Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Tag: skincare

    • A Good Rabbit Hole

      Posted at 3:35 pm by kayewer, on March 14, 2026

      Social media makes it easy to get distracted. The volume of posts being sent around our global online sources is beyond counting. We see people daily who sit (or even walk) while scrolling endlessly. Many of the stories are emotionally charged, but if you’ve seen one true crime video, you’ve seen the next week’s worth.

      What I found while checking my video feed one day, however, blew my mind.

      I saw a header about deodorants which warned that the video contained a list of deadly underarm products. In the past few years, I had been using what I figured was a safe product, because it was aluminum-free, so I was curious to see if it was on the list of products which were tested and proven. I took a few minutes of my time to watch.

      My brand was on the naughty list. On the recommendation of the video, I switched brands and am happier with what I’m using now. It doesn’t slide onto my skin with slippery agents, but it also applies easily and lasts longer and better than before. It’s also composed of safer ingredients than the brand I had thought had a history of safety. Instead, my new/old school choice was reformulated to increase the possibility of cancer. Who knew?

      It seems many of our products have become victimized by corporate cost-cutting, in a manner similar to how our healthcare needs are now settled in a boardroom instead of at a dying person’s bedside. The FDA apparently doesn’t regulate in the manner we would expect, so many products banned elsewhere in the world are liberally used in things we buy, and with little study or oversight. Often the result is neither, but those in charge simply look the other way.

      We are a country of misguided consumers, and folks in suits and ludicrously expensive homes and vehicles are printing up the signage.

      What becomes a piece of merchandise for health purposes may have been created in a laboratory rather than a kitchen. That oat-based moisturizer you slather on your skin, thinking it’s a healthy product, is actually a small (as in single) percent oats and the rest chemical compounds and scents to mask their odor. Imagine putting a derivative of crude oil on your skin to add moisture. It doesn’t do the job and, in fact, the product blocks your pores and does nothing to nourish skin. Some of the additives, the video revealed, are too large to be absorbed into pores, so your skin remains dry and needs more product. Which pays the manufacturers more money.

      Since that day of revelation, I’ve watched a few more videos. The narrative can be uneven, and the soundtrack repetitive, but the information appears to be well-researched and is based on actual studies. It also mentions past court cases in which the companies responsible needed to pay huge settlements for deceptive practices. A big one is Johnson & Johnson’s talc lawsuit for the use of asbestos in their talcum powder. Their baby products also contain chemical derivatives. The companies destroy our trust while still making money from labels they are apparently under no obligation to alter. When you look at the labels of the products you use, what do they tell you? Look on the back instead. Read the ingredient list.

      Videos of this nature–the creator of this series, which I feel safe to recommend, is called Dishclosure and appears on YouTube–show up right next to the Karen in the wild stories and cute cat clips, and seek to bring some reality to an otherwise sugar-coated fantasyland of society’s foibles being beamed on a small screen into our subconscious.

      If we learn how we are being taken advantage of by big-name companies, we might be able to save our skins. Literally.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment | Tagged beauty, dishclosure, skin, skin-care, skincare, skincare-routine
    • Unmasked

      Posted at 2:07 pm by kayewer, on February 10, 2024

      I recently read an article about Pamela Anderson, the gorgeous star of Baywatch who was the dream of every male and the envy of many females. She had a shapely body, a captivating face and talent to go with it. And naturally, like most women who are public figures, she wore makeup. Lots of it.

      Recently she opted to go without makeup, appearing during Paris’ famous Fashion Week with the face she was born with. Some people were aghast.

      The same thing happened years ago when Oprah Winfrey did a show with her entire audience deciding to come clean. Some of the attendees did appear rather uncomfortable. Oprah went facial commando for magazine covers as well.

      I don’t know when we decided that our faces are not fit to be seen in public without makeup, but the trend is starting to trickle down to tween children ten years old and younger. Check out the Ulta Kids articles to see what a mess it has become, with children buying anti-aging products–which are aimed at adults more than twice their ages–and leaving samplers and actual opened and discarded products in their destructive wake.

      Even the trend on social media seems to include a makeup tutorial by any woman posting details of her personal life. I’ve watched clips with a mixture of fascination and shock as ladies talk about their cheating boyfriend or boss from Hell as they dab seemingly too-dark highlights onto their facial curves with funky shaped applicators, and turn their eyelashes into lengthy, dark broom bristles sharp enough to take out a boyfriend’s eyeball if kissing gets too close.

      My luck with makeup has been difficult. I was often too light for the lightest shade of foundation. At modeling school, my attempts at pancake application left arid desert cracks on my cheeks (again, a shade or two too dark). Add to that a lifetime of fighting severe acne, and it was nearly impossible to make my face look as if I were not trying to banish pimples under several layers of tinted grease. For most of my working life, I’ve gone facial commando except for brows and lipstick, and my face seems to be grateful for the lack of over-attention.

      Pamela Anderson is in her mid-50s now, and she looks spectacular with just her face showing. She has said that she wants to emotionally stabilize her own perceptions of who she is; having been a model for Playboy and a television icon beside such talents as David Hasselhoff (who, by the way, probably did not require much in the line of makeup on set: men nearly never do), as well as the focus of a scandal when somebody leaked and tried to capitalize on a private intimate video of her sans makeup and clothing, she deserves to be in touch with herself as the person who has a life outside what beauty perceives us to have. Katie Couric and Justine Bateman have also climbed aboard the natural face train.

      Maybe we should all do that. Are we a sculpted painting of a hollow cheekbone, or do we have souls and thoughts and feelings that work just as well without the pricey plaster on our faces? There is also the stress we place on our skin as we manipulate the stuff onto our cheeks and tug at our tendons and muscles blending in this contour and that flawless matte of skintone. That ultimately leads to wrinkles, and the makeup companies are ready for us with those anti-aging creams the tweens are going Karen over in the Ulta stores.

      Leave your face alone. Let it be the canvas of your life. Enjoy the smile wrinkles and accept when you earn those age lines.

      I see my face in the morning, and I see that my soul is intact. I have nothing to hide.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged beauty, fashion, makeup, skin-care, skincare
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      Eden's avatarEden on A Good Rabbit Hole
      Eden's avatarEden on Free Secretary
      Eden's avatarEden on Getting the Message
      Eden's avatarEden on The Unasked Questions
      Eden's avatarEden on And Her Shoes Were #9

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