Thursday, 14 April 2016

No-Make Up Bride #1: Why?

I recently got engaged, and I’m planning to wear no make-up for the wedding.

!!!

My fiancé Sam and I pretty much knew we would end up getting married from Day 1 (more about him in a separate blog post), and it was several months ago I began considering not wearing make-up for our wedding. I very rarely wear the stuff anyway, and Sam loves me without it, so the thought of approaching him down the aisle with make-up on seemed a bit oddly inauthentic. Even so, I’ve been quite hesitant about the idea, because I can still get spots that are large enough to be given names, and such a spot is bound to appear at precisely the wrong moment. Then I saw this video, which made me certain I wanted to do it.

Before I ‘go off on one’ (I am guilty of that a lot), I need to spell out a few things, because I’m not actually anti make-up. In fact, I’m fairly on the fence…

As long as it’s not mixed into a curry, I’m happy for make-up to be used for pretty much anything. I would say face-paint counts as a form of make-up, which is my favourite; I love how people can be made to be look like Simba or the Wicked Witch of the West for the theatre, or just wildly colourful with lots of different glittery eye shadows and stuff (I’m not an expert, if you can’t tell!). Obviously if you’re appearing on TV or film, you kind of need it for the lighting at least, since you’d probably look less natural otherwise. If you do it mainly because you’re arty and you really enjoy experimenting with different effects and whatnot, I can in fact resonate with that a little bit, even though I rarely bother myself. But the one purpose of make-up that really opens up a massive Worm Can is this:

Wearing it to make you look prettier. (N.B. not pretty, like a different kind of pretty to the pretty you already are… prettier.)

This is where I’m very much divided in my opinion. A lot of people seem to justify it by applying the ‘insecure vs. secure’ argument; i.e. if you’re secure in your appearance and you wear make-up, it doesn’t matter because you’re just wearing it for fun, but if you wear it because you’re insecure, that’s bad. 

But it’s not really that simple. 

I’ve not met a single girl, not even myself, who isn’t insecure about their image in some way. Although I would put myself fairly well into the ‘secure’ end of the scale, even I’m still quite nervous about the thought of a zit appearing on the wedding day. And you can hardly blame girls for being insecure, given the nature of the video I shared. If wearing make-up makes you feel good or awesome or better about yourself, especially if you’re tired or ill… well! What a fantastic, simple tool make-up is! Although, it could be argued that it only prolongs any insecurities by not addressing the core of the problem. Who knows; everyone’s different.

Even someone who is totally secure about how they look without make-up (hypothetically, I assume!) could still choose to wear it to look prettier, if we assume beauty is objective. Though the precisely contoured cheekbones and perfect eyeliner flicks are aims that teenage girls and women are often too heavily pressured by, I think there is a form of objective beauty. Please don’t come and egg my house for this! All you have to do is look at a slug and compare it to a swan to know that objective beauty exists. I don’t mean that people who are not more naturally attractive can’t ever be considered attractive – we’re all familiar with the idea that getting to know a person and their beauty on the inside can perceptively increase their outer beauty, and I agree with that. And of course, people have different tastes; subjective beauty exists as much as objective. But there’s normally a widespread appreciation for a good-looking person, even if they aren’t to everyone’s nuanced tastes. And slugs will always be ugly, no matter how much time you spend with them! :D

However, the idea of objective beauty has gone too far. That doesn’t really need saying, because there are Dove campaigns, nomorepage3 hashtags, petitions to create laws that protect models from having to become dangerously skinny, and general materials circulating the internet that fight for beauty to be considered differently in our culture and to get rid of the objectification of women in the media. They challenge us to be comfortable in our own skin - with our natural, authentic selves. They challenge us to fight against our insecurities by saying our flaws aren’t really flaws. Perhaps this attempt to alter the standards of beauty and broaden its definition will eventually take away the focus on beauty in the first place, or at least smooth it out. However, I think this attack against the very idea of objective beauty has also gone too far and needs to be countered; it still seems to have an emphasis on everyone being beautiful, rather than everyone not even worrying about whether they look beautiful. The ‘You’re more beautiful than you think’ video by Dove, for example, could be renamed ‘Why worry about beauty?’ or similar. I worry about its comment that ‘believing you’re beautiful couldn’t be more critical to happiness’ – shouldn’t our identity and happiness be grounded in something other than outer beauty?

This is what I want to help achieve. I’m not trying to say beauty is never important; initial physical attraction is what can potentially make someone more than a friend (if ya know what I mean). I think image and beauty and the gift of being able to appreciate things visually is such a wonderful thing – I wouldn’t say stop telling young girls they look beautiful, but rather do it less often. Or if you are going to say it, balance it with other compliments about their character. It is okay to wear make-up - that per se is not the problem. The problem is that, like in the video I shared, too many people are called ugly regardless of whether they wear make-up or not (which is insulting and unnecessarily mean no matter how true it may be, or how confident the recipient is with their image), and that the victims, more often than not, feel the need to rectify it by changing their image. 

Do I want to inspire make-up wearers to become more comfortable with their non-made up face? Absolutely. But more than that, I want to challenge the idea that outer image is such a strong focus and primary part of our identity in the first place. Most of us already know this; most decent people in the world know that, although visual information about a person is useful, the personality driving it is ultimately more important. But I feel the need to make a statement and cement it nonetheless. It can’t really go much further than not wearing make-up on a wedding day! So maybe this can be the tipping-point (though I’m not quite the first person to do this!). It’s not that I think YouTube channels dedicated to make-up tutorials shouldn’t exist; image can be a fantastic way to express yourself. Make-up can be great. But our identity is not in our image*. For me, this attitude stems from my belief in Jesus. My identity is solely in Him, so that everything I do, say, think, or am, should stem out of that. 

So, apparently that means I’ve decided not to wear make-up on the day I marry Sam.

Wish me luck! :) x


* which means I’ve got to be very, VERY careful not to make the fact that I’m a ‘no make-up bride-to-be’ override the fact that I’m a bride-to-be, because that defeats the whole point of this. Unfortunately, wanting the world to stop focussing on image means focussing on image for a while, a bit like when you tidy a room – it gets messier before it gets tidier!

8 comments:

  1. Brilliant, Beth! Some valid points to put it mildly! x

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  2. Nice one Beth. Like it.... and think you will look great on your wedding day. Sam loves you for you not for any superficial face paint. I very rarely wear make up and people are always asking me how my skin makes me look so young....bonus i'd say ��well done for following your heart Xxx

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    1. Thank you! Ooh have any skin-care tips?! :) x

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  3. Good on you Beth! I like your arguments and you express yourself very well.

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  4. very true and interesting, as you know Beth I am in the bridal industry and I personally have never been to a wedding where the bride has not worn make-up,and the ones who do wear it want a simple natural look. So what could be more natural than anyone without make-up. you are a very beautiful young lady and I think you will look stunning on your wedding day with or without make-up. x

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    1. Thank you so much for the support and kind words :) (I assume this is Auntie Dawn? Thanks either way though!) x

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