Why Be a "Plus One?" Be "A One & Only" Who Matters - podcast episode cover

Why Be a "Plus One?" Be "A One & Only" Who Matters

May 29, 202430 min
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Episode description

"After being single and successful on my own, I refuse to be a Plus One in a couple and in a society where men still receive preferential and deferential treatment over women. Stand up for being the One and Only You," says FFY Host Melanie Young. She addresses the frustration of being treated as an "invisible woman" and subtle- or not so- indignations. "Defy Invisible. Remain Invincible," she says. Women are not fragile and transparent like glass. We are strong prisms with many points of light.

Fearless Fabulous You is broadcast live Wednesdays at 12 Noon ET on W4WN Radio - Women 4 Women Network (www.w4wn.com) part of Talk 4 Radio (www.talk4radio.com) on the Talk 4 Media Network (www.talk4media.com). 

Fearless Fabulous You Podcast is also available on Talk 4 Media (www.talk4media.com), Talk 4 Podcasting (www.talk4podcasting.com), iHeartRadio, Amazon Music, Pandora, Spotify, Audible, and over 100 other podcast outlets.

Transcript

The topics and opinions expressed on the following show are solely those of the hosts and their guests, and not those of W four WN Radio It's employees or affiliates. We make no recommendations or endorsements for radio show programs, services, or products mentioned on air or on our web. No liability, explicit or implied shall be extended to W four WN Radio It's employees or affiliates. Any questions or common should be directed to those show hosts. Thank you for choosing

W four WN Radio. Hello and welcome to Fearless Fabulous. To you, I am your host, Melanie Young, and thank you for joining me on this beautiful post Memorial Day in twenty twenty four. My mission is to empower women fifty and older to live life on their terms and live their best life on their terms, being mindful of their health, their wellbeing, their person and personality, and owning their worth. That's right, owning your worth,

and today's show will be It's a common thread. When I host the show solo. Usually something has happened in the past week that triggers triggers in a positive way, generates, let's say, inspires that's a better term inspires me to come up with some words of wisdom that I speak to myself, and then I decide to share with you that brings to light something that may be on your mind. It's certainly on my mind. Maybe you're experiencing it,

maybe you're not. But I like to bring it to light because I like to shine a light and enlighten on what it's like to be a woman over fifty in the United States. I can't say in the world because I haven't experienced the world enough, but I do believe it's different everywhere and it's similar everywhere. I'm going to start. The theme of this show is being invincible

versus invincible, invincible, invincible invulnerable. We as women have all at some stage probably felt all of these and therefore I'm going to read this poem, of course, written by a man, and I'll comment in a minute. It's called invisible. My body is a bottle of white glass. Why has not somebody poured red wine into me? That I should become beautiful? My body is a green leaf? Why have I not dried? That I should blow away to infinity with many winds? Written by jose Garcia Villa Well Jose

I have this to say. First of all, I love beautiful glass. Glass is not empty. Wine, glass shimmers, a vase shimmers in many colors and dimensions. That's the beauty of crystal and glass. So it's not plain, it's not really white. There are many beautiful arcs of colors and rainbows that, like a woman, shows beautiful complexity. As for why has not somebody poured red wine into me? Well, first of all, as we all know, I'm a certified specialist to wine, and I drink wine,

and I educate wine, and I love wine. No one needs to pour red wine into me. I'll pour my own glass, thank you very much. That's right. I don't need someone to pour something into me to illuminate my beauty so that I should become beautiful, because I already am, and I can choose to do it on my own. It certainly helps to have wonderful people around you that support that, but if you don't, you should choose to fill your own glass with whatever you want to drink up the

beauty of life and yourself. As for why my body is a green leaf and why have not dried that I should blow away to infinity with many winds, Well, First of all, we are all beautiful leaves that will eventually shrivel up and fall. It's the circle of nature and life, and we

will blow away. But in the meantime, I want to be blowing in the wind and float and enjoy what a leaf is, which is a beautiful excentsion of a solid tree, part of a blossom, part of a growth, part of a shoot, part of something that creates the fruit of the vine grapes. Leaves are beautiful. They come in different shapes, like women. They coup a different different different shapes and a different veins, different patterns like women. So well, I found a poem called Invisible. Interesting,

