Yesterday I watched the Golden Globes. I love awards shows. Red carpets. Frocks. Celebrities. Hair. Jewels. Strategic posing. Fluff. Love it all.
I don’t care about the men even a little bit. Pah. Meh. This is an event for the ladies. And I love to look at them. For quite some time now I’ve been looking, searching really, for my future face.
I know, I know — a red carpet is a stupid place to look for your future face. Or even your current one.
But celebrities have always been avatars for the rest of us. They’re the shinier, glossier, famous versions of us. What we might look like on our best day if we had some industrial strength spanx and a team of professionals whose job it was to make us look flawless.
Whether they mean to, whether they want to… celebrities calibrate modern standards of beauty and desirability for us all.
So I search. I search on red carpets for faces of women who aren’t 22 or 25 or even 30. I’ve left those ages far behind and frankly, PHEW. They were not terribly happy ages for me. Not my peak. I found my 20s to be the most confusing decade of my life so far as I tried to work out who the hell I was. I’m hella happy in my 40s.
I just want to see other women my age looking, you know, my age — not 32, which is the age everyone in Hollywood somehow looks, whether they’re 22 or 54. Botox and fillers make young women look older but they have them anyway, for reasons I can’t hope to understand but with which I always try to empathise. A world in which your worth is indexed so brutally against your face and your weight must be impossibly difficult.