Louisville Medicine Volume 67, Issue 11 | Page 12

REFLECTIONS REFLECTIONS: ABOUT COSMETICS AUTHOR Teresita Bacani-Oropilla, MD S eated at the lobby of an assisted liv- ing facility, the 98-year-old retired teacher was waiting for her ride to a doctor’s appointment. Usually seen shuffling along in her muumuu to the dining room, she had been transformed into a younger version of herself. Her snow white thinning hair had been puffed and coiffed by the resident beautician the day before. She had red lipstick and rouge on her cheeks. Dressed in a tailored suit, one could imagine her walking the school halls and teaching her students capably. A compliment made her smile! Meanwhile around town, a pretty college student fussed about the discoloration on the side of her nose. A horde of high school teenagers, male and female, despaired over their hormone related acne, thinking the world would end with each new bump. A group of middle-aged professionals began to grimace at their graying hair and wrinkles. Around the world, people with disfigured faces due to cleft lips and developmental mishaps, or the scars of burns and war injuries, are left with despair. Everyone with these feel- ings over major or minor defects, at times felt that life was passing them by, and things had to change. To their rescue comes the burgeoning market to cure, alleviate or cover up their miseries, giving them relief visually and allaying their fears. Talk about the restorative power of cosmetics and their kind! A perusal of cultures both old and new, primitive or mod- 10 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE ern, shows that generations of people around the world use dec- oration of faces and bodies to honor, display or emphasize their beliefs and preferences. We read about or see documentaries of body paintings of adolescents in their rites of passage from child- hood to adulthood, or of facial paintings of warriors going to war. Among our own kin and friends, those cheering for their favorite basketball teams do the same, don’t they? Permanent or transient religious symbols are traced on foreheads to affirm religions affil- iations and beliefs. It is said that, “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” Where are we in this spectrum? Ads in our media indicate that modern men and women defi- nitely want to preserve their youth. Witness the competition for products that recapture a baby’s smooth skin, remove blemishes, make wrinkles and eye bags disappear, and help drooping eyelids and sagging jaws stay in their proper places. When unable to dis- guise by covering up, injections and surgery take over. If indeed, people can extend their youthful looks thus con- tinuing to assert their young personalities and extend their pro- ductive years; if our youth feel comfortable with and feel more beautiful with their enhanced selves, thus encouraging them to be future-oriented; if disfigurement corrected can change the course of a person’s life, should we laud cosmetics? It is loosely defined as “serving to beautify the body” whether non-medical, medical or surgical, and ranks among the assets of our times. What think you? Dr. Bacani-Oropilla is a retired psychiatrist.