As Sarah and I walked the boulevard today, I reached up to
touch my face, realizing that in the rush of getting out the door to meet her I
forgot to put on foundation. As I felt my face flush from our brisk walk, I
said aloud that I’d forgotten.
“I thought you gave up makeup,”
she said, in reference to my August
5th decision.
“I did. Foundation’s not makeup,” I
replied. “It’s colored moisturizer.”
She laughed, and I admitted that I’d
cheated, almost always wearing foundation throughout the whole ordeal, wearing
a ‘full face’ of makeup when I sang at two different funerals (sparkly eye
shadow and everything!), and wearing a
touch of mascara for a few of the days, especially recently.
“I think I’m ready to give up
giving up makeup,” a said as I ducked under a low-hanging tree branch bordering
the sidewalk.
“Yeah?”
“Yeah. You know, giving up makeup
was really hard. For the first month it sucked. I didn’t want to look in
the mirror because I looked terrible. Wearing makeup every day since I was 13
had trained me never to get used to what I looked like without it. But now, it’s
not so bad. It took almost two months, but I’ve finally gotten used to seeing
myself without makeup. This isn’t to say that I finally think I look better
without makeup, but simply that I don’t feel rotten and unpresentable if I don’t
wear it. Not to mention, not wearing makeup came in really handy when I gave up Conroy.”
Even my hairdresser says
that she tries to go at least one day a week without makeup for this reason
alone. “Women aren’t comfortable with themselves anymore because they are never
purely themselves for most of their adult lives.”
And as I think I’ll officially
give up giving up makeup, I realize that this may have been the point all
along. The point isn’t that it’s wrong to spend $20 on a tube of hypoallergenic
blackest black mascara. The point isn’t that that makeup won’t be acceptable at
Shelter50 (where I’ll take up
residence come November). The point isn’t that I made a decision to give up
something and now I can’t turn my back on it. The point is that it’s possible
to retrain your mind how to view yourself. Sometimes what you once thought was
terrible is really neither terrible or beautiful; it’s just you, and it’s never a bad idea to get used to you.
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