Mirror, Mirror

On our complicated relationship and perpetual struggle with beauty standards.

I catch a glimpse of my face in the mirror.
The light hits it at an angle,
each pore highlighted.
The scars of acne long gone,
a trace to remember.

Eyebrows that are overgrown,
expanding and claiming the face.
A nose that had adorned generations of Punjabi women
Eyes that are too tiny,
high cheekbones,
the only outstanding feature in this plain face.

A tiny moustache over my lips,
the altar at which my femininity is sacrificed,
flaky and blotched skin, tiny hair
crooked teeth, an untamed unruliness
even braces couldn’t salvage.

Some days I like my face, and
look into those twinkling eyes.
Like the way my nose curves, the lips part,
the eyebrows arch.
Like how the sun catches my face,
how even if only for a second,
I can exult in having achieved ‘glass skin’.

On other days, the sight of a pimple,
or an acne scar portends days of agony
And so begins an incessant hunt for miracle cures,
praying for aloe vera and besan to save me.

I like tracing the patterns of my heritage across my face,
crisscrossing
like stories that go back ages.
My grandmother’s nose,
my father’s tiny eyes
that fold into a straight line when I laugh,
my mother’s prominent eyebrows,
A face that bares the blood that runs in my veins.

On other days, I see a face that is far too much
but never enough,
far too masculine – not delicate enough,
far too chubby – not angular enough
far too rugged – not ethereal enough.

The checklist always beckons.
The beauty of my face,
the desirability of my body,
slaves to this checklist.

I contort and bend to fit into these boxes
Years of effort, one block on another
But I always seem to miss the mark,
and the goal inches further away.

The anger bubbles over into an agonised scream
Or a tear, the two often entwined.

I know that my body,
a female body,
will forever be a war zone.

Arshiya Sharda is a writer and lawyer based in New Delhi. She makes sense of the world by writing about it. You can read more of her work here.

Featured image credit: Car Communication/Pixabay

‘She is Dark’: Marriage Prospects, Labels and Society’s Undying Expectations

I am an ordinary soul with an ordinary yearning – a yearning to be seen as a person, not a label.

I once had a dream in which my skin was the colour of gold. I was happy in that dream. People treated me differently – they treated me well, and that made all the difference. Though it was just a fleeting dream, I was happy at the moment that I had been born a golden child. Gold was, by all means, better than the ebony tones of my skin, or at least that was what I had been conditioned to believe.

I was born into a community obsessed with fair skin. My mom once told me that someone called me ugly as a baby, and went on to reason that all dark-skinned babies are ugly. I didn’t know whether to tell her that it was a cruel act, or that I had heard worse.

I am dark, I am short and I am obese.

Now, I can state these as facts. But having grown up hearing relatives never fail to speak about my physical features as major shortcomings when it comes to prospects of getting married, and the future in general, it has been a tiresome and tumultuous struggle.

“She is dark.”
”She is short.”
”She is fat.”

I grew up grappling with these labels used by my kin – near and far – right from the start of my teenage years. These people, with “good intentions”, took it upon themselves to remind my family and I on an almost daily basis about their “concerns about me”. While some were polite, others blatantly said, “No one would ever marry your daughter.”

These ‘concerned’ adults believed they were in the right to say things like this. Meanwhile, their three labels – dark, short and fat – echoed in my head and broke me even before I hit adulthood. I grew up as a very self-conscious teen who hated even the shadow of her own reflection. It took me a long time to grow to accept who I am and how I look, and a lot more effort to gain confidence and embrace my skin.


Also read: ‘You Are Not Alone’: Letter to My 10-Year-Old Self


I also did not grow up at a time when body positivity was even remotely a thing. All we heard of were matrimonial ads which only wanted a “fair, tall, slim girl” and people who looked like me featured in movies only as sidekicks – as that goofy friend with no life of her own, there for comic relief and the stark contrast she brings to highlight the heroine.

Back then, I used to think that no one would love me the way I was. No one told me that I was fine, the way I looked – not even my own mother. At a later stage of life, those things stopped mattering as much. But back then, it hurt.

As an adult opening up to the prospect of marriage, I dreaded putting up a profile on matrimonial sites for a long time and kept stalling for as long as possible. I may have been more confident about my physical appearance, creating a matrimonial profile meant so much more. It would mean opening my home to strangers who would then think it okay to gauge the size of my upper arms, legs and thighs, the excess of body hair, my skin colour, height and so on – all of which which makes you unsuitable as a match.

All this, in the very first conversation.


Also read: Exploring ‘The Bluest Eye’, Beauty and Colourism


How ever thick-skinned I’ve become over the years, incidents like this make me question why I even need to go through such an ordeal in the first place.

When I told one of my friends about the reason why I dreaded this groom-hunting business, she suggested I include these reasons in my profile. I didn’t – because my physical features don’t define me and neither does this reasoning. I am no rebel and putting up these reasons would paint me as one. I am an ordinary soul with an ordinary yearning – a yearning to be seen as a person, not a label.

I grew up breathing in the stale air of a society where fair, thin and proportionate is the standard of beauty and everything else is lacklustre. Perhaps if had been born now, there is the smallest of chances that the lady who called me ugly as a baby may not have said what she did.

But the world is still a place where the only adjective used to describe a good-looking plus-sized person is ‘cute’, not ‘pretty’. And a dark-skinned good-looking person is still described as ‘having good features’, and not ‘beautiful’. Time is still very much stuck at a place where a dark-skinned pregnant woman, confident in her hue, would still drink haldi milk everyday praying for the little girl in her womb to be blessed with the right colour.

Recently, some matrimonial sites decided to let go of the skin colour filter in their searches. It’s a start, but it hardly makes a dent in how society still, and will function for a long, long while. How can one change the pre-set conditioning of the minds of the families of many grooms who are going to mentally filter and categorise your photographs based on your physical features to decide if you are “good enough”?

Many would say why bother about such people? But the matter of fact is that the people who categorise you are not bad – they are ordinary, just like you and me. My problem is with their social conditioning.

How does one go about changing that?

I wonder whether a time would come when I would yearn for the ebony of my skin instead, if ever I were to dream of being born a golden child again.

Clearly, I am not there yet.

Shruthi Ramesh is a 28-year-old from Kannur, Kerala.

Featured image credit: Jon Tyson/Unsplash

I Live

A poem about dealing with society’s expectations and the chaos within.

I live
Maybe, maybe not.
With self esteem plunged
And an unending hunger triumphing

I live
With stretch marks, acne
And belly fat eternal
A societal conditioning printed in my head, unerased, forever
Trying to accept all of me
Seen and unseen

I live
With stress producing itself and multiplying
With mental health constantly deteriorating
Emotional health being emotional hell;
Inhaling and exhaling all my cries

I live
Knowing things, more and more with time
Helpless at times many, knowing them all

I live
With an urge to end this chaotic existence
And the little fear of not wanting existence to end
I live..

Shreyaa Tandel is a self established poet. She is a regular contributor at the magazine, Marias at Sampaguitas, poetry editor at Dream Noir magazine and poetry reader at ayaskala magazine. When she isn’t writing or is glued in front of a computer/cell phone screen, she spends time singing/listening north indian classical music, watching all genres of films/tv shows, reading the bhagvad gita and pretending too hard to be happy, even though she truly isn’t.

How Theatre Taught an Introvert to Grin and Bare It

I used to be very conscious of my crooked teeth in school but my college’s dramatics society helped me reinvent myself.

I used to be an introvert from childhood to my early adult years – to the extent that many people interpreted it as arrogance.

Yet someone who hasn’t known me in my early years would never believe that about me. My friends joke that I’m a “social butterfly”; they find it hard to believe that I could ever have been inhibited or hesitant about anything.

There is nothing wrong with being an introvert. I completely back Susan Cain in saying, “Solitude matters, and for some people, it’s the air they breathe.” Yet at a certain stage of my life, it became a practical difficulty and I knew that if I had to get what I wanted, I will have to work upon that aspect of my personality.

This happened when I got to college.

In school, extra-curricular activities were limited to debates or quizzes. Since we had an enthusiastic English teacher, she encouraged us to enact some of the plays from our textbook. When I got into directing and acting, I realised how much I enjoyed it. But because there were no inter-school drama competitions, this activity was limited to my school and, that too, once in a blue moon.

Upon entering college, I was overjoyed to find that they had an entire society devoted to dramatics. I resolved to join it.


Also read: From Introvert to Socially Anxious


I saw a call for audition on the notice board. This wasn’t school where the teachers already knew and appreciated my theatrical skills. To enter the dramatic society, I had to prove myself anew. I was nervous because I had never gone for an audition. Yet I pulled up my socks and registered. When my turn came, my senior asked me to laugh as hard as I could.

Delivering a dialogue would have been easier; even crying would have been simpler. But this was something I did not do properly even in real life. I used to be very conscious of my crooked teeth in school. In photographs I could hardly be caught smiling, let alone laughing. And here I was being asked to laugh out loud on stage.

Recently, I was at an event where a counsellor revealed that kids – as young as ten – ask how they can lose weight and share their sadness because they do not feel pretty.

I was disturbed to hear it, but looking back I can now see that beauty standards for children have always existed, right from the time they are born.

In fact, from pregnancy itself, mothers in India are advised about what to eat so they have a fair-complexioned child. It is only that things get amplified in the age of social media and now we are having more conversations about problems with sexualising children’s bodies or subjecting them to the beauty industry’s arbitrary definitions.

So on that day of auditions, even though the auditorium with a capacity of 550 was mostly empty – save a few of my seniors, the prospect of laughing unabashedly in public seemed grim to me.


Also read: Acne and Growing Pains: Finding Peace With the Skin You’re in


But it was also a moment when my desire to be selected became greater than my self-consciousness. If I missed this opportunity, getting into other clubs seemed even tougher, because I neither had a sports record to join the basketball team nor could I do handstands for the dance society’s audition.

So I finally braced myself, got up there and laughed as hard as I could, harder and longer than I had ever laughed, till my seniors said I could come down.

In that moment it felt like I had crossed a bridge that I had always been viewing from a distance. Something had changed in me, for the better. But I couldn’t allow myself to become happy yet. The audition results would take some more time.

The day the audition results were to be out, I rushed to see the notice board. My name was there but under “backstage”. I was crestfallen. I thought maybe this really wasn’t my forte.

But I had the desire to learn and better myself so I still went for the orientation meeting.

There I was surprised to know that our seniors had come up with the onstage-backstage distinction to see if the “backstage” people would turn up, to confirm if they were interested in sharing all the responsibilities of the dramatics society or only in the glamour of acting.

That day onwards it was a fun-filled ride with my fellow theatre aficionados. I got to reinvent myself and, most importantly, developed the confidence to accept my physical self the way I am.

If I ever forgot, my senior would remind me by saying, “Why so serious when you have such a beautiful smile?”

And my face would break out in a toothy grin.

Ankita Anand is an independent journalist-writer-poet. Her primary interest areas are social justice and culture.

Featured image credit: Pariplab Chakraborty

Straight Talk: How Indian Moms Are Embracing Their Kids’ Curls

With acceptance and time, a childhood battle against wild and unruly hair comes to an end.

Despite Jesus’ best laid plans, war loomed large over our home every time Sunday mass came along. In one corner was my mother, jaw set and brush firmly in hand. In the other, me, back arched and ready to deflect any movement she made towards my curly head. My father watched resignedly as we fired aces a la Federer and Nadal. He’d be spending the rest of the evening trying to broker peace.

You see, my mother grew up as a ‘100 strokes a day’ kind of girl. She kept my hair short in an unfashionable style that fellow curlies are well acquainted with – the ‘boy cut’. My mother had worn her hair in a similar style for years. It was easier to manage this way, she argued.

She wasn’t wrong. But it just didn’t feel right.

Time spent outside home didn’t help either. Fair women with straight locks in shampoo ads made me wonder why my own hair never fell that way. When I decided to grow my hair out, teachers at school insisted I wear it severely pulled back. At church, the backs of women’s heads like mine echoed stories of torture and submission.

We didn’t have mainstream Bollywood heroines like Kangana Ranaut and Taapsee Pannu yet. Humidity made my friends glow, and my hair expand like Mufasa. Professional blow drys were expensive, and my parents didn’t believe in the concept of allowances.

Obsession peaked during college, and I found myself conducting consumer surveys on packaged cheese for money to ‘rebond’ my anxiety away. After four hours in the salon, I remember coming straight home and washing it, despite instructions not to. I half believed that it couldn’t be true, my hair couldn’t be tamed, this was just another blow dry that would wash out. Imagine then, my utter amazement when it didn’t.


Also read: Acne and Growing Pains: Finding Peace With the Skin You’re in


Back then, it didn’t feel as wrong to hate a part of myself as much as I did. Also my mother liked my subdued hair and while I would have never admitted it then, her approval meant the world to me.

Things couldn’t be more different today. I wear my hair curly almost all the time, a testament to maturity and laziness in equal parts. I also spend a lot of time on a closed Facebook group of over 41,000 Indian women, Indian Curl Pride, where fellow curlies swap advice about ingredients, plopping, and a ‘praying hands’ motion that has nothing to do with God.

Nothing gets me more excited though, than mothers seeking help for their daughters. Heads of little curlies pop up more frequently than ever before on the timeline, with mums seeking tips on shampoo, haircuts and how to comb hair without making their girls cry.

One convert’s story resonated particularly with me. In a lengthy post, she wrote ‘…when my daughter was born with silky straight hair, and I was like aaah finally. But it was not long when genetics started to play and she got the curls as well! But this time it was not only for curls, I was determined to make my girl content, happy and proud of whatever she had!’

Last year, my mother was diagnosed with stage 4 breast cancer. A friend suggested I buy her a wig as it was one of the things you last thought about while shuffling between billing, pharmacy counters and nurse stations. Options online were slim, and despite myself, I ended up with a wig sprouting straight hair. My mother made no comment when I showed her it. We put it away and carried on with treatment. We were fortunate enough to be prescribed a line of therapy that caused no hair loss.

Last week, we celebrated one year since my mother’s mastectomy and I thought about that wig. I also thought back to my last trips home, and how my mother didn’t seem to mind my hair as much anymore. There was still the odd question – ‘but shouldn’t you comb it every day?’ – but fewer barbs about frizz and the use of the word ‘junglee‘.

Had the fear of losing her own hair brought about this change? Or had learning to style my hair as nature designed it laid the matter to rest? Whatever be the case, peace had come to stay.

My father couldn’t be happier. His Sunday evenings are finally free to spend as he likes.

Alisha Coelho is a writer for hire, content strategist and a lifelong ambassador for red lipstick.

Featured image credit: Pariplab Chakraborty