Okay, so maybe I’m an ageing hippy. But walking around a CBD filled with professional women, I want to stop them in their tracks and say, ‘Ladies, you have been conned. Laying stuff on your face with a trowel doesn’t make you look any better.’
It might have something to do with coming back from a holiday at the beach, where the only thing anyone seems to wear on their face is sunscreen and a dash of lip-gloss. But I can’t help noticing that I am one of the few women I see who doesn’t slather some type of cosmetic product on their faces.
I never have. The day I got married, a smudge of eyeliner was all the make-up I wore. More than thirty years later, I have graduated to occasional lippy, but eyeliner is basically the only thing in my make-up kit.
Heavy war paint on the face seems to be becoming more commonplace, more the norm. Women at the races are notorious for it. It’s certainly in evidence on the vast majority of the suited corporate types in the city. Increasingly, I see a thick layer of makeup on the fresh faces of schoolgirls on the train. It seems most females won’t step out of the house without it.
What mystifies me is that in most cases, it doesn’t actually improve a woman’s looks. If she is gorgeous, if she has flawless skin, she doesn’t need it. If she is suffering with an outbreak of zits, it really doesn’t hide them. If she is starting to be wrinkly, like me, it looks kind of sad. If she is seriously old, it looks grotesque, like poly filla.