Eye of the Beholder: Vanity of Sight

Jimmy Nash “I Can See Clearly Now”

Ahh, to see.  For those who’ve never needed assistance and/or tools to do so clearly, seeing just seems a given.  You open your eyes and the world presents itself to you.  However, if you’ve ever opened your eyes only to see the world out of focus, I feel your pain.  Now, I recognize that having whatever bad eye sight I have is better than having none at all but for the purposes of complaining, I am only comparing those in need of contacts and/or glasses to those who’ve only considered these options to cosmetically change the color of their eyes or to “look smarter.”

I’ve had glasses since age 6.  Yep, I was a scrawny, thumb-sucking, know-it-all first grader with glasses.  (Very little has changed since then sadly…)  At that age, glasses didn’t mean much else than something you had to be careful with because mom would get really upset when you broke them.  Of course, you didn’t understand why.  You just went back to the doctor and got more.  (Ah, the ignorance/innocence of youth.)  I don’t believe I ever really liked my glasses.  I just don’t think they began to bother me until middle school/junior high.

As hormones started to kick in and the pretty girls were identified (for at least the next 10 years), being scrawny and boyish was bad enough.  But I had to wear these thick plastic glasses too?!  They were just setting me up for social failure.  Beauties never wear glasses.  You don’t see singers, actresses or models with glasses unless they’re playing the part of the nerdy and the less attractive.  Glasses were like having braces, being flat-chested and having short hair.  You just didn’t want that.  Glasses did not equal attractive.

When my mother told me I’d have to get braces in 8th grade, I almost cried.  Well, could I at least get contacts before?  The last thing I wanted to happen was to look like a nerdy boy with crooked teeth that needed to be fixed.  Now, of course, I was far from the only one going through this helplessly awkward phase.  But at age 12/13, other people’s awkward phases don’t make you feel better.  Most people don’t seem to adopt the mean “at least I look better than them” mentality until they’re further into their teenage/early 20 years.  Thinking I was just being ridiculous, my mother didn’t want to deal with costs and issues associated with contacts so I ended up not getting them until I started working at Sears my senior year of high school and could afford them myself.

To not avoid the cliché, contacts opened my eyes to a whole new world.  Nothing looked better with contacts than it did with glasses except for my reflection.  There was a sense of beauty (or at least less ugliness) and freedom.  In my clouded, naive teenage brain, glasses made me unattractive.  Contacts at least helped to level the playing field.  I could now really play with makeup, eyeshadows, eyeliners, mascaras.  I could dress up my face.  They didn’t do anything for the acne or other flaws but at least the glasses were finally gone.  And with the braces having been removed the year before, I felt I was starting to look more like a young lady and less like a slightly more feminine Steve Urkel.  (No, seriously.  Urkelina was my nickname on the junior high volleyball team.  At the time, no one could think of Myrtle – the name of Steve’s southern belle cousin who came to visit a few times.)

Fast forward 8 years and not much has changed.  Aside from family and my roommate, it’s rare that anyone see me in my glasses.  (In fact, if you see me in glasses, it generally signals it was a rough morning and will probably not be a very good day so stay of my way as much as possible.  If it’s glasses AND my hair is tied back/wrapped up, stay clear.  I’m probably either sick or exhausted.)  Contacts and the insecurities tied to years of glasses are still very much a part of my identity.  I still believe I look better in contacts and usually have at least a bit of eye makeup on.  Luckily, I don’t really wear the bases, foundations, creams, powders and the like.  Genetics and the dermatologist have helped me maintain relatively clear, consistent skin.  But those eyes are a different story.

While I like to fancy myself rather intelligent, I don’t want to look like a nerd, just maybe sound like one at times.  Over the last two years, I’ve started to reconsider my opinion of glasses and me in them.  As I’m trying to force myself to wear these $400 pair of glasses more often than between my bed and the bathroom where my contacts are in the morning and the bathroom to my bed at night, I still find myself preferring the image of a glasses-less me.  Ideally, I’d love to get lasik surgery.  But last year my optometrist quoted me around $6,000 for the procedure.  Are my eyes and vanity worth six grand?  Yes.  I just don’t have the available funds.  Trust, as soon as I do, I’ll happily toss out my glasses, glasses cases, lens cleaning clothes, lens cleaning spray, contacts, contact cases and cleaning solution bottles, and stare blindly into the light.  Only to open them later seeing the world the way it’s meant to be seen – clearly.  I simply can’t imagine waking up in the morning and being able to see.  It must feel like a miracle.  (And I don’t care how overly dramatic that might sound. 🙂 )