I would rewrite the entire thing and call it invincible. I'll pour my own glass, I'll appreciate my own beauty, my crystalline beauty, and I will be a leaf that weather green and moist, are dried and crunchy, will be beautifully the way. Okay, So this is why we're going to talk about invisible, invincible, and vulnerable, because I find that when you age, you do, whether you like it or not, start feeling invisible or people make you feel invisible. And it's okay, when did my life go

from being number one, two plus one. I'll give you some examples. So all my life was single, I ran a company, was number one in the business. I was the one to go to for everything, the one who knew it all, the go to person. I was the one. I was one of a kind. I created wonderful things. I was the one. Then I got married, and I was thrilled to be married forty eight to a wonderful guy. But then over the years, I feel like I've become a plus one. I who was always on the top of

invitation lists. Now I'm at the bottom of the list. And David, my husband, gets invited to things, and I'm simply a plus one now. I've never looked at him as a plus one. I look at him as an equal to me person. We have different last names for that reason. But I've never in my life felt so plus one as I have, particularly traveling in Europe or being treated in business. I'm a plus one now, and I don't really like being a plus one. I like being the

one not to diminish my husband or friends. We're on equal ground. I wasn't created from his rib I was already here on earth. But it's amazing how old norms, even in New Times still treat women is plus one even further illustrate, there's an article out this week by Brett Anderson, terrific food correspondent for the New York Times. He wrote about Broma Casa is the new steakhouse. We're actually doing this show on the Connected Table on my other podcast,

and I encourage you to look at it. Brett Anderson is a very noted food correspondent. But the article is on how men love to go out now and do and going. Instead of going and eating macho carnivor nights steakhouses, they go to Japanese house restaurants or Asian usually it's Japanese and they do the oma kassa, which omakasa is a Japanese dining experience that involves placing one's

trust in the chef's culinary skills to create a personal menu. The term omakasa translates to I leave it up to you, which reflects the diner's willingness to relinquish control over their meals. That is a definition of oma cossa, but in the context of this article, it's basically men with money to burn and big appetites for life and good food. Go out together, bros, go out, drop bucks, drink big wine, spend the money, yuck it up with the guys, and have Oma Cossa meals instead of steakhouses, and

they drop like hundreds and hundreds of dollars per person. So why did this resonate with me? Well, first of all, I love Oma Cossa meals. I think they're just the best. I wish I could afford them, but I can't these days because they're super expensive and they're getting more so. And as a result, people who have lots of money to burn can enjoy them, and people like me just hope that one day we can save for a special time. But what really killed me of this is the machoism of

this. Again, it's still a man's world, even when you downate, like how often do you dine out? And the man gets the wine, list, man gets the menus, the man gets the bill, even though I tend to be paying for it right exactly. So, one of the lines in the article, which again is in the New York Times, that kind of gave me the I'm gonna throw at my OUNI if I was eating it was the guy and he was a guy who says, where is it. I'll get to it, but basically he says, I like going out

with the guys. But basically now I'm out with the wife, the wife or the little lady, like, oh, I have to like sometimes take her out too, because you know, I can't just always go out with the guys. So I kind of cringed at that because he just called her the wife, like she had no name. She was a bluss one in his life, the other person. And it just kind of underscored again how even when you're dining out, going to the theater, traveling, that's another

one. You're still traded as the second class person in the two person relationship. I'll give more examples. How many of you, let's just talk about

that. How many of you travel and have to fight like crazy to demand not getting the dreaded middle seat because your husband or your male partner or your significantly larger partner whatever has to have the aisle seat because their lives are so long, they have to have the window seat so they can sleep, and they automatically give you what I call the wife's seat, which is the dreaded

middle seat because you're smaller and you can fit in it well. I have to fight like Craig Cray whenever we travel, particularly when we're going to Europe, because I'm always seemed to be the plus one, even though I have my own credentials for going, I have to I have to insist that I have an aisle seat. It means we're not necessarily sitting together, but you know, I'm with my husband time, So for sutting on an airplane,

