Author: Admin01

Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 6 Reunion Looks

Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 6 Reunion Looks

The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 6 Reunion looks are in and we’ve got rich colors and glam gowns galore. And while all the women look gorgeous, the dress I’d be most likely to wear is Lisa Barlow’s plum corset look. Though Brownwyn Newport’s light yellow, Grecian-inspired gown and long, loose curls come a close second. And regardless of who your best dressed is I think we can all agree that all of these looks are extremely low bodycount and totally beautiful.

The Realest Housewife,

Big Blonde Hair


Lisa Barlow’s Season 6 Reunion Look

Lisa Barlow's Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 6 Reunion Look

Click Here for More Stock / And Here for More


Bronwyn Newport’s Season 6 Reunion Look

Bronwyn Newport's Season 6 Reunion Dress


Angie Katsanevas’ Season 6 Reunion Look

Angie Katsanevas' Season 6 Reunion Look


Meredith Marks’ Season 6 Reunion Look

Meredith Marks' Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 6 Reunion Looks


Mary Cosby’s Season 6 Reunion Look

Mary Cosby's Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 6 Reunion Look


Whitney Rose’s Season 6 Reunion Look

Whitney Rose's Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 6 Reunion Look


Heather Gay’s Season 6 Reunion Look

Heather Gay's Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 6 Reunion Look


Britani Batemans’ Season 6 Reunion Look

Britani Bateman's Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 6 Reunion Look

Photo + Info: Bravo TV




Originally posted at: Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 6 Reunion Looks

Read More

Aging in a Youth-Obsessed World: Why So Many Older Women May Struggle with Self-Image

Aging in a Youth-Obsessed World Why So Many Older Women May Struggle with Self-Image

I’ve been having the same conversation with women lately – clients, friends, cousins, neighbors. It usually starts quietly, almost as a confession:

“Why do I feel less visible now? I thought I’d be more confident at this age… not less.”

Many women recognize that feeling: you enter your 50s, 60s, 70s with a lifetime of experience, wisdom, resilience – and yet the world still seems to reserve its spotlight for women half your age.

It’s not because something is wrong with you.

It’s because society has spent decades sending women the same message:

Youth equals beauty. Youth equals relevance. Youth equals value.

And even as we outgrow those messages intellectually and in the public square, they linger emotionally.

The Culture That Shaped So Many Women’s Self-Image

Many women grew up watching the same story unfold in public life:

  • Young women got the lead roles.
  • Older women got the “background” ones – if they were represented at all.
  • Fashion rarely reflected real, aging bodies.
  • Workplaces labeled aging men as “experienced” and aging women as “past their prime.”
  • Entire industries grew rich by convincing women that aging was something to fix, hide, or reverse.

The result?

A quiet, persistent erosion of self-image – even among the most accomplished women.

Not because they lacked confidence. But because the culture lacked imagination.

Thankfully, That Story Is Starting to Shift

In recent years, I’ve noticed something encouraging.

There are more roles written for older women, not around them.

Helen Mirren, Meryl Streep, Viola Davis, Olivia Colman, and the late Diane Keaton – women who aren’t pretending to be younger versions of themselves. They’re portraying powerful, complicated characters who reflect the reality of aging without apology.

We’re seeing silver-haired news anchors, mature models, and magazines like the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP), The Magazine, New Beauty and Woman’s World showcasing women doing extraordinary things in their 60s, 70s, and beyond. I also see these accomplished women in my everyday life – in my coaching practice, and among friends, colleagues and relatives.

Representation matters.

Not for vanity – but for belonging.

For visibility.

For women finally seeing themselves reflected back with dignity.

The Hard Mindset Question: Accept Aging or Resist It?

Someone recently asked me which mindset is healthier:

Should older women embrace aging and acknowledge their limitations?

Or, fight aging with everything – surgery, supplements, and all the rest?

Here’s my take, as honestly as I can say it:

Neither extreme works. One path feels like giving up. The other feels like pretending.

And both come from the same place: A fear of becoming invisible.

