So I went and had a fiddle with the app she mentioned, and got bored SO quickly. Like, lightning speed. I thought I would enjoy fooling around with it for at least a little while, but practically before the picture was traced I was bored. This was pretty confusing, considering how much I enjoy putting on makeup.
Then it hit me - it's not about the end result for me. Some women I know love the process of buying makeup - trying things, searching out something they like, considering all the options. I find this part unbearably tedious. This is why I have so many eyeshadow palettes - the idea of putting the time into choosing separate eyeshadow shades just seems totally dull to me. I don't really go makeup shopping as such - if I decide I need a product, I'll look around online for reviews, and then go buy it. The makeup floor in a department store holds no joy for me, just overwhelming confusion which rapidly dissolves into disassociation and boredom. And I got the same feeling from this makeover app. I realised the reason I like makeup is the action of putting on makeup itself. It's the process itself I find comforting, soothing, and confidence building. The feel of the cream on my fingertips, the mascara wand between my lashes. It's these tactile, tangible elements that make makeup worthwhile for me. So fooling with an app is just...meh. It's totally without meaning for me.
![]() |
Image from thecoolhunter.net |
For someone with my brain this train of thought can form a crushing weight, that makes it utterly impossible to move.
The only way I've found to work past my difficulty with getting up and about is to set up a little routine, that I've done so many times I can complete it without thinking. So long as I can muster the will to push myself out of bed and towards the kitchen, I've ground the grooves of my routine so firmly into my psyche that I can continue along the track once started like a clockwork doll, no matter what my brain is telling me. Coffee is naturally part of this. So is taking my meds. I have this routine so down pat I often have to struggle to recall later whether I did actually take my meds or not, and count them out only to find that I did. It's just that my conscious brain was busy beating me up, while my subconscious brain trundled me around the house and got the pills out and took them. Nowadays, putting on makeup for work has become as much a part of this routine as any other.
The soothing power of the ritual of makeup and beauty work in general was best summed up by Anaïs Nin, in her marvelous book A Spy In The House of Love. If you haven't read it, you really really should. Nin has the ability to capture certain aspects of being a woman so much more clearly than any writer I know. Also, A Spy In The House Of Love is pretty short, so you've got no excuse.
"Slowly what she composed with the new day was her own focus, to bring together body and mind. This was made with an effort, as if all the dissolutions and dispersions of her self the night before were difficult to reassemble. She was like an actress who must compose a face, an attitude to meet the day.
The eyebrow pencil was no mere charcoal emphasis on blond eyebrows, but a design necessary to balance a chaotic asymmetry. Make up and powder were not simply applied to heighten a porcelain texture, to efface the uneven swellings caused by sleep, but to smooth out the sharp furrows designed by nightmares, to reform the contours and blurred surfaces of the cheeks, to erase the contradictions and conflicts which strained the clarity of the face’s lines, disturbing the purity of its forms.
She must redesign the face, smooth the anxious brows, separate the crushed eyelashes, wash off the traces of secret interior tears, accentuate the mouth as upon a canvas, so it will hold its luxuriant smile.
Inner chaos, like those secret volcanoes which suddenly lift the neat furrows of a peacefully ploughed field, awaited behind all disorders of face, hair, and costume, for a fissure through which to explode.
What she saw in the mirror now was a flushed, clear-eyed face, smiling, smooth, beautiful. The multiple acts of composure and artifice had merely dissolved her anxieties; now that she felt prepared to meet the day, her true beauty emerged which had been frayed and marred by anxiety."
God, she's just so good. Just so good it makes me sick. Since any words I try to conjure will seem hollow next to hers, I decided to take some pictures to illustrate just how clearly you can see this process of smoothing, calming and straightening she talks about on my face.
Sure, the second one has kinder lighting and a better pose, but I think that helps make the point. The first is the face only my boy (and you now, I suppose) see. The second is the face I show outside. I don't even use that much makeup - eyeshadow, mascara, a swipe of lip stain and a teeny smudge of BB cream under my eyes. It's mostly the process that puts me together - the brush through my hair, smoothing my fringe, patting my face. I discovered this morning while I was actually paying attention to the process that I even stand up straighter once I feel sufficiently "put together".
I've heard other women talk about learning this association of makeup with comfort, and control from watching their mothers put on makeup. But my mother hardly ever wore makeup, and certainly didn't seem to get any pleasure out of it when she did. I think these associations, for me, largely came about due to my time working as a receptionist in the sex industry.