Realizing it’s time to schedule her annual eye exam,

Jo’van

Eye of the Beholder: Apples, Pears and Bananas

Alternative title: My Body: More than the Sum of Its Faults

(I couldn’t resist.  Gotta love Youtube)

Like any normal, American woman, I’ve had issues with my body image.  And by issues, I mean minor annoyances.  I’ve been blessed enough to not feel the need to go to extremes.  When I was skinny, I accepted being skinny.  When I had a roll or two, I just had a roll or two.  Deep down I knew my issues were minor.  But nothing’s truly minor to a 14-year-old, 19-year-old, or even a 25-year-old.  You just debate whether the pain and cost of doing something about it is worth the benefits.  In my case, it never seemed to be.

Growing up, I, of course, saw the same models, singers and actresses everyone else did.  They were all beautiful because someone else said they were.  But in my head, Whitney Houston was gorgeous b/c she could sing (despite the ridiculous crimped blond wigs).  Naomi Campbell was intriguing b/c she would’ve failed the paperbag test miserably and everyone still loved her.  Cindy Crawford was cool b/c no one seemed to care she had a mole, oh, excuse me, a “beauty mark”.  Madonna had a big gap that no one seemed to notice.  I found these women and countless others interesting because we were all supposed to pay attention to what they could do and not the small things that would’ve been hinderances to people in the real world.

As I got older, I began to identify with women and characters who suffered the same ill fates as I did (or what I considered to be ill at the time).  Storm was my favorite X-Men, not b/c of her powers (although controlling the weather would be pretty cool) but b/c she was tall, slender and black.    (Don’t even get me started on Halle Berry being cast in the movie.  I love her but she’s SHORT!!!)  Kate Hudson became cool in my eyes not b/c of her skills but b/c she’s rather flat-chested.  The Jet beauties were interesting b/c they always had big butts.  Tyra Banks never lied about her weaves.  (I’ve never had one but I understand the desire.)  Etc…

Most of the women I’ve named are black.  This is not to say that I don’t see the Catherine Zeta-Jones, Angelina Jolie, Jennifer Lopez, Lisa Ling or Heidi Klums as beautiful.  Of course they are.  But they’re just not who I generally measured myself against.  What was the point?  My mother worked very hard to surround me with milk chocolate-skinned, dark brown-eyed and raven-haired dolls, pictures, barbies, books, etc.

I went through a brief phase of imagining how much easier it would be to be blond and blue-eyed but I emerged content to be brown.  Next came the feeling of not being black enough.  I seemed to lack the desirable attributes of black women.  Instead of full, luscious lips, my top lip all but disappears when I smile (think Jim Carey’s Fire Marshall Bill from In Living Color).  The voluptuous coke-bottle figure lovable even with a little extra padding completely missed me.  With my small chest, no-existent hips and lack of waist, I was much closer to the $1.79 2-liter bottle.  As puberty ended, it became apparent I’d never be a Jet Beauty or Cover Girl.  While missing out on those particular careers was fine, the sad truth was still sad.

You see genetics had not been as kind to me as they could have been.  The women on either side of my family are uniquely beautiful.  Faces aside, you have apples and pears.  My mother’s side of the family generally rocks the apples.  Red delicious, granny smith, pink lady, take your pick.  Top-heavy w/ smaller bottoms and, dare I say it, skinny legs.  That shape may not be everyone’s ideal but it is what I saw growing up and expected to resemble.  My dad’s family on the other hand were the classic pears.  Petite tops and small waists poised upon “thick” bottoms.  While one side struggles to find button-ups that don’t gap, the other struggles to find bottoms that fit the ass AND the waist.  I could’ve been the classic coke-bottle, big-little-big.  Instead, and in keeping with the fruits, I ended up a slightly deformed banana, straight up and down with a butt, only one of the desirable curves.  :- ) This realization was only worsened by a “harmless” comment my mother made during my teens.  “I used to worry I’d have to chase the boys away with my family’s top and your dad’s bottom.  But now, I guess I don’t have to worry.”  Thanks, Mom.  It’s all pretty funny now but not 10 years ago when I was 15.