la la la, particularly for finding Europe or sleep anyway. Differences that make we're not joined at the hip all the time. We're together wherever we are in mind, body and spirit, that we don't have to be like glued to each other so that I'm shmoosed in a middle seat. So you women who travel and you don't want the middle seat, you stand up for your

rights to have an aisle seat. You stand up for your right to not have to sit in the corner of a restaurant, whether you're dining alone or at a two top, and they give you the tiny corner table and you're shoved in or facing the kitchen or any inferior seat or location. Because you're the plus one. You also get your own name tag and your own title. When you go to conferences and events, you're not the plus one. You're not the plus one on a guest list. You have your own name.

You got to fight for that, otherwise you're going to be invisible. That is just a sign of being invisible when people look around you and over you, at the person you're who is with you, but not at you. And if you have not been one of those people that have had people come up to you say hello and then move on without even acknowledging your name to someone more interesting, better or opportunists than you, have been living a

charmed life. I'll never forget being introduced the more with a Stewart and introducing myself and she barely gave me at the time of day, and she didn't even say hello, She just kind of looked over at somebody else. So one I considered it rude. Two I'll never forget it. Three I'm not

a fan. And four I learned a big lesson from that not to do it myself, because when I worked in public relations, you're always looking over everybody's shoulders to see who the next a list person is coming in the door, particularly when you're talking to a B and C liss person because you label people that way, which is really gross but true, and may a Coulpa.

I'm sure I did it as well, but I have learned over the years not to do it because I've had friends in the industry, and I've talked about this on this show before, friends in the industry who had high, high power jobs at media companies, whether it's book publishing or magazine publishing or newspapers. They were the editors and chiefs, the managing editors, the editors at large. They commanded teams of writers and what we read and how

we read it and how we interpret it. That's a pretty powerful position. I mean, you know, one editor in chief could determine if we were going to be eating eggplant or watermelon for the summer, or whatever the new true is or bromagasa maybe we're all going to be eating broma gausa. It's the power of the pen under the editor. One by one, each of these was tapped out, now tapped out, let go. They all basically lost their jobs because they aged out and were no considered no longer irrelevant,

well no longer relevant and probably too expensive. And what happened to them. One by one, they all became invisible. They slowly became invisible, to the point where yesterday a very dear friend lover her to death. She cheered me up. I don't know why I was feeling glom uh, I don't know, you know, things coming? Oh, because I was feeling like

a plus one in an email situation, She cheered me up. She's in her late sixties and she had a huge job working for a major network, really the best of the business, several journalism awards, books, articles, just the best in her game. And of course, like old jobs, when you hit certain stride and pace, eventually everything winds down. And she had to know now say, oh, I was formally with I was formally Well, first of all, I've learned to say never say the word formally.

Okay, just drop that word from your list, because that immediately moves you into invisible world. You're never formally. You always are. You just may not be working at So if you were in broadcast journalism, or you were a novelist or a public relations or a doctor and you've retired, you're still have all the credentials, you just may not be actively doing it. But don't use the word formally, because that immediately puts you in the world

of invisible them. I find that, you know, invisible. Feeling invisible is usually when people just don't look at you. And you remember when people used to look at you in comment hey good looking, and now nobody does. That makes you feel invisible when people ignore you or you know, it's just little things. Don't do it to other people, is what I'm going to say. Don't do it to other people and don't make people feel you are invisible. Stand your ground and be next word invincible. Remember I am

strong, I am woman, I am invincible. Yeah remember that song. Well, you got to stand up. You got to stand up for yourself and for who you are. And if someone's dissing you and treating you any other way, to say, hey, let's hey, look over here, let's let's talk. You know, you got to. You gotta stay on your ground and sometimes you got to reshape who you are in your life because you're just gonna have to because if you start talking about formally I was I

used to back in the day when I was. If you talk in the past, people will look at you as in the past. You've got to stay current and in tune, to stay in time and in step with everybody else. Otherwise you're going to be put in the back seat or worse, in storage. I just loved it. When I was on a I was on a webinar about uh, the Wine Market Council talking about who's drinking wine and everybody wants younger people to drink more wine, and or gen Z and

gen X drinking more wine. And they said, oh, yeah, you know who's drinking a lot of wine the boomers. But they're all dropping off. Literally, somebody said that, yeah, the boomers are, but they're aging out and dropping off. And I'm like, well, I'm not dead yet. I'm still drinking wine. I'm still spending the money. I'm still spending more money than the eleven dollars a bottle people, I'm still spending more.

