If the French don't shower, then why should I?
Recently, I haven't had the energy or the ambition to put my face on every morning. Not that I've ever been a heavy makeup wearer, but now it's becoming a battle just to convince myself to apply a little bit of mascara to my eyelashes. Who am I trying to impress anyway? The kids? The French men who must spend 90 minutes a day perfectly crafting their just-woken-up/post-sex coif? The French women who already sneer at me for having big boobs and lacking the necessary thigh gap? Yeah, no thanks.
Here's a fun fact for you: I'm considered a hefty girl over here. I'm tall and wide, and therefore I'm supposed to be hideously unattractive. But even while I receive those judgmental lip-curls from the French women, it hasn't stopped the French men from being their usual skeezy selves. I mean, what au pair hasn't experienced the requisite Metro Grope?
Now please, this is not some desperate cry for the internet to tell me I'm beautiful. This is more a kind of personal documentation on the state of my finances and just how lazy I've become. The truth is, I'm too poor to buy more makeup even if I wanted to. I'm used to the expensive shit, because I used to make a lot of money prostituting myself *cough, waiting tables*, but now my salary allows me two options: either look pretty and sit sadly in my room, or enter the world barefaced and have some pretty rocking adventures.
Which brings me to my next point: How do women manage to look so damn fantastic hiking through ancient runes and medieval cobblestones in wedge sandals and sundresses? I mean, sure ladies, you're going to look great in your Facebook profile pic, but aren't you in PAIN? Was that selfie WORTH IT, 'cause I'm pretty sure your toes are bleeding? I gave up style for comfort a long time ago, which doesn't make me better than these girls in any way, but it sure does save me the agony of blisters and a limp (usually).
But then again, I'm not someone who takes a ton of pictures. I used to be, definitely - I think I took over 500 pictures when I was in New Zealand, but the more I travel the less necessary a photograph seems. My memory hasn't failed me yet, except for the names of small towns or exact dates, but that's why I keep a journal. A photograph won't help with that anyway. I AM NOT DOWNING PHOTOGRAPHS. I have a couple friends who are incredible photographers, and I really think that they have a future in the industry. I'm speaking of my own amateur photography that never seems to do justice to what I'm seeing or experiencing, and what would be better left to my memory.
For me, it's about living in the moment. It's about touching the sun-soaked rocks of the Temple of Apollo, or kneeling on the cold stone floors of Notre Dame. It's about lying in a park and smelling in the fresh-cut grass, or eating an exotic meal where I can't pronounce the names of the dishes. Even if I take a picture of these moments, I don't want to end up in the photographs.
Probably because I'm not wearing any makeup.