To be fair to her, the boys weren’t all that interested in high school (or college for that matter).  Between going to a small school, being a smart-ass, and strongly resembling Steve Urkel, no one had to worry about me and the boys.  This complete lack of attention (despite my “amazing” outfits haha) probably impacted my self-esteem more than I’d care to admit.  Rather than just accept it for what it was, I gave them excuses.  “Well, of course he wouldn’t be interested in someone who looks like a 12-year-old boy when I could talk to her…”  Colored eyes, longer hair, bigger boobs, a better butt, whatever the case might be.  I’ve since outgrown those excuses.  A lack of interest is nothing more than that.  I’m not interested in every man I meet.  Why should I expect or hope for the same?  But sometimes you can’t help but slip back into asking “why not me?”

So where’s the resolution you ask?  There’s not really one.  Am I stressing as much as I used to about my image?  No.  But I’m also doing more proactively to adapt what I see in the mirror to what I’d like to see.  I’m just too lazy to daydream about changes I couldn’t make with a few extra hours at the gym or a trip to a hairdresser.  I’m cheap and have no desire to go under the knife now that my wisdom teeth have been removed.  If plastic surgery’s the only thing that’s going to make me love the way I look, I guess I’ll have to accept just not hating it.

Realizing why she loves banana bread, smoothies and laffy taffy so much,

Jo’van

Friendly Drama: When I Didn’t Know Any Better

I couldn’t help myself.  🙂

Okay, okay.  Something a little more serious.  Oh, classic Mariah, brunette, seemingly sane, fully equip with choir and everything.  “Anytime You Need a Friend”

Earlier this summer, I had the opportunity to hang out with two friends from Nashville in Chicago (confused yet?).  I’ve known one of the ladies since 7th grade and the other since 9th, 13 and 11 years consecutively. Those numbers seem like an eternity to a 25 year old.  Just knowing someone for 3 years sounds like a significant amount of time.  Over 2 years?  Okay, you’re verified as a friend.  What does more than a decade mean?

If you were lucky/unlucky enough to live in one area and attend area schools your entire elementary education, you may have people you’ve realistically known since kindergarten.  I don’t mean to take anything away from those people but since I didn’t, 7th grade would have to be my longest maintained relationship and it sounds pretty significant to me.

These ladies have known me for (nearly) half of my life.  They’ve seen me fight, cry, yell, stare, run, and smile.  We’ve seen each other through puberty, AP tests, custody battles, puppy love, first loves, college applications, driver’s licenses, parties, prom, and leaving all of that behind for college.  We fell apart during those college years, casually seeing each other when we were all back home but it was never the same.  And as sad as that realization may have been, there was still something that made us come back together (hoping).  I always wondered what that was exactly.  Obviously, we’d all changed and no longer had the classroom to force us together.  What was it that made me still call her “my friend”?  And actually mean it?

Spending that evening together made me realize what it might be.  Intoxicated by wine, nostalgia, good food and ridiculous conversations, we quickly moved past the awkward “so how have you been over the last X years?”  Within the time of a rerun of Family Matters, we were back in the place of giddy adolescents.  Sure, we’ve all changed, grown up, gotten master’s degrees or “real jobs”, physically filled out, moved past pimples and onto real relationships, taken on new responsibilities and the like.  BUT we also all loved not having to worry about that in each other’s company.  We reverted to gossiping, giggling, smart-ass 15-year-olds, fueled by slumber party antics.  Just trying to take a group picture at the end of the night was a monumental feat.  We simply could not stop laughing.  And it felt SO good.  🙂  Laughing at nothing but ourselves.

Anyway, that evening made me realize why we  should, or at least why I still do, hold onto these types of friendships for so long.  It’s not because these people really play a big role in your life now.  I’m not saying they’re not important or that they couldn’t reclaim their roles of indispensable friends.  It’s just that your life operates just fine without their daily/weekly/monthly interaction.  But when you are with them you can become a person you haven’t been for a long time, since you really knew each other.  You get to not be a “real” grown up.  You get to talk about gossip, not just politics, outfits, not just bills, crushes, not just relationships, life, not just drama.  These are the people that knew you when you didn’t know any better AND still liked you.  These are the friends who knew you pre-filter, pre-adult judgment, pre-responsibilities, pre-grown up.

All other friends I’ve made since these ladies and our core/clique have known me in some part of my transition from child to adult.  Sure, these types of “pure” friendships are possible with people you meet past the age of , say, 16.  But they require a type of trust we learn to not give so freely as we get older.  For that reason, there may never be anything like the relationships you have/had with the people who knew the child who knew everything, rather than the adult who realizes they know very little.

Thankful people still liked me when I didn’t know any better,

Jo’van

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