Look different = better life? With aesthetic procedures on the rise, we look to the pressures and ideals that are shaping the way we do beauty.
Cleanse, tone, jab — this just might be how your skincare regime will look like in a few years. With the upward trend of cosmetic procedures, non-invasive and minimally invasive treatments are fast becoming the future of skincare. Just in 2015, reports showed that the number of aesthetic clinics in the country increased by at least seven-fold, within just 10 years. It also showed that an increasing number of Malaysians were getting treatments to enhance their features, reduce wrinkles and tone their body. The most surprising? In all of this, the ages of clients were also getting younger and younger. Once reserved for the super wealthy or just mainly for age-reversal , aesthetic procedures have stopped being about looking younger, but about looking different.
And it doesn’t help that there are bombardments of unrealistic beauty ideals from almost every source. Just recently, an online ad came under fire for being colourist and racist for the appearance of a “blackface” character as being undesirable, with her fairer complexion portrayed as “normal”. Understandably, people were enraged by the dated standards of the ad. Folklore or not, did it reveal something darker in terms of our beauty ideals?
“I feel that younger men and women now feel appearance determines the friends they have, the jobs they get and sometimes even the salaries they earn. Social media is definitely an influence, so that ’s why they’re starting treatments at a much younger age,” says Dr Anjalee Mohandas Nair, cosmetic dermatologist at Lyfe Clinic.
“Beauty standards evolve, as with any trend, and they are ever-changing. In the early 2000s you would have noticed it was about higher-arched eyebrows and plumped lips. Now it ’s more about K-Beauty: The V-shaped-face, bright and white skin, a high-bridged nose and doll-like eyes,” reveals Dr Anjalee.
This story is from the July 2017 edition of CLEO Malaysia.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the July 2017 edition of CLEO Malaysia.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
How The Cica And Collagen Will Save Your Skin
We take a look at how the C-words of beauty — cica and collagen — will save your skin.
MUTED PAUSE
Colours to soothe the soul? The picks by paint company Jotun for 2020 may just be the colourways you hoped for.
THE WORLD'S ON FIRE
But we won’t let it burn. This is how to do your part in the climate crisis.
LOVE ACTUALLY
It’s 2020 so we think about all the different ways relationships can take shape.
SHE'S ALL THAT
To all the films we fell in love with! #TeamCLEO caught up with Lana Condor for the newest To All the Boys: P.S. I Still Love You.
HER NAME IS LOLO ZOUAI
Music and passion — here Lolo reflects on living a life of contrasts, a sound that’s rare in this world, and keeping it real in her work.
What It Takes to Run A Business And Be The one in Charge!
Want to get into business or take a venture to newer heights? We speak to experts with the know-how who share their top tips.
Harley Quinn Steps Out Of Comfort Zones And Breaks The Silence
Sure, she’s got a name straight out of the comic books, but Harley Quinn Smith is making her own mark in doing it all.
UNLIMITED GROOVIN'
Music can be like food for the soul. #TeamCLEO spoke to a few headliners to know what music means to them, what their work is all about and what goes into their creations.
STRAIGHT SHOOTING
We hear from two cast members of action-packed Arrow, and what it meant to film its last season.