LOOKING INTO THE GLASS

In a recent discussion with my Seasoned Voices blogging group, we talked about how our beauty and self-care routines have changed and evolved as we age, and then the topic veered to procedures and our take on that.

One of the wonderful things about belonging to a group like this is the discussions we have. I mentioned that I remembered reading a Substack article that mirrored some of my own feelings on where the beauty industry is headed: convincing younger and younger women (girls really!) that they need all kinds of products and interventions. And, as women, we’re not supposed to voice an opinion on another’s choices, but simply cheer them on, whatever their decision, be it injecting poisonous substances into themselves or undergoing cosmetic surgery. Choice is what it’s about.

I’m all for women choosing what they do with their bodies and won’t criticize women for doing so. But the questions I would ask are: Why? What makes them feel they need to do this?

By solely focusing on applauding choice and not daring to voice a question or opinion, we are allowing the pervasiveness of the beauty industry (and the patriarchy) to spread and envelop young girls. Imagine thinking you need retinol in your twenties! We are allowing them to continue to set beauty standards for women, to tell us we need to ‘fix’ our wrinkles to feel good about ourselves.

Yes, we want women to choose what they do with their bodies, in the name of self-care or confidence or feeling good about oneself but at least let’s have the conversation about why we make the choices we make. Why are women in their 30’s opting for botox and cosmetic surgery? What is behind this? Why are 10-year-olds performing nightly skin-care routines? I barely washed my face when I was ten.

I do have an opinion on these things, and it’s not simply, “Good for you!” I want to know what is underneath those decisions. I do think it’s unnecessary for 30-year-olds to plump up lips and non-existent lines and inject botox. If a 65-year-old wanted some lines to be filled out for a special occasion or to look ‘fresher’, I could understand that. She’s likely not going to make a habit of it. But a 30-something still has a good 50-60 years ahead of her, and is she going to keep injecting fillers into herself for all that time? What are the health implications? And what message does this send to young girls, who are watching and imitating? It may be individual choice, but when it becomes just something one does because everyone else is doing it, then it becomes a societal thing, something bigger, something that sends a message to young children. Our individual choices in this context matter.

Yes, I’m all for women wanting to look good and feel good. I do too. But let’s not stand back and think our individual choices and behaviour don’t rate a conversation. Let’s not shut that down.

My own beauty routines have changed over the years. At one time, I used a separate day cream, a different night cream, each with its own empty promise. Now I’ve simplified that – one cream will do, if it’s nighttime here, it’s daytime somewhere else. I do use a serum, although when I run out, I will often go for weeks without one. One thing I do religiously – clean my face at night. I get the occasional facial now and have recently started using Korean products which I like and may stick with, but I’m fickle when it comes to skin creams. No brand has me swearing loyalty to it.

Over the years, I’ve used inexpensive drug store products and more expensive salon ones (and really, there’s little difference except in price). I now use a sunscreen daily (didn’t for many years and regret it). I’ve never considered botox and won’t. I realize when it comes to self-care routines, I’m someone who likes to keep things to a minimum, because I find the time involved tedious. I resent time spent sitting in a hair salon or getting a pedicure, or even in front of a mirror cleaning and patting down my face. I don’t know why I’m like this, or maybe I do. I want the results, but don’t want to put in the time, time I’d rather spend lying in bed reading. It’s just who I am: hurrying through monotonous routines so I can get to the real living.

RECENTLY READ

WHISTLER – ANN PATCHETT

Daphne runs into her stepfather, Eddie, after 44 years. She hasn’t seen him since she was 9, and although he was in their lives for only a couple of years, the bond and love between them was strong.

I did have a minor quibble: the instant rapport and affection between Daphne (now an adult) and Eddie given the long absence, and, by Daphne’s admission, she hadn’t thought about him in all those intervening years.

But I got over this after the backstory developed, because “childhood never leaves us. We seal the room up and cover it in sheetrock….and sooner or later someone always winds up tapping on the wall. …and then the whole thing comes tumbling down.”

This is a story about that, about how Eddie’s ‘case for human decency’ informed Daphne’s life. “I believed him, and by believing him, I had found it to be true.”

Patchett has a beautiful way of telling a story, drawing us in so that we want it to go on forever.

Comments

  1. Agree to agree! I loved make up when I was younger, but eye sensitivity put the kibosh on it. I had fun playing with make up when I was younger, and today I enjoy the freedom of not having to put on make up or to "do" my hair. I mean, sometimes I spend 10 minutes curling it when I have the mood, but that's it. There is nothing wrong with using fillers and cosmetic procedures unless you feel like it's mandatory. Then it's all kinds of wrong.

    I have a long history of Patchett not working for me, but the curse was broken with Whistler. What an incredible book.

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  2. It's tricky, in part because our collective behavior does shape culture, *but* each individual is "punished" (especially in her career) for, say, choosing to not color her hair as soon as it starts showing greys.

    I think it is *insane* that men and women start showing grey about the same time but because of society most women dye until near-retirement, which also leads to the assumption that women with grey hair are 10-20 years older than they are, no matter the rest of their skin/movement/etc., and that any woman with greying hair, outside of certain jobs is just marking time until retirement. We should NOT be weighting women down with the financial and time costs, and the chemical exposures, of a multi-decade-long Dye Routine by societally punishing them and their families.

    That particular one I don't have a horse in, since I lucked into genetics with minimal actual greying, but I have friends who had large streaks of hair greying in their mid-30s, and most of my friends dye their hair now, and that's just the way it is for now; the pandemic shifted the meter a *little* on whether undyed hair is acceptable for women - and made it slightly more visible - but now there's enough job worry and competition and misogyny that the force-field may be shifting back and just... augh.

    Both hair dye and skin are complicated to some degree by "wanting to feel like oneself" and look, yes, my concept of how I should look also lags well behind my age, but it's given entirely too much extra weight by the world having all these expectations, even if "wanting to look like I think I look" is part of the equation.

    BUT like supporting small businesses instead of Amazon and buying fair-trade and reducing waste and reducing energy use and emissions, the degree to which individual choices make a difference is tiny - substantial in the aggregate, but each person has to deal with inconvenience, *AND* industry/wealth/lobbyists - in beauty's case, advertising and products, including all those that aren't directly beauty-related but that use "looking old" as code in their advertisements anyway - are where *most* of the worst garbage happens.

    So I get it. It is hard to push back against a river. And everyone is tired. And some women feel restored by skin care routines - like they are taking care of themselves and getting a moment that is a break but that they don't need to feel guilty about - instead of bored and irked. But also, yes, the society-wide push to make younger and younger women/girls think they have a Skin Aging Issue is a huge, huge problem. But it's a river, and they're hard to stop by yourself.

    As long as these things are a signifier of wealth and youth and as long as our culture worships wealth and youth-for-women, it's going to be an uphill battle.

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