There’s a Third Way – And It’s the Most Powerful

What I see helping women the most isn’t denial or resignation. It’s authenticity.

Aging with honesty. Showing up fully. Leaning into your strength, your uniqueness, your earned wisdom. Refusing to shrink – even when the culture tells you to.

This isn’t “accepting limitations.” It’s reclaiming your agency.

It’s choosing:

  • Presence over invisibility
  • Expression over hiding
  • Confidence over comparison
  • Purpose over apology

Aging doesn’t make women irrelevant. It makes women real – and real is powerful.

The Bottom Line

Older women are not fading. They’re becoming more multidimensional, more discerning, more grounded, more themselves.

The world may still be catching up. But you don’t have to wait for permission. In a youth-obsessed culture, the most radical act is this:

Choosing to show up exactly as you are – and knowing that “as you are” is more than enough.

Upon Reflection:

What does your aging experience look like? Are you fighting to stay young? Or have you accepted your wise years? Or is there an in-between road you’ve chosen?

Read More

Kathy Hilton’s Jeans for Kyle Richards’

Kathy Hilton’s Jeans for Kyle Richards’ / Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Episode 1 Fashion

We may not know why Kathy Hilton does the things she does, but we couldn’t be happier for moments like when she showed up to Kyle Richards’ Summer Solstice party with a pair of jeans for the hostess⎯in her purse. Thankfully she was clocked doing it by other guests giving us a chance to zoom in on the tag and get the deets. Though we’re guessing Kathy didn’t get them for 60% off like we’re about to…

Best in Blonde,

Amanda


Kathy Hilton's Jeans for Kyle Richards'

Style Stealers

!function(d,s,id){
var e, p = /^http:/.test(d.location) ? ‘http’ : ‘https’;
if(!d.getElementById(id)) {
e = d.createElement(s);
e.id = id;
e.src = p + ‘://widgets.rewardstyle.com/js/shopthepost.js’;
d.body.appendChild(e);
}
if(typeof window.__stp === ‘object’) if(d.readyState === ‘complete’) {
window.__stp.init();
}
}(document, ‘script’, ‘shopthepost-script’);


Turn on your JavaScript to view content




Originally posted at: Kathy Hilton’s Jeans for Kyle Richards’

Read More

When “Bucket-List” Travel Becomes Risky: What Older Adults and Their Caregivers Must Know

When “Bucket-List” Travel Becomes Risky What Older Adults and Their Caregivers Must Know

A recent cruise trip turned tragic when an 80-year-old passenger of the luxury cruise ship Coral Adventurer was found dead on Lizard Island in Australia after she failed to re-board following a shore excursion. This tragedy offers a powerful warning for older travelers and caregivers supporting them.

It reminds us that luxury, remote environments and age bring unique risks – and safeguard steps matter. As the year ends and your resolutions turn to travel, turn your attention to your ability to travel too.

Do A Realistic Health Check-In Before Departure

Even if you’re active, a major trip – especially one involving hikes, remote locations or group excursions – requires honest appraisal of stamina, mobility and general health. That 80-year-old woman was described as having been hiking on Lizard Island when she “fell ill” and then was left to return on her own while the ship departed.

Ask: Can I comfortably handle uneven terrain, heat, stairs or long days? Talk with your doctor about the trip, any medications you carry, and whether the itinerary is too aggressive.

2. Choose Travel Experiences Wisely – and Map Your Worst-Case Scenario

Remote or exotic doesn’t mean safe. The destination in this case was a gorgeous place, but remote and steep: Lizard Island’s “Cook’s Look” trail is rated “medium to high” fitness and agility even for younger hikers. If you’re 65, 75, 85, the stakes are higher.

Before you book: ask the tour operator about emergency response, evacuation readiness, and how they monitor group members.

Build a plan: what if you get separated? What if you feel unwell far from the ship/hotel?

Caregivers and Travel Companions: Know Your Role – and the Risks

If you’re supporting a spouse, parent or friend on a trip, you may need to do more than share a room. You might need to monitor fatigue, hydration, medication schedules, mobility limits and group dynamics.

