Tween self-care trend is worst yet

Tween self-care trend is worst yet



As one aforementioned parent suspected, this fixation largely appears to be about play. Kids are observing guardians, siblings and countless social media stars weighed down by their own beauty habits and are mirroring what they see. By wringing our hands over young people’s relationship with personal care, we’re really just facing off with our own.

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With the growth of influencer culture in particular, we’ve shifted from β€œcleanse, tone, moisturise” to 10-plus step routines. And children have not only witnessed this increase in labour, but our growing emotional connection to it.

Brands have also adopted a new language of therapy speak (seemingly understanding they aren’t supposed to transparently make money by making us feel bad about our appearances), and kids are listening. Once Neutrogena sold teens firming body lotions. Now, the skincare line offers a seven step β€œanti burnout ritual” kit. Meanwhile, my niece’s favourite brand, Bubble, teamed up with Pixar’s Inside Out 2 on a β€œfearless” hydrating moisturiser that β€œsoothes your face and your mind”. It’s enough to make you miss the days when brands told you your pores were volcanic and the boy you liked was going to drown in your oily T-zone.

Companies now also offer a murky message that to use their products is to somehow love ourselves. When Audre Lorde wrote in her 1988 essay collection A Burst of Light, β€œCaring for myself is not self-indulgence, it is self-preservation, and that is an act of political warfare”, she was surely talking about spending 40 minutes washing your face after a 12-hour workday, and seeing someone who’s yet to get their first pimple desperate to copy you.

I don’t mind kids playing with skincare as an extension of arts and crafts, but I worry when it’s marketed as self-care. While my generation was taught that no one would love you with pimples, today’s kids are learning that to love yourself is an unavoidably expensive consumer exercise.

When my niece’s overpriced treat from Sephora arrived, I didn’t pair it with a lecture. If she is playing an adult, what’s more true to life than attempting to shop and slather her way out of a bad day or existential crisis? Besides, why shouldn’t she be allowed to apply a lip gloss without being subjected to a lecture about patriarchy or capitalism? No one is giving her brothers a TED talk when they reach for the Lynx.

Wendy Syfret is an author and a freelance writer based in Melbourne.

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