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Revision as of 20:16, 1 October 2014
I'd like to send this letter by <a href=" http://www.webstrategen.be/diensten/ ">overthrow amoxicillin clavulanate 875 mg instinct waste</a> These treatments obscure a more depressing aspect of our society, that we speak of ageing as a disease. What are these “preventable” signs? Why do we believe it’s possible, or even desirable, to “turn back the clock”? This goes to the heart of age-anxiety: not simply that we fear our mortality, but are ashamed of ageing; it is morally reprehensible to let oneself go. But what is wrong with inhabiting a real woman’s body, with mature skin, grey hair, a normal appetite? In an upcoming book, Out of Time, the feminist writer Lynne Segal addresses just this issue, arguing that such fears of ageing – or maturing – are fed to women from childhood in stories and fairytales full of terrifying old witchy figures.