I'm not dropping off. So drop the topic and instead drop back in to see who I am and what the potential I have to deliver to you and your brand are right, So just remember that we're not dropping off. When we're we're not dropping out, and we're not dropping off. We are still invincible. Invincible is by definition, the quality of being impossible to defeat. Or prevent from doing what is intended. Today's young people are certain of

their own invincibility. That is a plus for young people. I think it's great that they believe they're invincible. Then why aren't older people feeling the same way that. Let's just stop the word older people right now. Why aren't we of a certain age also not feeling invincible? We are, and we should and we should not let anybody make us feel any other way. Right, And if you want to learn more, there's a book. I haven't

read it yet, but there's one called The Invisible Woman. I'm actually very interested in this book because it basically it's by Caroline Creato Perez who basically does case studies on how women are continually diminished in a man's world. And it's everything from phones being too big, a doctor prescribes a drug that's wrong for your body. Where you know a car accident, you're forty seven percent more likely to be seriously injured. This is from a book description where every week,

the countless hours of work you do or not recognize your value. If any of that sounds familiar, chances you are you a woman and an Invisible Woman shows how in a world largely built for and by men. We are systematically ignoring half the population. It exposes the gender data gap and the perpetual systemic discrimination against women. A lot of people don't even know they're doing it, you know. Like in my house, it's so interesting. I love

my husband. He's over six feet tall. I'm five to three. He weighs over two hundred pounds. I weigh about half his weight. Let's just say that. So he has put everything out of reach. There's really nothing I can reach in our kitchen. I can't reach it, and if I try, I'll probably like have my head cut because it's going to follow my head. So everywhere I go now to haul the ladder around just to reach

things. He puts the caps on things so tight with his mighty fist that I have to ask for help to open it, run it under water, whatever, it's the littlest thing. It's like, I can't help it that I have thin wrists and smaller hands, but a lot of things that are made a lot of products that are currently made or made for big hands and

bigger grips and stronger grips, and that's men. It's interesting how many things are like that and I've noticed it more and as the older I get, probably because my grip is not as strong as it used to be for whatever reasons, I don't know why. I'm doing the best I can to work on it. But it's this inevitable thing called aging which I do have to face every day that I need to work on strength, body strength and flexibility every day of my life. Also in my mind. So the other is

being in vulnerable. Invulnerable means you're not vulnerable two things. Invulnerable means, like I thought, this is a weird description, but apparently Mother Teresa was involve vulnerable to things because she was a sainted person. Well, I don't think anybody's invulnerable and vulnerable reads you're not going to die. Nobody is invulnerable. Everybody is vulnerable to something and you have to acknowledge it and work around it. Perfect example, Pope, the Pope. The Pope is not even

invulnerable. He said something this week derogatory about gays queer's It was a term in Italian like fagiori or something, whatever it was. He's not invulnerable and he was taken to task. So if the Pope could be taken to task for a slip of the tongue. Everybody in the world could be taken to

task for a slip of the tongue. We're not invulnerable invulnerable here. It is something that's invulnerable is impossible to damage or injured, like the strongest, most rock solid concrete for reinforced steel bars or Mother Teresa's reputation from the Latin Invulnerable is not wounding. Invulnerable means invincible or immune to attack. Well, we've now learned everybody is vulnerable to attack, verbal or physical or other.

