Mary Kay Gave Me a Purpose

Wow. I honestly feel sad for you. Mary Kay gave me a purpose when I was a stay at home mom with no confidence. The women I met lifted me up and showed me I was worth something. They believed in me when I didn’t believe in myself.

I didn’t even care about the money at first (even tho I did make some). You clearly never tried to grow or believe in yourself. And you missed out on more than a paycheck You missed out on a sisterhood. If you had spent less time being skeptical and more time being grateful you would have seen the blessings right in front of you. So sad you can’t see that.

5 COMMENTS

  1. “You missed out on a sisterhood.”

    You keep using this word, “sisterhood.” I don’t think it means what you think it means.

    True, sisters can be mean to each other, especially up through the teen years. But to con your own adult sisters out of their time and money for your own gain? There are other, more appropriate words for this. But certainly not “sisterhood.”

  2. Go back a couple of days and read that post from that director whose own senior stole her DIQ in order to get credit for it herself. The one whose national ignored her and then shamed her in public. No one acknowledged two deaths in her immediate family; they only wanted to know why her business was bad.

    If that’s sisterhood, give me solitude.

  3. Oh, you had a purpose … your purpose was to order so they could get commissions. That “sisterhood” was fake, It was lovebombing and manipulation.

    Tell me, if any of the sisterhood quit, did the sisterhood survive the loss of cash flow?

  4. I’m curious. For those of us who were in Mary Kay for 10+ years, how many of those women in your “sisterhood” are still your friends today? For me, a big fat 0.
    This woman who posted is the typical, vulnerable, non-confident woman that Mary Kay consultants and directors devour for their own purpose. Pretend to care about her to get her to join the “sisterhood “ and get her to place orders. Keep building her confidence so she will continue to order. Ordering is what keeps you in the “sisterhood”, not true friendship.

    • I came here to say exactly this! Ask anyone who has left an MLM, for whatever reason. Those friends and sisters evaporate rapidly. Because MLM “sisterhood” is transactional, not unconditional. And when you stop lining their pockets, they drop you like a hot rock.

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