Makeup Free Month Day 20: Words, and makeup as protection

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Today I thought I’d chat a little about words. Comments and words about our appearance whether meant negatively or not can affect us, affect our confidence, so we doubt ourselves and our looks. I’ve experienced this about several aspects of my appearance.

I remember growing up with many comments about my ginger hair. Terms that were nearly always meant as an insult. To have red/ginger hair was to be mocked. People were and still are often horrified if their child is born with red hair. Family members comment. Even strangers. A good friend (a fellow redhead) recently told me one such tale.

In his office at work a client came in and they were chatting about their children. She asked if his son also had red hair. When he replied to say that no he was actually blonde she responded with ‘oh that’s lucky then’.

As a teenager I remember changing shape and having comments shouted at me about my small chest, and my ginger hair.

My dad made a couple of jokey comments about a bit of weight gain when I was 16 and it stuck with me for so long!

As an adult I’ve had stages in my life where I’ve lost weight or been very toned and I at one point when I was a student I became quite obsessed with the positive comments about the change in my body…. When they stopped it was tempting to keep losing weight in order to keep getting the comments.

Since having children I’ve on both occasions lost the baby weight quickly, which has led to positive comments from some and negative comments from others. I’ve been told I look drained, tired, too skinny, a bit like a lollipop… And actually I was trying to eat as much as I could to gain a bit of flesh!

So what has this to do with makeup? Well, I’ve used makeup to:
Hide my colouring,
create new characters when I lacked confidence,
look less tired,
look younger/older,
look slimmer,
look plumper,
look more bronzed,
and even as a teenager look paler!

So we then have two takes on makeup in this sense. It can be argued that we are surrounded by ‘fake’ looking images of women, who rather than having normal colouring and shapes are photoshopped and heavily made up, which we then feel pressured to look like. But also makeup can help our confidence.

What a shame we are so crap at communicating with one another (or so good if that is then intended message). And how frustrating (I feel) that we can be so easily affected by what others think and say.

If you haven’t yet seen my Street Art video – Skin- please take a peek!
http://youtu.be/2Mj1rQduYKM

If you would like to donate to Macmillan Cancer Support please do so via my Just giving page or via text as described below. xxxxxx http://www.justgiving.com/Susan-Merrick

or text MMFM £1 to 70070

 

Makeup Free Month Day 6: What will I go back to?

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So what will I return to? Makeup everyday? Makeup for special occasions?

And should I go back to the same cosmetics? Can I when I’m now so conscious …. Actually, now that I’m confused is a better way of putting it! I am now basically aware that I ‘don’t’ know what I’m putting on my skin.

Most of the products I use don’t have clear labels and if they do it’s a huge long stream of abbreviations that I am clueless about.

And if I try to look at the research it gets worse! Is skin a sponge or a barrier? Do these products protect the skin, soak in, change/damage the skin layers or break down the barrier protection? Or none of these?

Hmm I may start looking into gentle makeup products as I do like playing with makeup. Any tips or recommendations for gentle makeup/cosmetic/skin products please leave them in the comments part! There were some natural ranges discussed in Vogue a few months ago, but I haven’t yet dared to look up how much these cost. I will endeavour to do this over the next couple of weeks.

I’ve just been given another recipe for homemade oil (slightly more complex than my very basic olive oil scrub!). But it seems there is debate (as with everything) about the benefits/drawbacks of olive oil.
It’s here for anyone wanting to try it. I may be having a go later in the month.

From my doula colleague Carly Lewis:
“The calendula oil takes a lot of preparation and a little bit of love but I have had nothing but good feedback when I use it for massaging, in creams and in balms 🙂

1 litre of organic rapeseed/sunflower oil
1 litre bottle (amber glass) cleaned and sterilised
dried organic calendula flower (you don’t need too much of these, just a small pack)
1 litre clear glass wide mouthed jar with a sealed lid (can use clingfilm round and then screw on cap)
plastic funnel
organic muslin

Put as many of the flowers in to the clear glass jar as you can leaving air pockets, fill with the rapeseed/sunflower oil, seal the lid. Put on a window ledge in the sunlight and swirl once a day for 6 weeks. Line the funnel with the muslin and pour the oil through in to the amber glass jar. Make sure that you squeeze the muslin once the flowers and oil are emptied from the clear glass jar as they hold a lot of the goodness in.

Then just add the organic essential oils that you love. I keep my litre bottle in my fridge and pour in to smaller bottles adding the essential oils that take my mood at that time.”

I’m not suggesting that I’m going completely natural. But I am paying a bit more attention to what I put on my skin. With this in mind then making more careful cosmetic choices should be a part of this.

If you are enjoying my blog and would like to donate to Macmillan Cancer Support, please do so via my Just giving page or via text as described below. xxxxxx http://www.justgiving.com/Susan-Merrick

or text MMFM £1 to 70070