In the Australian case, the woman was reportedly directed to return alone, unescorted. That decision – whether by the operator, the group or the traveler herself – proved fatal. Be ready to say “no thanks” to an excursion if conditions, trail or timing aren’t comfortable. And make sure the operator’s mechanism for head-counts or re-boarding is clear.

Build in “Safety Buffers” During Excursions and Remote Stays

Older travelers should allow more time for transitions, rest and unexpected slows. Avoid starting strenuous activities at the hottest time of day – especially in hot climate zones or remote trails. Ensure you carry communication tools (cell phone with local coverage, satellite messenger if in remote area), know the exact return time, buddy-up or ensure accompaniment.

In the Lizard Island incident, the ship reportedly left without realizing the passenger was missing. Build in time and systems so a missing parent or spouse isn’t simply assumed safe.

Choose Travel Operators and Ships with Mature-Traveler Readiness

Some travel providers specialize in younger, highly mobile clients; others cater more to older adults and understand the special needs of that segment. Before booking, do your due diligence: ask about protocols for invigorated shore excursions, speed/fitness assumptions, first-aid and head-counts, staff training in elder care, and emergency evacuation procedures.

The operator in the Australian case is under investigation by the Australian Maritime Safety Authority.

Keep Communication Open, Documents Ready and Health Situation Transparent

Older travelers should travel with updated medical information (allergies, medication list, emergency contacts) and share itinerary and check-in plan with a designated caregiver back home. If something goes wrong, someone must know where you are and when you were expected to return.

Recognize When “This Trip” Isn’t the Best Trip

Sometimes the smartest decision is to scale back or postpone. If a cruise itinerary involves rugged hikes, remote locations, early morning climbs and long days, ask: “Is this truly compatible with my mobility, stamina and medical situation?” In an era when we talk about “bucket-list” travel, maturity can impart wisdom: some trips may be rich in scenery but high in risk.

Bottom Line

Pleasure travel in your 60s, 70s, 80s and beyond can be deeply enriching – but it calls for a new level of preparation, awareness and assertiveness. The tragedy on Lizard Island is a sobering reminder: age does not remove risk, it changes it. For older adults – and the caregivers who support them – the best journey is one where excitement meets experience, and adventure is balanced by caution. Because travel isn’t just about the destination – it’s about arriving there and returning home safely.

Let’s Hear from You:

Have you experienced any health issues or accidents when traveling? How did you resolve them? Do you ensure that after your travels you will return home safely?

Read More

Rachel Zoe’s Vintage Gucci Bag at Kathy Hilton’s

Rachel Zoe’s Vintage Gucci Bag at Kathy Hilton’s / Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Episode 1 Fashion

Rachel Zoe showed up to Kathy Hilton’s house with a very hard to find (like we couldn’t even find a pic in caramel croc) vintage Gucci bag on last night’s season premiere of #RHOBH. This bag is the definition of chic, not that we’d expect anything less from Rachel. And our pockets may not be as heavy as hers, but we can still travel around the world with a Style Stealer below.

Best in Blonde,

Amanda


Rachel Zoe's Vintage Gucci Bag at Kathy Hilton's

Click Here for Her Bag in Brown / Click Here for Her Bag in Grey / Click Here for Her Bag in Dark Brown


Style Stealers

!function(d,s,id){
var e, p = /^http:/.test(d.location) ? ‘http’ : ‘https’;
if(!d.getElementById(id)) {
e = d.createElement(s);
e.id = id;
e.src = p + ‘://widgets.rewardstyle.com/js/shopthepost.js’;
d.body.appendChild(e);
}
if(typeof window.__stp === ‘object’) if(d.readyState === ‘complete’) {
window.__stp.init();
}
}(document, ‘script’, ‘shopthepost-script’);


Turn on your JavaScript to view content




Originally posted at: Rachel Zoe’s Vintage Gucci Bag at Kathy Hilton’s

Read More