I'd been told I was supposed to wear makeup whenever I was on shift, but at first I took this rule pretty lightly. I was far too busy to be fucking around with adjusting my lipstick at four in the morning, and the boss could go fuck himself if he thought otherwise.
However, the thing about managing a brothel or massage parlour is that you have to appear in control as much as possible. When you're managing between five and ten workers, and however many dozens of clients come through, there are just too many moving parts for you to come across like you don't have things under control. Workers get scared, clients get pushy, and suddenly your workers safety can be at risk. This was a big responsibility for someone as naturally anxious as me. There were times I was coming in to a ten hour shift on five hours sleep, and not only was I not in control at all, my lack of confidence and control was absolutely clear to everyone who saw me. I was letting my co-workers down.
So I started watching the workers more closely, to see how they coped. They were in an even more complex situation than I was - all I had to do was take the clients money, make sure they knew the rules, and strongly encourage them to follow them. It was the workers who had to enforce the rules once they were in the room - all I could do was kick them out if they broke them. So I watched the workers, hoping to learn their secrets. I watched them trailing in at the start of a shift, in track pants or jeans, hair piled loosely on their heads. I watched them unpack their tools, and with makeup and hair tongs transform themselves. I watched them come in with their outside faces, and put on a new one, a face just for inside our walls - one that was perfect, beautiful, and in charge. I decided if this ritual of mascara and lotions and perfume could help them become so in control, maybe it could help me.
Happily, my co-workers were happy to teach me. They told me what to buy, what not to buy, how to use it all, and eventually I was pulling my tools out with them at the start of a shift. Sometimes I would do my makeup before I got there, but I always preferred to do it with them. It felt like we were a team, a gorgeous, confident team ready to handle anything the shift threw at us.
![]() |
I don't care that it was dumb as a post, I loved this movie |
What are your morning rituals to put yourself together? Do they involve makeup, or coffee, or perhaps your cat? I'd love to hear about your experience.
love it! ritual is important, and the ritual of makeup, and the idea of the pleasure of the repetition, predictability, and same outcome is soothing.
ReplyDeletefor me, i get up, get out of bed, get dressed, feed animals, and leave the house. the walk to the bus stop (10-15 minutes) is what i like - in winter, i tend to get coffee on the way, or stop off for a little breakfast - in summer, it's not something i do as often (summer makes me sad.)
(it's @hrasvelgveritas from twitter)
Summer makes me sad too :( I can't leave the house without breakfast anymore, it's one of my grooves.
DeleteHaving said all this nice stuff about repetition, it means when I go on holidays I'm totally fucked.
Absolutely brilliant post. I'm not even sure I can add much to it! It makes so much sense right down to the Nin quote. Do I have any rituals? Yes, similar ones to you and I have to admit that before I put my face on I don't quite feel in control yet. I call it my war paint for a reason!
ReplyDeleteI found this quote written out here - http://sarcozona.org/2010/05/31/armor-and-identity/
DeleteAs you say, there is a very good reason it's referred to as war paint :) Sometimes, maybe all the time, you need something between you and the world to hold together.
Also, you should absolutely read the book if you haven't. I think you would really dig it.
DeleteI only realised recently that I've always used beauty routines exactly like this to help me cope with the world. It's become more poignant since I was diagnosed with depression a year ago. So now it's beauty routines and medication. But hopefully some day the routines will be enough again.
ReplyDeleteThank you so so much for sharing this.
You are very welcome :) Knowing it's made some sort of difference to someone else makes the challenge of sharing worthwhile.
DeleteI think most people with depression have little routines/tricks to help the self soothe, and whatever works for each person should be acceptable. I have a friend who used to put a toy lion on her head when she was really sad, and it always made her feel better.
I'm going to be thinking about this one for a long time (and wouldn't be surprised if a post were to come from it, actually; we can aim to have the neverending post-inspiration chain!). Thank you for writing this, Cassandra. And thank you for obliging my wish to learn more about how your time in the sex industry affected your take on beauty! (Also, pssst: day-of-the-week pill cases are a godsend. Something like this: http://www.walmart.com/ip/7-Day-Mediplanner/14089470?findingMethod=rr )
ReplyDeleteTag, you're it!
DeleteAs for the day of the week pill cases, the sad fact is that I am actually too lazy to put the damn things in the case in the first place. I'm totally pathetic.