Pampering
What does the word mean to you? To me, it implies pleasure.
Not, say, ritual humiliation, which is my main experience of "beauty treatments."
A hot bath and a big chocolate cake and a really good Wodehouse or Heyer - that's pampering myself. Having to pick tickly bits of hair out of my jumper for days, or spending two books-worth of money on nailpolish applied by someone who can't believe I don't push my cuticles back? Not pampering.
Not, say, ritual humiliation, which is my main experience of "beauty treatments."
A hot bath and a big chocolate cake and a really good Wodehouse or Heyer - that's pampering myself. Having to pick tickly bits of hair out of my jumper for days, or spending two books-worth of money on nailpolish applied by someone who can't believe I don't push my cuticles back? Not pampering.
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A stretch of time where I can put my feet up and get lost in a good book, or listen to opera. Or getting up early, getting out my bike to go for a long, hard ride, letting the body work hard and leaving everything behind.
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The one that really stuns me is the idea of getting a bikini wax as "pampering"!
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The facial massage part was lovely.
(Actually, now there's less of it, haircuts aren't so awful, but when it was long, hairdressers were so incredibly fucking clueless that I generally ended up in tears).
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(Anonymous) 2008-05-18 07:59 am (UTC)(link)I agree it's much less stress getting a haircut when your hair is short! (Except when you're married to a long-hair-loving person, who, every time you get so much as a trim, goes, "Hmmph! Too short!" But that's a different issue ;-) )
Elaine xx
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Although sometimes I do buy into plucking my eyebrows and I do occasionally wear make-up, these both get included as pampering (don't paint my nails - they break/chip too easily). For me, hair removal (though almost always shaved) is down to hating body hair, rather than because its feminine.
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I also like the long hot bath, good books and chocolate (cake too)! I also take my hearing aid out for the best part of the day as a form of pampering. The quiet is nice!
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Facials pampering, but no "extractions" or bright lights please.
Massages...mmmmmm.
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Anyway, pampering is indulgence. Beer, bath, book sort of thing. Maybe Duvet.
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What you described? Torture.
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I pampered myself yesterday as I was home alone for an hour, but fancied some company, so went over to my friend's house who has 6 children. 4 were around (aged 4 weeks, 2 years, 7 years & 12 years) but as they weren't mine, I just relaxed & played & had fun & drank tea & chatted & cuddled the cute little baby :)
Even though the 2 year old was being 2 in a big way, it flowed over me as he wasn't mine.
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It has positive connotations, with a sort of implied warning that it's meant to be occasional, and you'll get too soft if you have too much of it.
I know some women really do feel pampered when they go for spa and beauty treatments. I've had a facial that genuinely left me feeling pampered, too. On the other hand, generally speaking I spend the money on extra-nice food instead.
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For me pampering is having someone else do to me something that I can't do for myself. So facials, massages, haircuts etc. all qualify. Goes without saying that I only feel pampered if they do it *well*.
Stuff I do for myself (baths, home facials etc.) comes under different categories of "looking after myself" and/or "pleasurable passties", but it's not strictly speaking "pampering".