Call me macabre (‘tis the season after all) but I want to know what supermodel Linda Evangelista’s “brutal disfigurement” looks like. (The only google images that come up show her looking like an attractive woman of normal weight.) I’m a little ashamed of my curiosity, though not so ashamed that I won’t bring it up here. I absolutely believe Evangelista is entitled to privacy and shouldn’t have to process her trauma publicly; I’d just like some perspective. Is her idea of disfigurement the same as mine? To be clear, I don’t mean to challenge the validity of her suffering. Because suffering is suffering. But I’m curious from an…experiential point of view. Which raises a different question: Am I a monster?
If you’re not up on the news, here it is in a nutshell: Over the course of several months, Evangelista was treated with a device called CoolSculpting, which freezes localized areas of fat, killing the fat cells and presumably slimming the spots (on Evangelista, the thighs, abdomen, flanks, and chin) that are otherwise difficult to slenderize. Instead of the preferred outcome, she had a rare (or maybe, it turns out, not so rare) side effect: The treated areas took on the hard, protruded shape of the device—a rectangular bar—that proved, even after surgeries, impossible to eliminate. You can read an excellent informative account here and a perceptive analysis of the situation here.
Evangelista’s dilemma pushes a lot of buttons for a lot of people, including in those sensitive, Puritanical souls who believe it’s not nice to f*ck with Mother Nature—especially when Mother Nature has created such a ravishing creature as Linda Evangelista. I’m not (obviously) squatting in that austere camp, as, bottom line, Evangelista’s job description makes her a perfect candidate for aesthetic upkeep/maintenance. It’s not logical, never mind not fair, to blame a person for making a choice that might improve her career prospects. And though it’s been said many times, it’s also not been said enough that a culture (that’d be ours) that encourages or demands a person to undergo any kind of procedure to effect or imitate an approximation of youth or perfection is a deeply unhealthy culture. (See my related observations about Jane Fonda here and a few other observations about beauty culture here.)
My nasty desire to see Evangelista’s nasty outcome led me down what at first seemed to be a more primrose path toward beauty makeovers, of which I did many when I was beauty director at O, The Oprah Magazine. (Now that I think of it, I was also the subject of one at Parents Magazine not long after giving birth to my son. A well-known stylist cut off most of my hair, as I remember it, and when I went to my mommy’s group soon after, one of the—more acid—mommies looked at me appraisingly before saying, “M. did that to you?”)
Here’s the thing about makeovers: We’re obsessed with them. Just think of the avalanche of shows featuring makeovers of all kinds, from beauty to architecture to lifestyle. In the beauty makeovers we did at O, The Oprah Magazine, we were very careful to remind our subjects that we weren’t in business to “fix” them, as they didn’t need fixing, but were instead going to encourage and emphasize the beauty we knew they already possessed. Certainly, it was only a tweak in the “bad to better” model, but we made sure our made-overs were happy and could, without further interference, maintain some version of their new look on their own. I’m sounding defensive here: We really did try to bring tongue-in-cheekiness to the process. For one feature we photographed the women in “before” mug shots (thanks @therealadamsays) and I wrote the story as if they were characters in a film noir. Each crime had something to do with hairstyle and proportion, I think. We did have fun, all of us; the subjects were treated by world-class stylists, and I can’t remember anyone who didn’t enjoy the outcome. That’s the point of participating in any beauty ritual: For fun…right?
No, not only for fun. Why do we love the makeover? Is it simply because we believe we’re transitioning to an “improved” version of ourselves, in the uber-American style of chasing improvement always? Because certain experts are able to see us in a way only they can—like criminals, wink, wink—and so can recover our hidden assets? Are experts our good fairies who help shepherd us from aesthetic pubescence into fully developed beauties? Probably all of the above. The wish for transformation can of course also be motivated by darker forces: the need to conform to unrealistic beauty standards, or to feel validated, or visible, or to compete in one’s field.
Still, the prospect of renewal, of possibility, of looking dissolution in the face and saying F-you—that’s one way we can try to satisfy the achingly poignant desire to forget that we all carry an expiration date. Getting a new hairstyle that brings out our cheekbones or rearranging the furniture in our living room (or in our head) can give us a fresh, even clearer vision of ourselves, of the open road, a different perspective on the inevitability of change. Fashioning the change ourselves, we might feel we have some control over it. When the outcome conforms to or even exceeds our expectations, sweet! The trouble is that when it doesn’t (or is perhaps forever doomed to fall short), as Evangelista’s story demonstrates, it can feel less like a treat than a cruel, meanspirited trick.
Val Asks You
Don’t be shy! What’s your most vexing or intractable appearance issue? Send me your beauty-related questions. If I don’t have a good answer, I’ll find someone who does.
Love your insights on this topic, Val. I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the nonconsensual “makeover” age itself gives us. How time can render humans unrecognizable; and so we sometimes submit to plastic surgery or dermatologic tweaks or various other makeovers to try to regain control over our appearance and hold onto our identity, craving an “after” that resembles our very best before, if that makes any sense. And when our efforts backfire, when we move even further from our desired image, of course it can be devastating. Just my two cents. And thanks, pal, for the link! Xx
Whitney M. FishburnWrites docu-mental: mapping the americ… ·3 min ago
I spent about a third of my career chasing academic/clinical doctors around much of the globe to attend their medical meetings and hear them discuss, and in some cases, defend their latest findings. Esthetic derm meetings were always the weirdest. I should write about that, but relevant to this post of yours, Val, I am reminded of the time when an esthetic-derm-to-the-stars removed his shirt at the podium (oh, these meetings used to get even weirder than this, I promise), and then turned to show us all his back.
Speaking into his mic, his back still turned to us, he asked us all in the audience to notice how firm his sides were. This was not from working with a trainer at the gym, but was the result of what the cold sculpting technology made possible, he trumpeted.
Given that I had already been shocked into a mild state of senselessness after being made to watch a video of liposuction in order to demonstrate to the derm crowd in attendance how much easier and less messy this cold treatment you refer to, Val, would be in the clinical setting, I was just not prepared for a half naked doctor taking the stage. But moreso, I was puzzled by his thrill.
A buzz went up through the crowd. I have no idea what the actual sentiment was, but they were exercised over the display.
To me, he looked hard, and not in the way that we like hard bodies. He looked plastic. His sides didn't look like they were shaped correctly. The left side was bulging out farther than the right.
What was I missing?
In my confused state, I still managed the cogent thought that it would probably be easier to celebrate (?) with the rest of the crowd if a) I knew what he had looked like before and b) I could touch his back and feel for myself, because he looked misshapen to me, not beachy buff.
Since touching him would, it seemed to me, be exactly the kind of thing I should not do and he would want done, I decided to leave his success to his imagination.
And yet, I never forgot that day. Accordingly, I never got the procedure.
(Nor did I ever have liposuction. The video cured me of that, if I ever would have considered it anyway, although that is not likely. Just remembering the hot bucket of melted human fat makes my stomach lurch.)