One author reflects on her uneasy relationship with buying make-up in light of her low-income upringing
There have been 4.1 million children living in poverty in 2017, and it’s predicted that because of the continued Universal Credit rollout this December, there will probably be an extra 400,000 by 2022. Growing up, I used to be considered one of them.
As a baby, I struggled to construct a healthy relationship with beauty, since it was something I literally couldn’t afford to do. I used to be ignorant on the time of the proven fact that I used to be already privileged in other ways by default – fitting the Western beauty industry ideals of being young, slim and white. Don’t get me flawed, I’ve at all times taken pride in being clean and searching my best, despite having to be frugal with showers since the gas meter was nearly at all times in emergency credit. The last item I ever wanted was for others to think I looked ‘poor’ – I’d somewhat wash with cold water within the sink.
But growing up in a one-parent family in a council house where finding money for the subsequent evening’s meal was often prioritised over replacing the near-empty bottle of shampoo or tube of toothpaste, made me view any beauty products that were anything but basic as a whole indulgence. It grew more complicated after I discovered make-up in highschool. I lusted after my mate’s recent Bourjois lip gloss – which must only have cost slightly over a fiver – as she generously applied it while pouting in the bathroom mirror, then the YSL Touche Eclat that she click-click-clicked after her older sister gave it to her just because she’d bought a fresh one for an eye-watering £20.
There have been no high-end hand-me-downs in my family, but I liked make-up and I just wanted to slot in with the lunchtime trip to the toilets. I received bits of make-up for Christmas, but I felt ashamed and guilty for asking for them after I knew my mum hadn’t visited the hairdresser all 12 months and had a cosmetics bag half-filled with the most affordable products she could find down the high street.
That shame and guilt never left me. I need to have a greater and bolder relationship with beauty and make-up, but my upbringing makes me feel ridiculous for wanting anything greater than crucial. Even today, I feel very uncomfortable spending greater than £10 on a foundation, despite the fact that I can afford to treat myself. I had my nails done last Christmas for the primary time and, despite it leaving me feeling like a grownup who finally has her shit together, the thought of spending £20 every month to recapture that feeling seems absurd – especially considering just a couple of days later, our landlord gave us notice he was selling our flat. I can’t depend on the bank of mum and pop to bail me out of any financial woes.
Most of my make-up is from Superdrug’s own brand and anything that isn’t might be a freebie through working within the media or from a friend. Thankfully, I’m in a position to afford toiletries without worrying, however the considered at some point starting a family and ending up in a situation where I actually have to make a choice from feeding my kids or ensuring they’ve shower gel and enough hot water to clean with, as my mum did, is yet one more financial reason to postpone the thought of indulging in beauty products for slightly while longer.
Not every woman from a working-class background shares the identical outlook on beauty, nevertheless it’s still a sophisticated relationship in other ways.
Suze, 30, had an analogous upbringing to mine, but her pimples meant that she learnt to prioritise health and wonder, saying, “I used to be really self-conscious about my scars and redness, so I actually couldn’t wait to begin earning my very own money and experiment with products that worked for me.” After getting herself right into a financially secure position after leaving university, Suze would happily spend £32 on a foundation and cleanse with products from brands like Liz Earle.
Nonetheless, following the breakdown of a long-term relationship, she now finds herself back in a precarious financial situation. “This month, I can’t afford to purchase my normal foundation, so I went to several large malls free of charge samples to tide me over until payday. I’m not happy with that and I do know I could just buy a less expensive foundation, but I’m determined to not compromise on the standard my skin deserves ever again, because I’d feel like I used to be back to being a skint teenager, consistently worrying about my skin.”
“Feeling guilty for spending money I earn on something that makes me feel good will be frustrating, because, like Suze and Eden, deep down I feel it must be something I deserve”
Eden, 22, also grew up in a single-parent family on advantages, and, like mine, her mum would borrow money at Christmas and birthdays to purchase her make-up products. Although she still lives at home, she’s now in a position to buy her own products when she wants them, explaining: “Financially, me and my family are all higher so I do not actually feel guilty spending money on beauty products anymore, especially because it means not putting that pressure on my mum to pay for them.” Nonetheless, her upbringing taught her to be cautious and persist with low cost products: “Because I’ve at all times been less fortunate with money, I’m quite smart with money, so I still won’t splash out on high-end brands.”
Feeling guilty for spending money I earn on something that makes me feel good will be frustrating, because, like Suze and Eden, deep down I feel it must be something I deserve. Research into the connection between class and the wonder industry is lacking, but there are many studies showing how using beauty products and make-up could make us feel higher day-to-day. If people really do judge others inside a matter of moments – something I definitely do – I need anyone I meet to think I’ve got my act together just by my made-up face and hair, which in turn makes me feel more confident. This helps to elucidate why the typical person living in London is willing to spend £113 of their monthly salary on grooming and wonder products, while the typical 18 to 24-year old in Britain spends £63 a month on improving their appearance.
