on us. Why, for example, do you insist on having fluorescent, overhead lighting? Who in the world designed you, thinking, “If only we could make our customers see every unfortunate nook and cranny in their skin, and be all-too-aware when the undersized jeans they are fighting to get on cause their stomach to muffin out unflatteringly over their waistband.”? Almost without fail, I go into a dressing room and am greeted by lighting that — even if the rest of the store is more flattering than an Oprah interview camera lens smeared with Vaseline — makes me look like some kind of bridge troll who has snuck into the mall to try clothes on with the normals. This cannot be good for business. Could you at least get some vanity lighting around the mirrors, or something?

    Aside from the simple head-on unfortunateness of greenish fluorescent lighting that makes us look vaguely nauseas at all times, there is also the problem of the mirrors. When you have two, and they are angled towards each other to give us an unprecedented view of our backsides from any and all perspectives (no matter how unprepared we might be), the police-investigation brightness only serves to make us look like a paparazzi photo of a celebrity who’s let themselves go. Not to mention the heat. Oh, God, the heat. Why is it always so hot in you, dressing rooms? Why is it at least 10 degrees warmer than it was out in the store, making the process of trying on jeans similar to that of a crab shedding its shell for molting season? Why do we have to emerge in a wholly unfortunate layer of shame-sweat?

    It’s just that, when one does stumble upon a dressing room that is flattering, reasonably cool, and spacious enough so that you don’t risk tumbling out of the two-by-two box all wrapped up in curtain — it’s like some kind of gift from the Self-Esteem Gods. We suddenly look fabulous in everything, and beyond that, want to buy the **** out of everything we try on. This is a good thing, dressing rooms! It’s good for you, it’s good for us, and it’s certainly good for the stores you’re located in. Why make yourselves a funhouse of unflattering angles and floodlights? Just set the mood a little bit, and we will buy/feel awesome in everything! We promise.

    Just don’t be one of those dressing rooms that makes you walk outside into the common area to actually see a mirror. Not even Hitler deserves that fate.

    Love,
    Society
  • bratttchick
    bratttchick Posts: 7 Member
    I had twin by c section so my belly is not good even thin but big its just so embarrassing.All this time I've been walking around with it not covered by my shirt just outlined in shocking detail in my to tight pants. God must' ve wanted to cheer me up though ,because i came home to try on the new pants I bought and they had mysteriously been switched to a size so big they fell off me.
    sucks to have to take them back but it was nice to try on something too big for once!!
  • bratttchick
    bratttchick Posts: 7 Member
    hmmm2013
    I love it !!! :happy:
  • mom216
    mom216 Posts: 287 Member
    Been there done that! Take a deep breath! I left a shopping mall in tears - because I was comparing myself to all the pretty ladies (young & old). I made a decision, I can dress my body (no matter what size it is) and take care of my appearance to the best of my ability. If the store doesn't have a coat that makes you feel like a queen, go to a different store. :happy:
  • mom216
    mom216 Posts: 287 Member
    Been there done that! Take a deep breath! I left a shopping mall in tears - because I was comparing myself to all the pretty ladies (young & old). I made a decision, I can dress my body (no matter what size it is) and take care of my appearance to the best of my ability. If the store doesn't have a coat that makes you feel like a queen, go to a different store. :happy:
  • MysteriousMerlin
    MysteriousMerlin Posts: 2,270 Member
    I don't even bother trying them on in the store. I buy the size I think will fit, take it home and try it on there. My dresser mirror is big enough to see how well something fits. If it doesn't, I take it back and exchange it. Just keep the tags on and keep the receipt.
  • qtgonewild
    qtgonewild Posts: 1,930 Member
    wtf