I swore off makeup and covered my hair, arms
and legs for nine months. It was frightening -- and liberating
By Lauren Shields
The idea for my modesty experiment began when I worked in New York
City as a receptionist for a company at Fifth Avenue and 52nd Street,
while I edited short films on the side. Every morning I would shoehorn
myself onto the train with thousands of expensive-smelling, coiffed
women who somehow managed to keep their hair looking great under wool
caps in winter and despite hot, stinky gusts of subway backdrafts in the
summer. It was an army of ladies sporting fitted waistlines, toned
arms, blown-out hair, full faces of makeup and heels (which was
incredible, considering all the walking we all had to do). Everyone
looked good, no one was phoning it in, and we were all stylish.
I
hated every second of it. It felt like putting on a costume. In fact,
that was what I called it: my “Grown-up Suit.” Still, given where I
worked, I had to look like that. Every. Damn. Day.
By contrast, on
my way home to the warehouse I inhabited in Williamsburg, I would look
at Hasidic women in their headscarves and long skirts with something
akin to envy. Gawd, I thought. How nice would it be not to have to think
about stupid crap like the latest accessories and whether my hair had
gone limp?
Mind you, these Hasidic women were stylish: They looked
good. They just didn’t look like everyone else. These women were not
“fashionable” first, like most of the women I saw everywhere else — they
seemed to be focused on something else, something more important than
what was trendy. They had a very good reason for not dressing like the
train-squishing crowd of Fifth Avenue, and I wanted a reason too.
Out
of curiosity, while I sat behind my desk answering phones or prepping
conference rooms I began to research Quaker, Jewish and Muslim belief
systems, which allowed adherents of both sexes to dress modestly for
spiritual reasons. I briefly considered beginning to dress like a
Quaker, but I thought to myself, “What’s my excuse? I can’t just
magically dress like a Quaker or a Muslim because I’m tired of dressing
like an American.”
Eventually I scrapped the idea: I had no excuse
to buck the trend. Plus, it would be a little ridiculous: “No, I dress
like this because I’m pretty sure the beauty industry is a ploy to keep
us from thinking about how to break into the boys’ club of corporate
America, and obsession with your appearance is frivolous and
time-consuming! Would you like some more coffee, expensively dressed and
perfectly nice female co-worker?” No, thanks.
Two
years later, I was a first-year student at Candler Theological Seminary
in Atlanta. (Don’t ask how I went from wanting to be a filmmaker in New
York City to applying to seminary. It’s as long and weird a tale as you
might think.) One day, a woman came to my “Women in Church History”
class. She had spent some time in the Middle East with her husband (who
is Middle Eastern) and children, and while there she had been required
to cover her hair and adhere to particular clothing requirements.
She
was there to talk specifically about hijab, the modesty requirements
for many Muslims, and its effect on women. To a classroom full of vocal,
educated feminists who were eager to prove themselves, this lecture
might have been your typical Islam-slamming discussion on whose fault it
is that men desire women (it’s men’s, in case you’re wondering). I was
ready to go to battle.
Instead, it was a shock to all of us.
The
speaker explained very clearly how much she had enjoyed (and
admittedly, sometimes hated) dressing in accordance with modesty rules.
She talked about her daughter who, being half-Muslim, had decided to
wear a headscarf at age 8 soon after returning to the States from
overseas. The speaker didn’t advocate for hijab, but she certainly
wasn’t opposed to it.
This was not the podium-pounding,
acrimonious discussion I had prepared for. Instead of feeling
self-righteous and angry, I felt inspired — and profoundly unsettled. I
didn’t know it then, but what I had learned about modest dress was
teaching me about my own hypocrisy.
After class I retreated to my
favorite couch — the one on the fifth floor the faculty didn’t usually
catch me napping on — and buried my nose in that week’s reading
assignment, “Muslim Women in America.” It’s not possible, I thought,
that women would feel freer dressed modestly, that women would choose to
be ashamed of their bodies.
But it wasn’t shame, I soon learned.
In fact, for many women, it was pride. It was a desire to be considered
for things other than what their hairstyle communicated, or whether
their butts were shaped right — a desire that many people, not just
women, share today.