But, for a growing number of individuals still living and growing up on a low income or in poverty, like I did, not with the ability to afford health and wonder products in any respect is becoming a fair greater problem.
Research carried out by Kind Direct in 2017 found that 37 per cent of the UK – 56 per cent of which were 18 to 24-year-olds – have needed to go without hygiene or grooming essentials, or cut down on them, because of lack of funds. The Trussell Trust, which runs food banks across the UK, also reported that greater than half of the people using its services cannot afford toiletries. If women and girls can’t afford to purchase tampons – which a growing number can’t – this surely must affect their relationship with the health and wonder industry?
In 2017, Jo Jones and Sali Hughes arrange Beauty Banks which distributes hygiene and wonder products to food banks, homeless shelters, schools, NHS Trusts and period-poverty charities. Jo explains that “poor hygiene can result in a lot of serious health issues, bad body image, social exclusion, bullying and so forth. We never intended to incorporate make-up in our beauty parcels, but we do because we were specifically asked for it by our charity partners. They tell us that it makes the ladies they serve appear and feel good about themselves.”
Discussing feedback from schools and youth centres, she adds: “Young people treasure the non-essential items we send like hair styling products and make-up (if appropriate) because it makes them feel special to have such treats which might be way beyond their reach. Should you’re growing up in a household where toothpaste and sanitary pads are left off the shopping list because there isn’t the cash for them, then something slightly phenomenal has a majorly positive effect.”
Even when women from a low-income background do prioritise cosmetic products, there’s the fear of being ridiculed for caring, because of the media’s obsession with mocking working-class girls at Aintree’s Ladies Day held before the Grand National, where women traditionally dress up and luxuriate in themselves. In response to the Every day Mail, these women are all fake tan and hair extensions, which is interesting, since the last time I watched the upper-classes parading around on Made in Chelsea, in addition they wore fake tan and hair extensions. Some women need their cosmetic armour simply to face the day and feel a bit higher about life, others just really enjoy the way in which they appear with it on – it’s not OK to ridicule those who can’t afford the perfect beauty products, while praising those that can.
“Even when women from a low-income background do prioritise cosmetic products, there’s the fear of being ridiculed for caring, because of the media’s obsession with mocking working-class girls”
This isn’t to suggest that everybody who’s grown up in a snug or middle-class background is mechanically frivolous in the case of beauty, however the privilege of growing up without ever considering how much lunch money you’d should sacrifice for an honest hair conditioner as a substitute of the stuff mum normally picks up on the pound shop, makes the connection slightly easier.
I spoke with a bunch of female friends who grew up in middle-class, two-parent families, all of them agreed that they’ve never needed to prioritise other each day costs over the same old health and wonder products that they grew up with – other than when starting university, when being a skint student is a rite of passage, right? And anyway, those products they missed could at all times be found back home.
“I remember my mother using Elizabeth Arden products for her facial routine and he or she got my sister and I using Easy or Clean and Clear in our teens – for years she tried to instil some awareness of the importance of a cleanse-tone-moisturise routine. She also bought all my make-up but I didn’t ask for an excessive amount of of that,” describes considered one of my mates, Mary, 28. “Today, I religiously cleanse, tone and moisturise twice a day, and now I am unable to not do it. I actually have needed to factor it into my budget and do see it as an added expense since the products are dear, but I feel it’s a priority now.”
Mary was clearly just as influenced by her beauty routines and surroundings while growing up as much as I used to be – they were just very different. She was taught to treat skincare as a priority to the purpose that she now budgets for the perfect products, acknowledging and accepting that it’s a luxury she will afford. I still use the identical Dove soap bar and tub of Nivea cream that my whole family used, feeling relieved to give you the option to purchase them.
Despite continuing to be socially mobile, I don’t see my relationship with beauty changing anytime soon. I shouldn’t consider myself ‘lucky’ to give you the option to purchase the essentials but, knowing that girls my age are counting on beauty banks, I do. It’s comforting to learn that individuals from similar backgrounds even have their very own complicated relationships, although I’m barely envious of those that are determined to prioritise and spend money on their beauty routines more as they get older.
I actually don’t begrudge anyone who grew up in a position to wash their face with decent products, ask their mum for a recent lip balm and who were in a position to afford to experiment with beauty – that’s the way in which it must be. But, we’d like to speak about health and wonder as a privilege more and realise the ugly reality behind it.
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