The Sunday Times - UK (2022-02-13

(Antfer) #1
It all began with dog ears. Remember
those cute little puppy ears that poked up

and flopped down every time we moved
our eyebrows? For a while it was comedy

gold as Instagrammers and Snapchatters
morphed into bunnies! Kittens! Doggies!

For the uninitiated, the idea is that you
can easily layer a filter over a regular

picture to do anything from enhancing
how you look to turning yourself into a cute pet or

wicked witch.
But something else happened when filter-dom began.

Social media companies started tweaking with the minu-
tiae. In between the whiskers and the paws, they began

giving us a taster of what life would be like if we had
smaller noses, bigger lips — and smoother skin.

Yes, it’s the smoother skin that has been playing on my
mind, and here’s why.

The other week I put on a full face of make-up and was
quite proud of the results, so I did what any thirtysome-

thing who is on Instagram would do. I took a selfie and
uploaded it. (After all, if I didn’t show my followers the

make-up, did it even happen?)
“Nice!” I thought. “Good angles, good blush.” For the

fun of it I swiped across the image to add the Paris filter
— aka the smoother, blurrer and perfector — and in

seconds I was admiring my new and improved perfect
skin, whiter teeth and lighter eyes. I quickly swiped back

to reality and that’s when I noticed the problem. I no
longer liked the original selfie. I suddenly

had hang-ups that didn’t exist pre-Paris.
My pores looked more pronounced, the

textured skin around my jawline was
more noticeable, and questions like

“Were my teeth always this yellow?”
raced through my head.

With one swipe, the Paris filter had
managed to make me feel self-conscious

about my real skin, and I can’t help but
think that if it did that to me — a beauty

expert who is well versed in the ways of
the skincare industry — what is it doing

to everyone else?
I decided to post both images side-by-

side on Instagram to show the difference
(right) and the responses were over-

whelming. People thanked me for my
honesty and bravery — it was as though

Cat Garcia I had done something important enough


Sarah Jossel


Social media blurring filters have given me a complex about my


skin – I hate to think what they’re doing to the next generation


to be awarded an MBE. There were
grown-ups marvelling at how small but

mighty the difference a filter can make to
skin. And the comments kept coming: “I

wish more people would do this. I feel so
down about my skin when I look in the

mirror”, and “I spend days on end
comparing my complexion to filtered

faces, so that I’ve lost touch with what
good skin looks like and what is achievable.”

In that moment I saw the darker world of social
media filters. What used to be a playful gimmick is

leaving people with serious insecurities.
Most of us will have grown up with airbrushed celebri-

ties, which is one thing — they were always seen as the
elite and the untouchable — but comparing ourselves

daily with airbrushed peers and, worse, airbrushed
versions of ourselves, can surely only have a negative effect.

We are beating ourselves up for features like “pores”,
which are 100 per cent normal. For the record, if you

didn’t have pores you’d be a Barbie doll or a mannequin.
Supermodels have pores, the Queen has pores. We all

have pores. There are skincare products that can help to
unclog pores or prevent enlarged pores from getting

larger, but you will never be poreless — and you should
never strive to be poreless.

Today’s Skincare Special is about busting myths, so here
is one more very important one. Perfect skin is not real

skin. Life chapters like puberty, pregnancy, the meno-
pause, along with emotions such as stress

and grief will affect your skin. The time of
the month and lack of sleep will show on

your face. Bad skin days followed by good
skin days then great skin days are all part of

day-to-day living. And the role of good
skincare? It’s to give you the best version

of your skin at the stage of life you’re at.
My advice? For those of you on social

media, don’t be afraid to quietly message
— or even unfollow — peers and experts

and celebrities and brands who use
filters when showing you their beauty

regimens. We need to break the cycle
and start championing our real complex-

ions, especially now that we are
emerging from behind our screens and

into the real world. Yes, for the love of
filters, it’s time to start seeing fewer

paws and more pores. ■ @sarahjossel


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UNFILTERED

The Sunday Times Style • 47
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