In America, Islamic dress is often a choice,
and the women who make this choice are declining to endorse Western
Imperialism and the sexualization of their bodies. It’s a way of
expressing modesty and resisting the pressure to be scrutinized against
Western standards of beauty.
And then, as I sat on the couch at
one of the best seminaries in the States, tummy sucked in so I looked
thinner, makeup on my face to hide my blemishes, wearing uncomfortable
shoes because they matched my outfit even though I had to walk three
miles in them, hair with enough $15 product so it laid just so, and my
whole “look” completed with a scarf that was always in my way and skirt
arranged to look natural but that was actually perfectly placed to cover
my knee socks — pinched, pulled, painted and still not good enough, I
thought, “Is this really any better?”
Up until that moment, I had
considered myself the kind of person who was “above” thinking too much
about my appearance (remember, the Grown-up Suit was just a costume —
deep down I disdained all that “frivolous” stuff), but that day on the
couch I was uncomfortably aware of how much I did care about how I
looked. One day I had noticed cellulite where it had never been before,
and it really upset me. My neck was saggier than it was when I was 20,
and I found myself awake at night wondering if I was just fat, or
getting older, and whether I was still beautiful.
Why should I
care? Why, if beauty didn’t matter to me, did I have more than $600
worth of makeup in my closet (and I never left the house without at
least some of it on) and more shoes than any sane individual needs? Why
was I convinced that if I didn’t look “sexy” or at least attractive no
one would listen to what I had to say?
The fact that I was so afraid to let go of all those security blankets told me that I should try it. So I did.
With
the support of my seminary community and my then-boyfriend, I designed
the Modesty Experiment, in which I took my cues from Jewish, Muslim and
some Christian modesty practices in order to loosen my death grip on the
idea that youth and beauty were prerequisites to relevance. I started a
blog and a journal to stay accountable, and I gave away more than a
third of my clothes. The clothes I couldn’t wear during the Experiment
because they had no sleeves or were too short or tight, I gave to a
friend, along with all of my makeup. It was hard — I actually cried on
the way home from the clothing drop box.
And for nine months, I
covered all of my hair, wore nothing that was so fitted that I felt like
I had to sit or stand funny to look good, and never exposed my knees or
my shoulders, except at home. With rare exceptions, I wore no makeup or
nail polish. It was kind of brutal, and really liberating.
It’s
easy to say that age and appearance don’t matter when you’re young and
beautiful. Facing evidence of my own aging, I had found (to my disgust)
that I was just as panicked about my looks as other women. I wasn’t
liberated. In fact, I had been telling myself I was beyond
superficiality when in fact I had bought the whole thing hook, line and
sinker.
But in nine months, I learned that yes, you do get more
done when you’re not obsessed with your shoes, but you do still need to
look put-together for your own self-confidence. I learned that looking
good isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but when it becomes the cornerstone
of your identity — like the advertising industry tries to convince us it
is — then you’re doing nothing but damage to yourself.
I learned
that if you put down the Beauty Suit you will be ignored by people who
think you have to look a certain way to be worth their time (men and
women included), and that that is a small price to pay for not having to
put on a costume every time you think you’ll need to impress them. I
learned that you will feel invisible until you open your mouth, and then
people will be amazed at what you have chosen to do in protest of the
Western beauty ideal. And then those people probably won’t date you
because you’re kind of outspoken. Or whatever.
I learned that, to
the people who matter, you do not become invisible when you stop trying
so hard to look available. I became visible to the one guy I had been
looking for, and his proposal three weeks ago rocked my world. I became
visible to a community of women who began to have conversations about
just how trapped they felt by the beauty ideal because it demands so
much expensive upkeep and such a constant stream of internal criticism. I
even heard from a lot of guys who swore that the more made-up and
“rich” a woman looked (think the Kardashians), the less inclined they
felt to take her seriously, either as a co-worker or a dating prospect.
More
than anything else, I learned how to see my appearance for what it is: a
“Lauren Suit,” which does nothing more than provide a necessary
exterior for an inner life that will never be available in stores. Also,
you would be amazed at how much money you save not trying to buy the
latest Grown-up Suit.
Lauren Shields is a freelance author based
in Atlanta. She is currently working on a book, "The Modesty
Experiment," based on her experience and supplemented by her blog, themodestyexperiment.blogspot.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment