Sunday, June 18, 2017

The Curse of Great Beauty

I wrote this story in when I was 30. It's only semi-autobiographical. For instance, I definitely remember the guy walking around the grocery store with a chicken and his cane in the cart, but I don't remember ever gathering a crowd in the tomatoes aisle. I remember thinking at the time, "Wow if it gets this dark when I turn 30 I've got a long road ahead." Indeed.

I was also listening to lots of Clem Snide around that time.

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The Curse of Great Beauty

My beauty isn’t what it once was.

When I was younger, I would stop traffic. Men, and sometimes women, would stare at me as they drove by, sometimes remembering to wave, but other times just gaze, transfixed, under my spell.

When it first began happening, I didn’t know what to make of it. I had been an adorable baby, but sometime during my pre-pubescence, I had begun looking mousy and nondescript, as one might say. In high school, I had typical adolescent self-esteem problems, and didn’t notice my own blossoming.

When people began staring like that, I attributed it to possible fashion faux pas, always checking myself to see if I had toilet paper stuck to my shoe, or mismatched shoes, or a giant stain on my shirt front.

I gradually came to realize that there was nothing wrong with me. The realization was exhilarating. I came to look forward to tossing my hair on a breezy day, and could feel the eyes catching the sun as it shone of my shiny tresses. I would dress up to go the grocery, knowing that I could stand in the aisle deciding which type of canned tomatoes to purchase and by the time I left, several people would have stopped to mull over the same decision, casting sideways glances at me while there.

I marveled at the freedom this sort of admiration brought. I never had to remember anyone’s birthday. I never had to worry about an admirer’s faithfulness. I never had to worry that a loved one would see an ugly side of me and turn away in disgust. It was fantastic. This is all I need out of life, I thought, smiling and winking as I passed a group of young men standing on the corner, their female friends scowling subtly, so as not to betray their jealousy.

I never felt lonely.

Then, at some point, I noticed the number of admirers began to dwindle. Just as I was realizing my power, and strength, and beauty—just as I realized I should not take any of it for granted—I realized that I was no longer the center of that attention. I compensated, wearing more revealing shirts at first, then darker eye make-up, then making more eye contact.

One day, as I was getting ready, I had what recovering addicts call a “moment of clarity.” I saw myself. I looked at my face, halfway through the disguising process, and felt like Baby Jane. I looked at my outfit and felt like Jezebel. I thought of all the young women I was competing with and realized that I no longer had what they had—the thing that made them all so gorgeous and had once graced my countenance—peace. Joy in living the moment. Happiness to share in the beauty of the whole world. Just enough self-doubt to be delighted in the affirmation of a beauty just discovered.

All of that was gone now, and no amount of make-up or garish clothing could reproduce it. I had never been so lonely in my life.

I put down my make-up, and took off my disguise. I went to the store and stood in the canned tomatoes aisle, trying to decide between seasoned and unseasoned, organic and conventional, diced and chopped, and while I did, people came through, picking up their cans and moving on. I smiled to myself. I am the invisible woman, I thought. I went to the produce section. People passed me with their carts, pushing their babies, or talking with their partners, or on their phones, hardly noticing I was there. I decided on fresh organic grape tomatoes, smiling again to myself as I imagined the pop of sweetness in my mouth, feeling in my memory the freshly turned dirt of my grandfather’s farm as I squished it between my toes.

I realized—not too late, as these realizations are never too late, but always just on time—that I had been blind all along to my true beauty.

I’m not as beautiful as I once was, but I finally have access to the beauty that really matters. The beauty of my heart, the beauty of my memory, the beauty of my love, the beauty of my family, the beauty of my spirit, the beauty of my soul. And I can finally see that beauty in others.

Now, beauty stops me in my tracks, and I realize that it is everywhere. There is the beauty of a little girl chasing a dog in the front yard, laughing hysterically as the dog plays and loves the only way he knows. I know they are both living life to the fullest. There is the beauty of an elderly man, pushing a shopping cart through the grocery holding nothing but a whole cooked chicken and his cane. I know I can never know the strength and pain he has endured, and only hope that I have the grace and resolve to make it as far. There is the beauty of a middle-aged couple walking through the bookstore together, holding hands, and the beauty of a man picking out a movie at the video store, alone like me.

Of course, there is always the beauty of a young woman walking with her hair blowing in the wind, as well, although it is tinged with sadness for me, and a hope that she will realize sooner than I did where beauty really resides.

Charity Crabtree
Sunday, 24 February 2008

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