You Don’t Have to
Show It All
Staying
at hotels is fun, except for the mirrors in the bathrooms.
They
all seem to have magnifying mirrors and lighting suitable for an operating
room.
Gah.
Why
would you do that to yourself?
Is
there a conspiracy between the hotels and beauty companies? Do the hotels get a
kickback when people run out and buy electrolysis and/or concealer?
Calling
them vanity mirrors seems like a
misnomer; insecurity mirrors would be
more like it.
Seeing
everything in detail on anything is not always the best option. For example, as
a near-sighted person, I have discovered that Christmas trees and Christmas
lights are best looked at without glasses or contacts. You don’t see the wires
and the hooks and the bulbs and the extension cords. You just see what you are
supposed to see: lights and colors and shine.
I
would argue that the same holds for faces, your own and other people’s. We
don’t have to see every pore and eyebrow hair, people.
The New York Times
Magazine
tends to employ a photography style on their cover subjects that zooms in on
the pores on the person’s nose, which is just mean.
I
think/hope that what I see in my own bathroom mirror (a regular one, lit by
regular light bulbs) is what other people see when they look at me.
Another
reason I think people aren’t seeing me in high-def: They are probably worrying
more about their own faces than scrutinizing mine.
I’m
all for not worrying about this. How about you?
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