But back to not being invisible. So if someone is if someone or an entity or a group is making you feel invisible, you can't always blame that entity, group, whatever, because you're allowing them to make you feel invisible. Just remember that it's a two way street. Feeling unworthy and invisible is a two way street. Someone is making you feel that way, but you're allowing them to. You're accepting it. You're maybe you're not accepting it,

but you don't know what to do. So first of all, you've got to just stand up and fight back and say I don't like the way this feels. Wait just a minute, can we reword that? Could you please reframe what you just said, let's take a step back and restate and rethink this concept. Whatnot? What are you ignoring here? What is it I'm

saying you're not listening to. Okay, these are just examples, but you got to do that because if you don't, you'll be put in the invisible women's section of the plane, in the store, and the theater and the group or the table. Let's just talk about that. How many times have you been to a dinner party and you're in the invisible end table section by nobody because you're the plus one. Let's just talk about that. Yes, let's just talk about that. So the best way to get around that is

to get somewhere first and claim your seat. I'm not being insensitive and I'm not being overly sensitive. I've experienced it, and I have been told I'm being too sensitive, usually by my husband. And maybe I am being too sensitive, but damn if I don't see it and feel it and notice it, because I'm living it and I am as my girlfriend lover to death. She said, we're older, white, blonde haired women, so we're still

the lucky ones. I can only I can only slightly empathize and be more sensitive and sensitive and sympathetic to the black women of this country who were marginalized, even more black than latinas. I can't even imagine what it's like, but I actually wish I could spend one day in their skin to understand what they go through, because I know they're treated worse than me. I'm a lucky one in comparison. I'm just a sixty five year old white women who's

not in the desirable demographics anymore of marketers. Apparently, they get it worse and it's not fair and it's not right. And I stand for them. I stand for all women of every race, color, creed, background, sexual preference. No one should be marginalized or made to be felt invincible. They all have a voice, they all have beautiful skin that should be thicker to protect them. And no one is an empty glass waiting to be filled

by someone else. We are all beautiful vessels filled with amazing intelligence, kindness, compassion, love and warmth, spirit creativity. We are a mosaic. We are a mosaic of many beautiful prisms that glass. So none of us are empty glasses waiting to be filled by someone else, to be made to feel more beautiful. We are already beautiful, whether we fill the glass or just enjoy it for its beautiful, pristine quality without having anything in it.

So remember that no glass is empty, no vase is empty. It's filled with light. You can choose to fill it with other things or not, but not it does not diminish the beauty of that glass, and that is you. Nothing should diminish the beauty of who you are, whether you choose to get multiple degrees, whether you choose to have children, whether you choose to have a career or choose to stay home and take care of your family, whether you choose to many things, you are a perfect prism of beauty

and capability and amazingness and fabulousness. And you are never invisible because that beauty is an aura that surrounds you and sheds light, and that makes you invincible. Because many people have not discovered that in themselves, and once they do and they act on it and they own it and they project it, they too will be invincible, and you will as well. So don't be the

empty glass. Be the crystalline beauty that the glass reflects in the light, the prism of beauty that you choose to fill withever gives you pleasure and brings you joy. And if it's a great wine, go for it. Don't let anyone say no. Give yourself the joy and pleasure of filling your cup, your glass, your vase, your vessel, you with the things that bring you joy and make you feel invincible. I leave I leave you with this thought. You are a prism with many colors and lights to share with

others. Never let anyone dull that quality. Always polish it and share it. Never let anyone dull your polish. Always keep it bright and shiny. You're never invisible to me or the people who matter in your life, and you always be invincible. I'm Melanie Young. This is fearless fabulous. You remember you have the right, the right, and the choice, and I hope it stays that way. To live life on your terms. And if anyone tries to diminish that, you just speak out, stand up for that

right. Otherwise you will become invisible, and none of us deserve that. We all deserve to remain invincible and invulnerable. Thank you for joining me. Please follow me at Melanie Fabulous on Instagram. Check out my other show with David Ransom, The Connected Table Live Wednesdays two pm on W four c Y Radio, and you can hear all my shows, this one and that one

the Connected Table on your preferred podcast channel. We're on more than fifty Please connect, please comment, please share, let me hear from you, and always remember, stay fearless and fabulous. Thank you,

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