***
My relationship to my skin has always been different. I take good care of it. I do what I can to protect it from dryness, wrinkles, lines, redness, yellow patches, paleness, sagging –an unending list of possible ailments. I make masks of honey, yoghurt, cucumbers, tomatoes; basing my recipes on whatever I found in women magazines and in the fridge in our home. I have a daily routine of cleansing, peeling, moisturising, protection. It's as if this skin belongs to someone other than the woman who never takes care of her things.***
I placed my products in my handbag before my flight from Istanbul to the little Turkish town, Rayhaniya. But the officer at the security check stopped me and asked me to discard all liquids and creams. Disaster! We did not speak each other's languages. But I pleaded with her all the same. I tried to tell her that I was going to be away for three weeks and that my skin would fall apart without these things. When she seemed not to follow, I pointed at my face, frowned and pointed at the lines between my eyebrows, then raised my eyebrows in an expression of fake surprise and pointed at the horizontal lines on my forehead. She got me then, and smiled, but did not budge. She shook her head and pointed to the waste bin.***
I spent my first week in Rayhaniya without cleansers or moisturisers, using only the hard water from the mains. My work in the small town began at 8:30 am and finished at 8 pm. I taught for three hours, edited for three hours, then taught a second batch of students for three hours, and finally spent a further three hours slot editing, before joining friends for dinner. When I returned to my room in the small hotel, I answered some emails and complained about the noise from the room above mine. Once the nightly battle I had with its resident was dealt with by the hotel staff and he was persuaded to turned down the volume on his TV, I finally went to sleep.***
On my 35th birthday, I had just finished my second slot of teaching and was washing my face in the centre's bathroom with its unflattering white light. I looked in the mirror and thought my face looked decidedly closer to middle age. I don’t usually buy the clichés about making peace with the signs of age, loving your lines and all that. But –without changing my conviction that a little make-up had become a daily necessity, I found myself appreciating the tiredness that was visible on my face that day. I could relate to myself in the same way that I relate to my things: To love something means to use it. The lines and wrinkles were a sign of love. I felt content. This doesn't by any means imply that I will stop using moisturisers and exfoliators. Just that I am happy with what the products will fail to conceal – satisfied with the traces that show that, as Teta put it, the Murabitoun were here; except on my face, those are not traces of destruction, but of life. My life was here. On my 35th birthday, I found myself echoing what Mama told me when she saw my battered belongings: “As long as I wear me out in good health!”This article first appeared in Arabic and was translated by Nariman Youssef.
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