A Makeup Artist Reveals: What Ugly Women Look Like
This was also published here on The Huffington Post.
âYouâre ugly,â said the little girl as she stared me down in an elevator. âExcuse you,â her mother exclaimed with a mix of horror and embarrassment.
The mother began to apologise profusely, to which I simply shrugged and smiled. âThatâs ok,â I said as the elevator doors opened and I exited in my wheelchair.
Meh! That was nothing and Iâve certainly heard far worse over the years. Besides, she was a child and anything âdifferentâ always provoked curiosity in children (and a little unfiltered commentary).
If Iâd had more time I would have said what I often say to children who question my physical appearance and use words like ugly, gross or weird. I explain that itâs just the way I am. I might look different from other people but that doesnât make it a bad thing.
In many ways, however, she was right – the young girl. By conventional standards, I am ugly. By conventional definitions of beauty, my imperfect body is littered with âugly flawsâ (to quote a recent television advertisement). But as Iâve said before in this blog for Huffington Post Women, screw convention!
So this is me. Proudly imperfect at a recent photoshoot. Where many women would flaunt cleavage and flawless dĂ©colletage, Iâm sporting scars from a number of procedures, including open heart surgery and a trachea ventilation tube that allowed a machine to breathe for me when I was in a coma.
Iâve also got implants in my chest. No, not those ones! A metal plate, wires and screws, holding my sternum together.
Iâm the first to admit that these scars on my chest and neck are minor compared to many other scars and amputations on the rest of my body. They are also minor compared to those of many beautiful women around the world with prominent scars from tragedy.
The scars on my chest have dramatically faded over the years (and the lighting on our photoshoot washed them out as well). But that wasnât the case a couple of years ago when I came out of hospital after surgery. I was getting married in just over six months and didnât want the inflamed, red gash on my chest to be seen.
Similarly, as a pimply-faced teenager with braces, I was embarrassed by my acne scars and would never have let someone photograph them.
Today, I donât care who sees my badges from battle. I wear my scars with pride. They make me who I am, and each one tells a story.
So, what do you think makes a woman unattractive? Her blemished skin? Messy hair? Unfashionable clothes? Nope, none of that – and the answer might surprise you.
I had a very interesting conversation with a makeup artist at a recent photoshoot.
This very experienced makeup artist had been in the industry for years, and her makeup brushes had swept across the faces of women around the world. Sheâd seen a diversity of female forms, including supermodels, Brides and the âeverydayâ woman (like me!).
As a makeup artist, sheâd seen countless physical flaws and imperfections. Except that these women werenât flawed or imperfect – just different from the cookie-cutter mannequins. As Iâd wanted to tell the young girl in the elevator, just because someone looks different doesnât make it a bad thing.
Over the years, this makeup artist had been called upon to erase all evidence of ugly physical flaws. On numerous occasions, sheâd been asked to apply extra concealer to scars, blemishes and uneven skin tones. Not a problem!
Yet there were some women who she couldnât help with makeup.
Those really unattractive women whose ugliness couldnât be concealed with an extra coat of mascara or blush.
The worldâs most unattractive women all had one thing in common. They all had an ugly attitude.
Selfishness looks disgusting, bitterness looks repulsive, and there is nothing beautiful or sexy about a lack of self-respect.
Above: Another photoshoot #perfectlyimperfect â Disability isnât as common in popular culture as it is in society.
We all have ugly days!
I daresay weâve all been guilty of unattractive behaviour. Be it on social media or out in the real world. Iâm not perfect and Iâll admit that Iâve had ugly outbursts. I looked horrendous the other week but it had nothing to do with my missing leg, that pimple or bad hair. I was just being a cranky little b*tch!
My friends know they can come to me and vent to get all that ugliness out of their system and theyâve done the same for me. But thereâs a big difference between being a cranky cow over coffee and permanently entrenched, ugly behaviour.
What the research says
Once I got home from the photoshoot, I wanted to explore the topic further. What did the rest of the online world think ugly women looked like?
Dr Robert Tornambe is a New York plastic surgeon and Author of the bestselling book “The Beauty Quotient”. During his 25-year career as a plastic surgeon, he has worked with thousands of women and spent countless hours contemplating definitions of beauty.
In support of what my makeup artist and I had observed, Dr Tornambe says that while physical traits do play a role in beauty, what makes any woman truly attractive is based largely on confidence, charisma and personality.
If you thought a saying like âa beautiful personality is what countsâ was just a tired clichĂ©, think again. In an article about how your attitude can make you appear more or less physically attractive, Psychology Today cited a number of studies where the conclusion was that a bad attitude can make you appear less attractive.
Another study found narcissism, bigotry and a lack of drive or ambition to rank in the Your Tango Top-10 list of the traits men found most unattractive in a woman. In another article, intelligence and wearing LESS makeup were two ways that a woman could appear more attractive.
So when it comes to beauty, the bottom line is, well… itâs not about your bottom. Or your hair, your weight, your skin, your scars or the label on your handbag. In fact, spending too much time obsessing over these things can have quite the opposite effect.
Itâs time to roar! Confidence is gorgeous and courage is breathtaking. What do you think is an incredibly beautiful or sexy personality trait?
Love life,

